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What does your therapist do to create emotional safety?

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ButterflyBean

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OK so everyone knows the difference between physical and emotional safety, right? I’m not necessarily afraid of disclosure but rather my intense feelings themselves. Oftentimes, I will start to feel unsafe and verbalize the fact to my T when feelings start to surface and/or emerge. We have been working together for years, so this is not anything new, and I trust her. We’ve had a few ruptures along the way but have always been able to move past them even though they will come up again sometimes. So, my question is: do any of you have experience with your T creating a safe space for you emotionally in the moment? If so, does he/she do or say anything specific that helps you release your emotions (particularly sadness and anger)?
 
So, my question is: do any of you have experience with your T creating a safe space for you emotionally in the moment?
Yes.
1. You don't need to worry about that - that is my job.
2. So do you mind leaving that (issue) here with me this week and you focus on XYZ instead and see how that feels?
3. By not telling me what is going on in her life - issues/problems/concerns
4. By giving me an object to hold
5. By letting her cat into the room

There are lots more things I am certain, but those are the things that come to mind right now.
 
The main thing I'm noticing with my new psydoc is that she works extremely hard at keeping me within the "Window of Tolerance". Feeling safe means I don't get hyperaroused and start shaking OR hypoaroused and dissociate or experience a flashback. My WoT is damn narrow at the moment so I really respect what she is doing. Allows me to feel a tiny bit and then switch it off. If it doesn't feel safe to disclose or talk about something I don't have to. In fact she prefers if I say "no I can't talk about that".
 
To my ears, this sounds to me you have not internalised safety in this therapy yet. Until you internalised it, meaning you just feel safe like you feel you are a woman (at least with this therapist), you will struggle and there is nothing a therapist or anyone can do for you.

A therapist can facilitate a relationship for you to feel safe, but she cannot make you feel safe or take safety role for you or maybe that is what happened...you gave her your part for your safety (projected to her) and you are depleted for feeling safe.

When you are not with your therapist, how do you feel about her? do you feel she will be there when you are back? Do you feel she is in your head telling you good things like someone you care...looking out for you?
You said you have been with her for a year, but I think you have not master feeling safe yet and that is OK. This depends on your particular constellation of trauma so you may need to talk about it more in order to process it through consciously rather than assuming anything.

Hope this helps.
 
I read this thread earlier this week and couldn't think of how my therapist does it, even though I know he does. This week, in therapy, he asked me about a previous therapist I saw several years ago. After the appointment I remembered something about the old therapist that I think speaks to this post.

I went in there incredibly anxious. I was still with my now ex-husband, he was in jail, and I was terrified about what would happen when he got out of jail. I went in to see old-therapist trembling, crying, not just trembling hands, but even my legs were shaking. Anyway, he seemed completely taken aback by my intense fear and clearly didn't know how to handle that. He just kept putting his hands up, like to indicate I should stop.

What I realized after this week's therapy appointment is that after that therapist reacted how he did, I worked a lot harder not to let that much feeling out in therapy or anywhere for that matter. I just knew that I'm too much, my feelings are too much for me and those around me.

A few times I've been upset seeing me current therapist - not as upset as above because I won't let those feelings out. Whenever he sees even a little bit of emotion though, or if I'm starting to cry or look like I might, he reminds me that it's ok. I don't know how many times he's said it's ok if I cry. Or when I'm frustrated or nervous he's constantly telling me that it's ok. His tone of voice changes with my emotional state. If I'm crying, sad, solemn, he gets quieter, gentler almost.

I don't know, I guess it's still hard to explain. But I think they do that by reminding us that what we are feeling is ok, but also if intense feelings do come out, not over-reacting with us or getting overwhelmed.
 
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