I will have a chance to do some work with a therapist who specializes in early trauma work. It's been such a long time I've tried one thing after another, the repeated failures have complicated the original problem a lot. What a difference it would make to my outlook on life to have a sense of moving forward, even if it is slow. And I hear you that it will be.
I need a huge amount of work on feeling safe, too. She keeps asking whether there is a time I can remember when I felt safe and the trouble is, there really isn't.
The early trauma perspective, even if difficult to wrap my head around, helps a lot. I've felt so f*cked up. I know I had major medical trauma, pre-birth wasn't even good or very safe, and I did not have a safe or caring connection (I think I reminded my mom of her own abuse or something...she despised me...thinking back I think she was somewhat dissociated in her violent rages...like I really wasn't "there" and she wasn't either...very messed up). I can't recall any safe feelings either, at least not early or in connection to people. I have a memory of feeling safe in the closet, hiding in a big box of mittens. This is sort of how I have felt "safety" for a long time...shut out everything and disappear. Anyway, it's pretty complicated to get the internal safety thing working if you've never had it. But I've been feeling hopeful.
Like safety, I could not feel comfort or soothing. Not long ago I was able to feel comforted by holding a teddy bear. I never felt that as a kid...like I never felt comfort? WTF. And that explains my self-regulation, drinking, cutting, burning, starving problems (possibly now connected to chronic pain)...I have had no ability to self-soothe or calm myself. So by the time I faced adult traumas I responded by quickly trying to kill myself...just felt like there was absolutely no way to go on or survive. BUT somehow I'm not dead, and it's really interesting and hopeful to realize that I'm not totally broken...my body can still relearn and experience these really natural things. I dared to ask my therapist if I could get the smallest stuffed animal on her shelf. She offered to get in for me. But I wanted to myself...took me AN HOUR of scooting on the floor. She held the end of a blanket that I was holding so we were sort of connected and not alone but I was doing it on my own (trying to access and allow myself this tiniest comfort). I was crying the whole way, not able to look at the puppy, and stopping occassionally to give myself oxygen. It was bizarre and yet felt incredibly deep and real. Now sometimes I can rest my head on my dog and feel calm. Humans are probably long down the road, but just feeling any comfort, or allowing myself to feel that, is really amazing for me...the little things I didn't think were possible.
Of course ask about insurance, etc, if that is an issue for you. Many SE practitioners are private practice and not in the major clinics yet, so the crappier insurance companies can't cover it. My insurance is all f*cked up now and I don't know how long I'll be able to do SE, so it's really depressing to feel like you find something that won't be another failed therapy and then it just stops. I'd like a little control over the timeline and not such an abrupt change (my company switched insurance companies, I had no say in any of it)...like I'd like to have another year and have some pretty concrete goals...or just have until I feel like I have that inner safety more constant. I still have a lot of meltdowns and feel myself as living in a bubble sometimes. I'm really aware of it, which is different, and I feel more connected in many ways. But it's been a couple years and it sort of feels like we're just starting. It took well over a year in order for me to feel like my therapist existed beyond therapy (this sounds crazy, I'm smarter than this, but it helps to understand as really early stuff). Yet I forget that under stress or I fear I'm dead to her or I'll never see her again.
So yes, slow. Maybe the person you're seeing will be a good fit. Maybe not. But there's no harm in having support as you try to slow down and gain a connection to yourself and your own experience. I value that so much. Very few people can do that for us.