Freemartin
Diamond Member
Hey guys, I wonder if you can give me a hand with this. I recently started trauma therapy with a new T after a not-so-successful attempt with a different T. This new one is just brilliant and I've made some decent progress already. I can see how this changing t's can make a world of difference.
So, today she asked me to contemplate on the question: what makes a good trauma therapy or a good therapeutic relationship. I guess she wants me to ponder on the theme in order for the both of us to get a clue on what I want and need from her and the process. Also, she is preparing her thesis on the subject and would welcome some insight. She knows I hang around on the forums with my extremely insightful colleagues, so I promised to raise the question here.
I know for me it's extremely important that I can trust my T to maintain control of the situation. I easily go down some really nasty rabbit holes when addressing trauma sh*t. So it feels awesome to be able to trust her to have my back. This is what I Iacked with my previous T, so I really see the difference.
Other stuff: it's immensely important that the T genuinely respects me. Not in a generic, benevolent-healthcare-professional way but as the real, f*cked-up and glorious person that I am.
So, this is what I managed to cook up. Let's hear your thoughts!
So, today she asked me to contemplate on the question: what makes a good trauma therapy or a good therapeutic relationship. I guess she wants me to ponder on the theme in order for the both of us to get a clue on what I want and need from her and the process. Also, she is preparing her thesis on the subject and would welcome some insight. She knows I hang around on the forums with my extremely insightful colleagues, so I promised to raise the question here.
I know for me it's extremely important that I can trust my T to maintain control of the situation. I easily go down some really nasty rabbit holes when addressing trauma sh*t. So it feels awesome to be able to trust her to have my back. This is what I Iacked with my previous T, so I really see the difference.
Other stuff: it's immensely important that the T genuinely respects me. Not in a generic, benevolent-healthcare-professional way but as the real, f*cked-up and glorious person that I am.
So, this is what I managed to cook up. Let's hear your thoughts!