"Talk therapy" is where you go in once a week (or maybe twice a week) and all you do is talk about your problems. There is little done other than simply talking about your problems. It may help some, but in terms of healing trauma, it's not so helpful. I think you perhaps are thinking of talk therapy in a different light. (Well, all therapy is a talk therapy of sorts in that talking is a necessary component of therapy, but in this context "talk therapy" is when you just talk about your problems and there isn't much else to therapy at all.)
On the other end of the spectrum is therapy that is entirely skill based. You see a therapist who pretty much just works on skill building with you, such as in CBT and DBT. Well, my CBT and DBT was this way, but I know not all CBT and DBT is solely skill building. My CBT was like going to a class. I just learned skills and in between sessions I had homework. My therapist wasn't touchy-feely in the least, but I learned a LOT from her in the short time I saw her.
Then in the middle you have a balance of talking about issues as well as building your coping skills so that you can heal and move forward. Therapy that involves processing falls more into this middle category as it involves using coping skills and putting them to the test while talking about past trauma.
I've found little to no true healing with straight "talk therapy" but much healing with more skill based therapies. Some people get help from just going in and venting to a therapist about life while the therapist does much nodding with the occasional comment. Unfortunately this doesn't really heal trauma (and the studies show that CBT type therapies work the best).
Do you have an arsenal of coping skills? Yes, I truly mean "arsenal"! CBT skills help a lot, but I also use DBT skills, ACT skills, IFST skills, etc. If you ended up in the hospital, then I question how great that therapist was. I was literally to the point of giving up on processing until I found a newer type of therapy geared toward preventing the re-living factor. It didn't matter that I had a ton of coping skills and that I knew how to use them. The bottom line was that the types of therapy I was trying were not able to prevent me from re-living the past. Unfortunately this newer type of therapy that I used for processing isn't very widespread yet and has many doubters in the psychological community as it is so new. But, it worked for me, and that's all I care about. I can't help but wonder if you need a type of processing that is geared toward preventing the re-living?