You eat the crayons? How does that help? What colors do you recommend? (sorry, just kidding.)
I just remembered. The "traumatologist" I saw who worsened matters was a student of Franklin Schultz, author of A LANGUAGE OF THE HEART (known, somewhat menacingly, as ALOTH.) She was following his book and personal teachings in trying to use NLP (although they do not admit it was NLP, even though it's based on Bandler's "behavior mapping" theories) when she did her "intensify the bad feelings" schtick. I saw Schultz personally, as well, and won't use this forum to comment openly on his therapeutic techniques, but certainly can comment on his published works, including ALOTH. Schultz does not believe there is such a thing as a "moral imperative" to be a good person. He (and thus his student and offshoot therapists) say that we make the choice to be what we want to be in life, and we can choose from an infinite number of possibilities, but once chosen you only have to the best at whatever you decide to be. If you decide to be a good person, be the best good person you can be. If you decide to be a serial killer, be the best serial killer. (I am not kidding.)
Making matters worse, as part of his approach, he emphasizes that therapists not "judge" -- meaning, literally, they would not deem someone who came to them and admitted a series of murders to be "bad" unless the patient himself themselves FELT bad. This leads to the question as to whether or not the ALOTH theraptis would then help the murderer accept his role and thus become a BETTER murderer. At a personal level, Schultz disallows any questioning or debate of his theories.
Needless to say, this kind of therapy is not conducive to (a) victims of rogue hypnotherapy whose suggestive states are already in flux and highly fragile, and (b) people (like my ex) who are going through the manic cycle of their bipolar disorder, looking for a person in authority to basically "give permission" for them to go out and become a sex addict or whatever is very dangerous stuff. (Which is my case is exactly what happened. Still high on the hypnosis, she used ALOTH to justify a third and fourth relapse into manic behavior that eventually almost killed us both and destroyed our marriage, in effect finishing the work started by the trauma-inducing hypnotherapist we were seeking help from!) In my opinion, ALOTH presents a very dangerous approach, at a very subliminal level, with an outward appearance new-age warm-and-fuzzy. But at it's core it is teaching that uber-narcissism is okay, and if anyone tells you otherwise THEY are crazy.
More culty crap. I sure know how to find 'em.
Then I had the therapist who told me "just man up" and stop thinking so much. That's another story for another day.