Psycho-Babble Psychology Thread 385420

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Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Pfinstegg

Posted by Dinah on September 1, 2004, at 23:38:07

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » DaisyM, posted by Pfinstegg on September 1, 2004, at 22:36:39

It's not just the two of you. :)

I really have been obtuse, haven't I?

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » lucy stone

Posted by Dinah on September 1, 2004, at 23:48:50

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they, posted by lucy stone on September 1, 2004, at 23:16:40

My therapist wouldn't do what Daisy's therapist does either. Though thankfully he's willing to speak to whoever shows up for therapy. But he doesn't talk any *differently* - well, maybe a bit differently, but only insofar as he knows what motivations to use, not as in being more nurturing or anything. He's really big on my being responsible for my own therapy. He's very clear about the professional nature of our relationship. He's not particularly nurturing. I envy Daisy her therapist a lot. :)

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Dinah

Posted by daisym on September 1, 2004, at 23:53:59

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » daisym, posted by Dinah on September 1, 2004, at 22:42:42

Dinah,
I still flinch sometimes when he notes how attached to him I am, or how much I need him. But not as much these days. He says it in such a way that it is not only expected but like it is a good thing. And it is definitely easier to admit these feelings and figure out what I need to feel safe.

I'm still shocked when my therapist talks directly to my younger self and she responds. The flood of emotions shakes me and I have a hard time editing what she wants to say. There is a powerful urgency sometimes, like she senses a window of opportunity that will only be open for so long.

It is nice that you understand so well.

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » daisym

Posted by Dinah on September 2, 2004, at 0:09:39

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Pfinstegg, posted by daisym on September 1, 2004, at 23:31:52

I actually prefer the term "emotional Dinah" or "real Dinah" or what I usually use in person "Dinah (pointing at my stomach as opposed to Dinah pointing at my head)", although the latter is hard to do in writing. :)

For shorthand and convenience I might use capital and lowercase letters, but while I might use a photo of me age 12 or 13 to denote the self image of me (pointing at my stomach), and while I (pointing at my stomach) have a real objection to growing up, I don't really think of it as an age related thing so much as an emotional/rational thing. Well, I (pointing to my stomach) like to think of it as a real/fake thing, but I (pointing to my head) am not crazy about that one, so the compromise is emotional/rational me or me (pointing to my stomach) and me (pointing to my head).

And now I have you totally confused, should I ask if you have any preferences? I probably use little Daisy because I heard it elsewhere, but if you prefer a different way of referring to yourself, just let me know. :)

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » lucy stone

Posted by Pfinstegg on September 2, 2004, at 0:20:35

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they, posted by lucy stone on September 1, 2004, at 23:16:40

What you said is interesting, Lucy. There are so many different ways to get better.Your analyst is working in a standard, traditional way, and you have made some great changes (from reading your previous posts). When I was 20, I also went to a traditional analyst for three years; he worked just the way yours does, and I got SO much better. I did a lot of grieving over the abuse and lack of love and support in my childhood, but we mainly concentrated on growth of my adult self. He did not want regressions, which my present analyst does want.

I really stayed quite well, through marriage, the birth of my son and a good career life. I had the wonderful feeling that I was meeting challenges successfully and growing personally all during this time; I always remembered my wonderful first analyst, and kept in touch with him- he was a very important, internalized part of me. However, when my mother and father died, I quite suddenly developed a very severe depression, with suicidal thoughts; for the first time in my life, I really needed anti-depressants. That's why I'm in analysis again; I've been doing very different things with this analyst, as you probably know! But different as this experience is, it's also tremendously valuable; I probably needed to do both at different times in my life- this one almost seems like something one has the privilege of doing when older.

The first analysis seemed to move smoothly towards growth, independence and increased personal fulfilment. This one is more all over the place- sometimes I think, what am I DOING? It's not so great for one's adult life to keep regressing! But, in a year and a half, I've overcome the depression almost completely (I take just 37.5 mg. of Wellbutrin now). In my adult life, things are changing in subtle ways- more confidence in my career abilities than I have ever had, more spontaneity and joy in day-to-day things, better acceptance and liking of myself.

My analyst told me that doing an analysis that includes exploring dissociative states is probably the most thorough kind that one can do. I guess he thought it was the correct thing to do, because I had *done* the standard analysis, and never lost any of it's benefits. He personally thinks that everyone has dissociated states, but that most people do not need to explore them. He doesn't look for them in every patient, though I guess he feels they are there!

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » lucy stone

Posted by daisym on September 2, 2004, at 0:26:11

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they, posted by lucy stone on September 1, 2004, at 23:16:40

Lucy,

I want to clarify without sounding defensive.

When I say my therapist "insists" that I come, it usually goes like this:

"I think you should come and we should talk about what you are feeling. You know me, I think we should talk about whatever is going on. I want you to come."

I've expressed to him before that I need him to advocate for the parts of me that need and want therapy. Because the part of me that thinks I should be stronger and do it myself looms large.
I need to be reminded that it is OK to be doing this work. He knows I would interpret "it is your choice" as "I don't care what you do."

I guess that is why therapy is such an individual process. I have to learn to trust another person with the damaged parts of myself. To learn that someone can know this stuff and still care about you. We've talked about my perception that no one, irl, really can handle knowing how emotionally unstable I feel, they would be burdened with feeling like they had to fix it. I don't want that. Yet he points out that until I allow myself to trust others with my emotions, all of them, I will be missing something huge from my relationships. I know this, I feel it already. I just can't risk the vulnerability yet. I'm practicing with him.

I also think that in 99% of my life I'm not only the "adult" but I'm the adult in charge. He refuses to allow only this strong front which crowds out the wounded child. But he never makes me feel childish. He just accepts the childlike parts.

I do sound defensive, don't I? I guess it is because I've never let myself be this vulnerable with anyone before and I still question the wisdom of this dependency off and on. No one has ever nurtured my soul like this. What a sad realization that is.

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Dinah

Posted by Pfinstegg on September 2, 2004, at 0:33:33

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Pfinstegg, posted by Dinah on September 1, 2004, at 23:38:07

I guess that I'm the obtuse one. You HAVE been mentioning different Dinahs! I wasn't sure if you meant it in the way my analyst means it- as an unconscious, separated- off self which wasn't able to join the conscious me in the growing up process. I somehow thought that you were referring to sort of co-equal, but different, parts of your adult conscious self. I'm jealous of Daisy's therapist, too- mine is great, but he doesn't do or say some of the extra-ordinary things that hers does.

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » daisym

Posted by Pfinstegg on September 2, 2004, at 0:55:49

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Pfinstegg, posted by daisym on September 1, 2004, at 23:31:52

Absolutely. Who knew? What we are all trying to do is so difficult, and brings up (in me- in us all) so many emotional storms, that I am coming to really value being able to talk about it here on PB. It doesn't work to do it IRL. At first, I felt that it was a pleasant, sociable thing to do, but now I am starting to feel that we are all playing small but real roles in one another's struggle towards health. Makes it pretty darn valuable!

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Pfinstegg

Posted by Dinah on September 2, 2004, at 1:23:37

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Dinah, posted by Pfinstegg on September 2, 2004, at 0:33:33

How about somewhere in between?

There's a rather complex sharing of consciousness now, and one that is totally unlike anything I've come across in my typically extensive research. So I'm neither fish nor fowl as far as I can find from books, articles, etc. Which of course makes me feel like I can't possibly be the way I am.

But at one time, it was a far more unconscious or dissociated or whatever, arrangement. I just learned how to access the dissociated ego state fairly easily and worked out a time share sort of agreement. It wouldn't be discreet or prudent of me to discuss "equality". :)

To some extent, I'm happy to downplay the dissociation aspect. There is a fair amount of prejudice against it, even within the mental health community. My experience doesn't fit neatly into any box, so I don't need to put a name to it. Even my therapist varies widely in how he describes his understanding of it. I usually use "well defined ego states" if I must describe it. The inner child explanation has a cultural acceptance to it, despite my indignant response to being called an inner child. Or as the EMDR therapist called it "an archaic inner child remnant" which didn't go over very well as it was said to the "remnant"'s face. I go through periodic activist phases where I stand up proudly and say I'm a dual-ego-state individual and proud of it, but I usually sit down again very quickly. :)

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Dinah

Posted by Pfinstegg on September 2, 2004, at 1:33:08

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Pfinstegg, posted by Dinah on September 2, 2004, at 1:23:37

Oh, you gave me a giggling fit, and I woke up my sleeping husband! The only place I stand up at all is here, and I sit down pretty quickly, too!

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they

Posted by lucy stone on September 2, 2004, at 8:37:37

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » lucy stone, posted by Pfinstegg on September 2, 2004, at 0:20:35

Well, I'm not doing a "standard, traditional" analysis. I am doing a modern analysis. My analyst says that the only people he knows that do more than one analysis are ones that did a traditional one the first time. It's just that I do not think that my analyst believes that everyone has dissociated states. I suspect that he would say that some people have them but everyone. I think I will ask him about this today, I am interested in his response. I have talked here about what I call the "other Lucy", which is the public face I use in stressful situations, but when I talk use that term with my analyst, he always brings me back to what I am doing, why I need to act in a different way in stressful situations, what I need to do to use my authentic self at those times. It is indeed interesting how different approaches for for different people, and how important it is for a patient and therapist to be a good match.

 

Re: shoes » DaisyM

Posted by gardenergirl on September 2, 2004, at 9:36:35

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » gardenergirl, posted by DaisyM on September 1, 2004, at 22:05:54

Gotta go shoe shopping, Daisy. Do what works!
The are a medium heel with a center seam on the toe with contrast stitching. Not too pointy but stylish.

Take care, sweets!
gg

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Pfinstegg

Posted by gardenergirl on September 2, 2004, at 9:49:47

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » DaisyM, posted by Pfinstegg on September 1, 2004, at 22:36:39

Pfinstegg,

> She doesn't speak yet, but she does speak in dreams. In them, she has rearranged the analyst's office, bringing in her favorite toys and animals from her childhood, changed the couch to a different location, etc. Then she said, "OK! Now I'm at home. Now I can tell you things, and it will help me a lot". And she does, a bit more, each day.

That is such a sweet image. Thank you for sharing it.
>
> I never thought of myself as having any kind of ego state or dissociative disorder! It's so easy to have one and not know it! Do you think other people here might have them, but that their therapists don't work in that way, and so they don't find out? I've always wondered about that, as I think it's just you and me who write about it.

I had an experience recently when I was meditating about a metaphor for my pain. It included a volcano (don't ask!) and as I was sitting there, all of a sudden, my five year old self came up and tried to pull me away, saying "You'll get in trouble." I did the same thing you did...I sat with her and stroked her hair and told her things would be okay. I told my T about it because it was a bit freaky to me. I was concerned that it meant that my ego was fragmenting rather than getting stronger. He never mentioned disorder and actually believed it was good progress. That I was able to parent the child me that did not get that caring and nurturing in the past.

Now he doesn't work to try to talk to her, although he did mention we could analyze why it was that age, why she looked like she did, etc. But he focused on the self-soothing aspect and seemed pleased.

Warmly,
gg

 

:-) (nm) » Pfinstegg

Posted by Dinah on September 2, 2004, at 10:07:15

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Dinah, posted by Pfinstegg on September 2, 2004, at 1:33:08

 

Yikes! I'm late!

Posted by Aphrodite on September 2, 2004, at 11:00:24

In reply to Does your Therapist understand how important they, posted by daisym on September 1, 2004, at 20:17:56

Wow! This thread took off in no time, and I have so much to say. I really want to respond to everyone, but I have such little time.

So, as my T would encourage, I will just say what is on the forefront of my mind and that is the issue of my T advocating for young Aphrodite. The two child-like ego states that are wounded and frightened and need a lot of support need therapy. However, the adult, who foolishly thinks she's just fine, has to bring them. My T, then, has the difficult balancing act of helping the children without offending the adult me or causing me to flee. If he didn't address my younger parts, I would have left a long time ago and still carried the sadness of abuse and neglect with me.

My point is that it has nothing to do with therapeutic orientation. In order to literally save my adult life, he has to address the younger lives.

 

Re: Not late!! » Aphrodite

Posted by Dinah on September 2, 2004, at 11:15:26

In reply to Yikes! I'm late!, posted by Aphrodite on September 2, 2004, at 11:00:24

I'm hoping the subject isn't closed. :)

"However, the adult, who foolishly thinks she's just fine, has to bring them. "

That statement made me snort diet coke out my nose. It's soooo much the way I think. :)

I was trying unsuccessfully last night to say some of what you said. I finally gave up without posting. I understand that therapists have to be careful about creating ego states. But if something already exists, ignoring it or treating it like it's a shameful thing can't possibly be helpful. If my therapist had refused to speak to my emotional self, or punished me overtly or covertly for speaking, I would have stopped speaking, but I wouldn't have disappeared. It probably would have been immensely harmful in that I would have gotten pretty rage-filled and self destructive at this new sign that I wasn't acceptable.

As it was, I had to talk around the subject for years because my therapist (tho he didn't say anything) was clearly uncomfortable with the concept. I think he was afraid of creating alters or escalating the number or something. I had to pretty directly confront him with how difficult his reluctance was making therapy for me before I was able to be really open with him. So he clearly didn't create anything in me. But thank G*d he didn't try to "discourage" me either.

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » lucy stone

Posted by Pfinstegg on September 2, 2004, at 11:34:09

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they, posted by lucy stone on September 2, 2004, at 8:37:37

You are right. I misspoke. I didn't mean to say you are having a "standard, traditional" analysis; I was trying to say, rather, that I think you are having a modern, interactive,more usual form of analysis because childhood sexual and physical abuse are probably not issues in your past. If they are, I would be wrong on that, too, but I don't think you have mentioned them. Therefore, the question of dissociation would not come up. I am the one having a slightly unusual analysis by an analyst who sees mostly people who have serious abuse issues. I think everyone who speaks here of having some degree of dissociation- not to an obvious degree, like in DID, but to some degree, unconsciously, has a history of abuse in their pasts,

 

Re: Not late!! » Dinah

Posted by Aphrodite on September 2, 2004, at 11:39:12

In reply to Re: Not late!! » Aphrodite, posted by Dinah on September 2, 2004, at 11:15:26

I never pictured you as someone snorting coke, but you just never know about people:)

I think you hit the mark about any dismissal of these other states setting off destructive thoughts or behaviors. I know that one of my adult parts, a very crictical one, can be very abusive to the little girl. If my T dismissed the little girl, he would be collaborating with this abusive adult who would lash out at her in anger and embarrassment.

Have you ever considered, Dinah, how far along you've brought your T professionally? Think of how many "emotional" sides of others he can now address because he understands. You should get some free sessions or something.

I feel like I'm training my T sometimes. I think I can be quite a challenge:) I have only one friend who knows about therapy because she is a former therapist. She swears up and down he must be writing a paper, if not a book, on me.

 

Re: P.S.

Posted by Dinah on September 2, 2004, at 11:43:06

In reply to Re: Not late!! » Aphrodite, posted by Dinah on September 2, 2004, at 11:15:26

I have a "life history" summary I wrote for my therapist shortly after starting therapy. Probably three or so months in, around the time therapy stopped focusing completely on "The Anxiety and Phobia Workbook".

In it, in highly coded language, it is clear that everything I believe about myself now, I believed then - but with less understanding and different words. For instance then I wrote something like "So during my time of difficulties as a young adolescent, after a year in therapy, and being unhappy with my life as it had become, and realizing that my behavior was not getting me what I wanted, I stopped. I stopped being crazy. I stopped misbehaving. I came up with socially acceptable reasons for avoiding situations that I wanted to avoid. I became what others wanted me to be. I sat back in amazement as I watched everyone believe that I was ok." Things like that. There is nothing inconsistent in my early reporting of what happened and either of my later theories of what happened. One is that the flawed emotional Dinah went into hiding at age thirteen or so, hurt and angry that no one noticed, and let a false front interact with the world. And that the false front eventually developed the delusion that it was real, and developed a limited range of emotions so that it could operate independently. The other theory is that the rational Dinah took what it wanted from the raw material, concentrated on will and intellect, and left what it didn't want behind, where it somehow managed to survive on its own (and without anything worthwhile because anything worthwhile had been stripped). Guess which theory belongs to each ego state? :P

There is also reference in that very early history to what could possibly be a third ego state and what I have always referred to as an alien being who took over my body in tenth and twelth grades. I have *always*, even in eleventh grade, referred to this stranger as Happy Dinah. But there just isn't enough evidence to tell whether it represents a third ego state or not. If so, it's probably where any sexuality I might posess resides.

So if it ever occurs to me that my therapist encouraged the creation of ego states, I look back to this writing which was done when my therapist had no influence over me whatsoever, and when I still had no idea what was going on in my innards.

 

Re: Not late!! » Aphrodite

Posted by Dinah on September 2, 2004, at 12:00:30

In reply to Re: Not late!! » Dinah, posted by Aphrodite on September 2, 2004, at 11:39:12

Well, my therapist did enough work with DID, then MPD, back when it was more accepted to make him fairly well qualified at working with ego states. Actually, I think it left him gunshy from being overwhelmed. I think that's why he discouraged my talk of different parts when it first came up.

Of course, I don't have DID, and my ego arrangement, however unconventional, is very stable. I have never had any additional ego states beyond the two (or possibly three) that I always had some sort of awareness of on some level, however well hidden.

So I may have educated him, but it's about phenomenon lower on the dissociative scale than what he already had familiarity with, and if the writing on the subject has any validity, I'm not sure what he's learned will apply to anyone but me. :( I just don't "fit" anywhere.

Even to not having a history of abuse.

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » gardenergirl

Posted by Pfinstegg on September 2, 2004, at 12:30:39

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Pfinstegg, posted by gardenergirl on September 2, 2004, at 9:49:47

That's such a warm image. It sounds as though, occasionally, different *parts* do come up in your therapy and life. My analyst is very much like yours- he considers mental events like that as signs of more cohesion and health, rather than the opposite. And mine, like yours, emphasizes the comforting aspects of dealing with the parts- both the adult me comforting the child, and him comforting her. It's not the only thing that happens in analysis, either- it's interwoven with so many thoughts, memories and feelings from every stage of my life, which seem to be pouring out faster and faster, as my inhibitions and defenses decrease.

Are you really thinking of termination so soon? You've only been going about a year, haven't you?

 

Re: Yikes! I'm late!

Posted by daisym on September 2, 2004, at 18:58:25

In reply to Yikes! I'm late!, posted by Aphrodite on September 2, 2004, at 11:00:24

>>>However, the adult, who foolishly thinks she's just fine, has to bring them. My T, then, has the difficult balancing act of helping the children without offending the adult me or causing me to flee.

Exactly! We talked about this some more today. Because the adult still thinks it is really dangerous to let someone be this important to you. But he reminded me (again) that I have a strong core which has been gradually been adding supports over the past few months. So even though I don't think so, he isn't indispensible. But he acknowledge that my kid self doesn't believe that and doesn't really need to. Sort of like when kids think they will never want to move out.

I'm interested in how we get our adult selves to not be so harsh with the younger selves. I've been told to try to remember that "she" was just a child and couldn't do anything to protect herself. But I find it so hard to believe. And I'm pretty tired of all her sadness.

We also agreed today to take a break from the memories for a while. So we didn't talk about them specifically yesterday or today...and I don't see him again until Wednesday. I can feel my youngerself quietly freaking out...but I'm shushing her. (and no, she can't call either...)

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they

Posted by shrinking violet on September 2, 2004, at 19:47:35

In reply to Does your Therapist understand how important they, posted by daisym on September 1, 2004, at 20:17:56

>>So do you think that was a strange thing to ask?

I haven't yet read the responses, so forgive me if I have missed anything that may have developed.

I think that was a GREAT thing to ask, and your T's response was perfect. I haven't asked my T that particular question, but we've talked about our relationship. I think *she* views it as "genuine, caring, and real" which were her words, but I tend to push it off and minimize it as "just" therapeutic. As far as I go, I'm not sure whether she truly understands how important she is to me, and our relationship...it's kind of weird, because whenever I try to convey how upset/sad/distressed I'll be when we terminate (prematurely, as I can't see her anymore once I graduate) she tends to get uncomfortable. I think she wants reassurances that she won't hurt me in any way, as I think that idea tends to get her anxious. So, in short, I think she knows she is very important to me, BUT she doesn't want the relationship to be so intense or hurtful that it ends up hurting me in some way (which, in my opinion, is inevitable). Since that's the case, I'm going to try to keep my feelings about it to myself until we get closer to the end, then I'll probably be a crumbling heap in the corner of her office. *sigh*

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Pfinstegg

Posted by gardenergirl on September 3, 2004, at 0:08:45

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » gardenergirl, posted by Pfinstegg on September 2, 2004, at 12:30:39

Your therapist sounds great. It sounds like you are in a quite active place right now. I would love to be a fly on the wall in an analysis. I don't know if I would ever have the stamina to undergo the training, but there is a lot about the model that appeals to me.

My T brought up termination a couple of sessions ago. He said I appeared to be showing a "hallmark" of entering the termination phase. That is that I am less resistant of being open and talking about memories and thoughts and more resistant to the idea of giving up my dependence on him and on a few other significant people. I can see what he meant, as we were talking about the conflict between desiring someone to take care of me...what was it called? The Golden myth or fantasy? (gotta read that book someday!!!) and seeing the benefits of being independent or interdependent. For once, the idea of termination didn't scare the pants off of me (now there's an image....).

However, termination will take awhile. It's a phase of the therapy, and I expect it could take several months, if not the entire year I am still able to see him before I graduate (Crosses herself). Of course I just had to drop a doorknob bomb as I was wrapping up the session before last, which in some ways may be a resistance to termination on my part, or may be, as Daisy has suggested in another thread, the last big thing I need to work on. So I feel more in the middle phase again. We'll see...

Take care,
gg

 

Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » Pfinstegg

Posted by gardenergirl on September 3, 2004, at 0:09:24

In reply to Re: Does your Therapist understand how important they » gardenergirl, posted by Pfinstegg on September 2, 2004, at 12:30:39

Your therapist sounds great. It sounds like you are in a quite active place right now. I would love to be a fly on the wall in an analysis. I don't know if I would ever have the stamina to undergo the training, but there is a lot about the model that appeals to me.

My T brought up termination a couple of sessions ago. He said I appeared to be showing a "hallmark" of entering the termination phase. That is that I am less resistant of being open and talking about memories and thoughts and more resistant to the idea of giving up my dependence on him and on a few other significant people. I can see what he meant, as we were talking about the conflict between desiring someone to take care of me...what was it called? The Golden myth or fantasy? (gotta read that book someday!!!) and seeing the benefits of being independent or interdependent. For once, the idea of termination didn't scare the pants off of me (now there's an image....).

However, termination will take awhile. It's a phase of the therapy, and I expect it could take several months, if not the entire year I am still able to see him before I graduate (Crosses herself). Of course I just had to drop a doorknob bomb as I was wrapping up the session before last, which in some ways may be a resistance to termination on my part, or may be, as Daisy has suggested in another thread, the last big thing I need to work on. So I feel more in the middle phase again. We'll see...

Take care,
gg


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