Psycho-Babble Psychology Thread 1062006

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Re: Support is what Dinah Seeks

Posted by Dr. Bob on March 14, 2014, at 15:16:41

In reply to Re: He's not dying » baseball55, posted by Willful on March 13, 2014, at 23:33:52

> Dinah is utilizing Babble as a safe place to express her hurt and shock
>
> Twinleaf

> Dinah has the right also to take care of herself-- which involves expressing and working with the complexity and painfulness of many of her reactions. ... she was also saying ... that it would be devastating for her that he needed suddenly to abandon her.
>
> She does have the right to be angry and hurt, and disappointed-- and even to reject the relationship for a time.
>
> We need to accept the complexity of her (and our) feelings, and the primal sense of abandonment that some people particularly feel devastating-- leaving only the loved person's absence.
>
> Willful

Thanks, I found that a helpful way of seeing what's going on. Maybe the Support that Dinah Seeks, right now, anyway, is understanding and empathy, not what might feel like "excuses" for her T's behavior. I'm going to respond to an earlier post, but I'll start a different thread for that.

Bob

 

Re: Support is what Dinah Seeks » Dr. Bob

Posted by sleepygirl2 on March 14, 2014, at 20:36:54

In reply to Re: Support is what Dinah Seeks, posted by Dr. Bob on March 14, 2014, at 15:16:41

> > Dinah is utilizing Babble as a safe place to express her hurt and shock
> >
> > Twinleaf
>
> > Dinah has the right also to take care of herself-- which involves expressing and working with the complexity and painfulness of many of her reactions. ... she was also saying ... that it would be devastating for her that he needed suddenly to abandon her.
> >
> > She does have the right to be angry and hurt, and disappointed-- and even to reject the relationship for a time.
> >
> > We need to accept the complexity of her (and our) feelings, and the primal sense of abandonment that some people particularly feel devastating-- leaving only the loved person's absence.
> >
> > Willful
>
> Thanks, I found that a helpful way of seeing what's going on. Maybe the Support that Dinah Seeks, right now, anyway, is understanding and empathy, not what might feel like "excuses" for her T's behavior. I'm going to respond to an earlier post, but I'll start a different thread for that.
>
> Bob

Seriously, this is not a good time to rationalize things.
Dinah knows how to rationalize.
We're all dependent to some extent, of course we can see our t's as separate people, but we attach, so we feel attached. When anyone is important to you, and they disappear without explanation, you'll miss them dearly.

 

Dinah?

Posted by alexandra_k on March 16, 2014, at 16:35:16

In reply to Re: Support is what Dinah Seeks » Dr. Bob, posted by sleepygirl2 on March 14, 2014, at 20:36:54

So I didn't follow all of this...

But I got to thinking... Remembering... Around the time of hurricane Katrina. How things fell apart for a lot of people. How you held things together really well. Better than your therapist, even, ha. Better than most people. How you do that on the boards sometimes, too. Hold things together. Find your calm. In the storm.

I think I have that tendency sometimes, too. I think. I see a little bit of that in me. I wonder if it comes from living in a state of almost chronic alarm most of the time. People might think that we don't have good coping skills because of living a lot of our lives in crisis... But then when something external sends other people into that same state of physiological arousal the person who is used to it functions best.

I don't know if that makes sense. Or whether it is true or not. But it helps me think about the lab... Helps me feel better about it. I was totally focused. for 2 hours. Until I realised I needed to do calculations on something I forgot to write down (thought that was what the pre-lab was for) and that I needed to double the scale on the x axis which would have made the numbers align... oddly... with the little squares on the graph paper and i mentally gave up on the math. That's a pretty good first effort. It... Won't get any harder than that, actually.

I sort of imagining your therapist pulling things back together in a little time... Seeing sense. Or something. Anyway... Not sure if I'm up to speed on things... Or making an awful lot of sense... But I wouldn't be terribly surprised if this storm, too, comes to pass.

 

Re: And that's it for me, guys. Bye. » Dinah Seeks Support

Posted by baseball55 on March 16, 2014, at 20:28:05

In reply to And that's it for me, guys. Bye. (nm), posted by Dinah Seeks Support on March 13, 2014, at 21:40:11

I'm sorry Dinah. Did my post drive you away? I certainly hope not. I did not mean to be hurtful. When you write about your T, I can't seem to help applying it to myself and my relationship with my T, whom, I have said many times on this board, I love and feel deeply attached to. He's in his mid-70s and I think a lot about how I would handle the kind of situation you are in. The call or letter one day that he is curbing his practice for personal, health reasons.
It terrifies me and I try to imagine how I can handle it, how I can come to peace with it.

So I think I just project my own imagined responses to you.

 

Re: My therapist on extended leave

Posted by vwoolf on March 17, 2014, at 1:22:55

In reply to My therapist on extended leave, posted by Dinah Seeks Support on March 7, 2014, at 20:23:20

Dear Dinah, I don't often come to the boards any more and have only just seen your message about your therapist. I just wanted to say that I think it is intolerable that you are not being allowed to know what has become of him.

You quite clearly have a strong relationship with him. A real relationship that has lasted twenty years. I am sure it is real for him too.

I think you have a right to know, no matter how terrible the news may be. You have a right to mourn if necessary.

I would insist with the agency if I were you, press them to give you enough details. Boundaries are supposed to be there to protect the patient, not to hurt them. Trust in the relationship you know you had with him.

When people go missing, the most terrible thing for the families is that they can't grieve. They need to know what has happened, they need the 'bones' to bury.

 

Re: My therapist on extended leave » Dinah Seeks Support

Posted by 10derheart on March 17, 2014, at 16:45:48

In reply to My therapist on extended leave, posted by Dinah Seeks Support on March 7, 2014, at 20:23:20

I sent you an email.

I don't know what to say here.

I'm praying for you.

 

Re: And that's it for me, guys. Bye. » baseball55

Posted by Dinah on March 20, 2014, at 17:43:34

In reply to Re: And that's it for me, guys. Bye. » Dinah Seeks Support, posted by baseball55 on March 16, 2014, at 20:28:05

I was feeling pretty fragile. I probably still am. I don't know really....

I understand that my issue might be triggering for a lot of people here. It's the worst nightmare. I certainly have fussed at my therapist often for what other people's therapists have done. So I really do understand.

Every therapy dyad is different. And what's "true" in your therapy relationship isn't necessarily true for others. Our boundaries weren't either better or worse than with your therapist. They were just different. Partly because of the years involved, partly because of the nature of the work (which largely involved fear of abandonment), and partly because we lived through Katrina as comrades as well as therapist/client.

What is reasonable for your response and his actions is not necessarily the same as is reasonable for my response and my therapist's actions.

I'm not entirely sure why you thought, that day, that I was primarily angry with him. I was furious with the therapist who called me in to her office merely to tell me that he actually had abandoned me, she would curl up and die if it happened to her, and that he was never coming back. I'd have been way happier if she had never contacted me after telling me he wasn't dying.

Also, to some extent the anger I felt towards my therapist was protective. You might find, if you are ever in this situation, that anger feels less horrible than terror.

 

Re: My therapist on extended leave » 10derheart

Posted by Dinah on March 20, 2014, at 17:44:20

In reply to Re: My therapist on extended leave » Dinah Seeks Support, posted by 10derheart on March 17, 2014, at 16:45:48

Thanks, 10der.

 

Re: My therapist on extended leave » vwoolf

Posted by Dinah on March 20, 2014, at 18:01:13

In reply to Re: My therapist on extended leave, posted by vwoolf on March 17, 2014, at 1:22:55

You're right. The not knowing is horrible. And even worse since that stupid therapist told me that he was never coming back. I at least held hope that one day I'd hear some sort of reason. I do appreciate her telling me he wasn't dying, and her tone implied it's nothing like that.

If you have any idea of how I can find out, please tell me. He worked alone. His phone is now disconnected (causing another evening of sobs). The stupid therapist with the agency he referred to let me know that she found out what's wrong with him from the grapevine. There's a whole grapevine out there, with people who don't give a darn about him, who know what's going on. But a client cant' find out because it's "confidential".

And there's no point trying to communicate at all with her or anyone else from there. I'm identified as the crazy client now. Nothing I say will break through their complacency.

I've googled, and will continue to google. I've found several things it *isn't*.

The irony was that if someone had just given me minimal information, I wouldn't even be looking. It's like a celebrity wedding. The best way to avoid a mob scene is to release wedding photos. I don't want or need to know details about his personal life. It may seem like I want to know the gory details, and it's hard for me to explain the difference. What I need to know is about what happened and will happen between us. Something more than "extended medical leave" "probably longer than four months" and just the vaguest hint that it might be never.

But his phone is disconnected. No one who knows him will say anything to the crazy patient. Short of contacting his wife, which will probably have the same result anyway, or hiring a private investigator, I'm at a loss.

 

Re: Dinah? » alexandra_k

Posted by Dinah on March 20, 2014, at 18:05:43

In reply to Dinah?, posted by alexandra_k on March 16, 2014, at 16:35:16

It depends on the type of emergency, I think. I fall apart in medical emergencies.

But yes, I did handle Katrina better than he did. But our experience in Katrina makes this even more incomprehensible. Even then, with the whole world in chaos, he never just cut me off. He might have said he couldn't handle me right now. He might have run away. But he never just disappeared. He made an effort at least to not disappear.

I know in my heart that my therapist would never do this.

Yet he did.

 

Re: Support is what Dinah Seeks » sleepygirl2

Posted by Dinah on March 20, 2014, at 18:08:23

In reply to Re: Support is what Dinah Seeks » Dr. Bob, posted by sleepygirl2 on March 14, 2014, at 20:36:54

Rationalizing isn't always bad. I've made up at least one scenario that makes sense to me. If I never hear anything else, I'll have to cling to that one.

I feel very detached. At least in the daytime. He almost seems like someone I used to know long ago. Perhaps. Maybe he was a dream.

But whenever I wake up, I still breathe pain.

 

Re: My therapist on extended leave » Twinleaf

Posted by Dinah on March 20, 2014, at 18:10:12

In reply to Re: My therapist on extended leave » Dinah Seeks Support, posted by Twinleaf on March 14, 2014, at 10:12:04

((( Twinleaf )))

Thank you. I have tried.

I hope you understand that there is a lot of caring and support here for you as well, because of how much you've given to others through the years.

 

Re: He's not dying » Willful

Posted by Dinah on March 20, 2014, at 18:14:14

In reply to Re: He's not dying » baseball55, posted by Willful on March 13, 2014, at 23:33:52

> We need to accept the complexity of her (and our) feelings, and the primal sense of abandonment that some people particularly feel devastating-- leaving only the loved person's absence.

Willful, you have absolutely nailed it. Although I wasn't well enough to post, this resonated so much and I felt so perfectly understood that I cried.

 

Re: And that's it for me, guys. Bye. » SLS

Posted by Dinah on March 20, 2014, at 18:30:14

In reply to Re: And that's it for me, guys. Bye. » Dinah Seeks Support, posted by SLS on March 13, 2014, at 22:42:21

The best way I can explain it is this. You're maybe almost ready to go away to college. Then you come home after a brief absence (I had to cancel my last session) to find out that your dearly loved mother has left you a note on the kitchen table saying that something is terribly wrong with her, and she's going away and doesn't know when she'll be back.

It doesn't even matter that I had one foot out the door, metaphorically. It's terrifying. I'm terrified for him, I'm terrified for me. And I'm angry he left an impersonal note that left me thinking he might be dying. Other people - people who know him only casually - know where he is, but they won't tell me. I'm left wondering if I missed something. Was something going on that I didn't notice because I was arriving late and missing sessions?

His phone is disconnected, and that one slim hope I had that he would one day return has been dashed. That one slim connection. As long as the phone message was there, I knew he hadn't totally disappeared. He was expecting to return.

Tools. Well, despite his feelings about Babble lately, he'd probably be happy that I reached out here. He always knew I was sometimes quite unkind to him here, and he was just glad I had somewhere to process my feelings.

It occurred to me earlier today that he'd likely tell me that story about the farmer.

http://www.rainbowbody.com/newarticles/farmerson.htm

Then I'd metaphorically put my hands on my hips and tell him that's awfully *convenient* for him. And that abandoning me can never be rationalized that way. That it was good for me to see him as long as he needed the income stream, but now "may be". And he'd likely laugh and acknowledge that it could look like that. And then tell the same story next time.

I miss him. I literally can't believe I'll never see him again. I literally can't believe our twenty years of fighting to relationship can end like this.

 

Re: And that's it for me, guys. Bye.

Posted by Dinah on March 20, 2014, at 18:38:20

In reply to Re: And that's it for me, guys. Bye. » SLS, posted by Dinah on March 20, 2014, at 18:30:14

Incidentally, I hope no one tries to get me to see how the farmer story applies. I thought it was a cop-out when he used it to excuse his own actions. But it was him doing it, and it was so like him that I couldn't help but find it endearing.

There is nothing that could offset the loss of trust that abandonment by my therapist of twenty years has caused. I don't want to extend myself to anyone ever. If my therapist, who would never in a million billion years, did this, then how could I trust anyone in the entire world. Except maybe my husband and a couple of dogs.

 

Re: And that's it for me, guys. Bye. » Dinah

Posted by baseball55 on March 20, 2014, at 20:14:58

In reply to Re: And that's it for me, guys. Bye., posted by Dinah on March 20, 2014, at 18:38:20

I'm so, so sorry Dinah. It makes me cry to think of how awful this must be. I know how attached you have been to him and, really, him to you. It's so sad and so unfair.

 

Re: And that's it for me, guys. Bye. » Dinah

Posted by Phillipa on March 20, 2014, at 21:23:12

In reply to Re: And that's it for me, guys. Bye., posted by Dinah on March 20, 2014, at 18:38:20

Do you know where he lives? drive by? Phillipa

 

Re: And that's it for me, guys. Bye. » Dinah

Posted by SLS on March 21, 2014, at 1:36:22

In reply to Re: And that's it for me, guys. Bye. » SLS, posted by Dinah on March 20, 2014, at 18:30:14

Thanks, Dinah. Your metaphor was very helpful in providing an understanding as to what you are experiencing.

The only thing I can think to say is that I'm sorry. I'm sorry for your loss, and I'm sorry that you have to experience the such hurt. Your level of anxiety must be very high. Mine would be.


- Scott

 

Thanks guys.

Posted by Dinah on March 21, 2014, at 19:52:29

In reply to Re: And that's it for me, guys. Bye. » Dinah, posted by SLS on March 21, 2014, at 1:36:22

I think I'm going to try to forget my therapist ever existed. And totally cut off my emotional self until it feels better.

I'm not even sure that's a bad thing. Emotions are pesky things.

 

Ugh, so sorry » Dinah

Posted by Tabitha on March 27, 2014, at 15:54:00

In reply to Thanks guys., posted by Dinah on March 21, 2014, at 19:52:29

Dinah, well I'm not sure if you'll see this. I'm so sorry your therapist let you down so spectacularly. You deserve better. I hate to see such an insightful and kind-hearted person hurt so much, particularly when the hurt comes from what is supposed to be the safest, most nurturing relationship.

The further I get from my own therapy the more I think that therapy benefits the therapists more than the clients. However, I do still hope that despite this awful ending, you have benefited from the 20 year relationship. I like your phrasing, that it provided an alternative to being a "suburban hermit".

The not-knowing why someone left just absolutely makes me nuts. I just want to punch him and the referral therapist for refusing to give an outline of the reasons. I do not think secrecy is about protecting the clients or even about protecting the therapist from actual harm. To me it is about protecting the therapists' power. Oz behind the curtain and all.

 

Re: Ugh, so sorry

Posted by Dinah on March 28, 2014, at 17:38:26

In reply to Ugh, so sorry » Dinah, posted by Tabitha on March 27, 2014, at 15:54:00

Thanks, Tabitha.

I think I hate people and will go back to being a suburban hermit. They say it's better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all. That's crap. It's far better never to have loved and never to have felt so very very horrible.

I HATE PEOPLE!!!

 

Present company excepted of course (nm)

Posted by Dinah on March 28, 2014, at 17:39:13

In reply to Re: Ugh, so sorry, posted by Dinah on March 28, 2014, at 17:38:26

 

Re: Ugh, so sorry » Tabitha

Posted by Dinah on March 28, 2014, at 17:51:41

In reply to Ugh, so sorry » Dinah, posted by Tabitha on March 27, 2014, at 15:54:00

I think you're right. It's to protect them.

I found some papers today from the mid nineties. I was using a dot matrix printer! I've been seeing my therapist since dot matrix printers.

And he just disappears without a trace and I may never hear from him again, not even to find out what happened.

 

Re: Ugh, so sorry » Dinah

Posted by Tabitha on March 30, 2014, at 16:50:34

In reply to Re: Ugh, so sorry » Tabitha, posted by Dinah on March 28, 2014, at 17:51:41

Amazing how outdated 90s stuff seems now.

It's good to see you posting. Breakup pain is probably #1 on my list of Painful Experiences. The only good thing to say about it is that it eventually changes.

 

Re: Ugh, so sorry

Posted by Willful on April 5, 2014, at 1:04:49

In reply to Ugh, so sorry » Dinah, posted by Tabitha on March 27, 2014, at 15:54:00

How are you doing Dinah?

Have you begun to feel even brief moments of relief-- of being out from under?

The bad feelings may come in waves and still be more than you feel you can tolerate-- but I hope some moments of feeling yourself have begun.

Have you had any word? from his fill-in therapist or anyone else?

My own psychopharmacologist, with whom I have wonderful rapport and whom I have trusted implicitly-- was forced to leave his practice because of a serious illness from which he will not recover. He and I had nothing even approaching your relationship with your therapist but he would never abandon a patient to the sort of rupture and spiritual nausea (in the existential sense)-- that your T put you through. I am still so appalled that he could suddenly and callously disappear.

But I hope time is making a small beginning of healing--- and that there is more healing to come. And I deeply hope that he is recovering and will be well-- and that he will make some attempt to redress this wrong.

Very best wishes and thoughts,

Willful



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