
Nothing quite screams depression like zombie-ing it through the day feeling like you’re about to collapse, then the moment the kids are safely in bed taking yourself off to bed and then sobbing your heart out, huge tears, snot, literally wailing, face down on your bed well into the early hours, then texting your ex-therapist that you love her (groan), and then finally when the tears subside, raiding the fridge for a mini pork pie at 2am… and I don’t even really like pork pies, but turns out I’d ‘forgotten’ that eating was a thing yesterday until I’d had my breakdown. It’s been that bad. The young parts have had a collective meltdown and I just don’t know where to start with strapping them all back in the bus because I think it freewheeled off over the cliff edge and exploded.
I’m trying to make light of all this, but actually it’s really not funny. I feel awful. Some of it is hormonal – but that’s only a really small part. PMS is just exacerbating an already intolerable situation. I feel completely and utterly broken now. It’s weird. I hadn’t realised just how much having Hannah (new therapist) on board was creating just about enough of a dam so that things didn’t flood out. I mean it’s been really really hard in the last couple of months. One therapy session is certainly not enough to hold how I feel, and a new therapeutic relationship is harder work, but at least it was something, a bit of a scaffold if you like – and certainly better than nothing at all.
It would have been a break from therapy for this next couple of weeks anyway, which would have been tough enough – I knew I was going to have to dig deep because alongside no H I wouldn’t be able to see K or have a massage with N – basically I was on my own for the first time since Anita and I ended – yikes. However, knowing that I actually have no therapy at all now to hang on for, or return to is… hard. And I simply don’t have the emotional energy to go through the process of searching for someone else, sending the emails, doing all the communications, and then having to start over AGAIN.
You might be wondering what the hell happened. How have I broken a therapy in only eight sessions? I mean, crikey, that’s impressive, isn’t it? Well, it’s complicated…or maybe it isn’t. I don’t know. It’s a mess, that’s for sure. I don’t even know how to write this because as much as think I protect mine, and my therapist’s privacy, ultimately the thing that’s thrown a spanner in the works is this blog.
Groan.
There’ve been eight sessions and this is the first I have got to it – when it is over!
When I met H I immediately liked her. A few things struck me about her – she seemed to have a good sense of humour, she seemed to actually be interested in what I was bringing (well, that’s the job right?!), and she seemed to be my intellectual match (actually, I think if I’d come across her in the real world she’s the sort of person who I would be friends with). I know that sounds like a really weird thing to say (the brain stuff!), but actually I really need someone to meet me where I am at to do this work because I have the capacity to run rings round therapists. It’s not deliberate. It’s a defensive/protective thing that means I can hide my vulnerable parts – but this time I really needed someone to get through my walls because, understandably I am in a cold war bunker right now after my most recent experiences in therapy.
I found that I felt reasonably at ease with H even though parts of me hated everything about being in a new room with someone that wasn’t Anita and wanted to run away. I was able to outline quite a bit of what had happened with A and how I felt as well as some other things that have happened in my life. It was coming from the False Adult self’s perspective but that’s fine – she gets stuff done and protects my little parts. Those small ones are so hidden around others right now that it was never going to be a go in and fall apart and collapse in a puddle on the floor situation – even if part of me felt like that’s what was happening inside and could have done with it!
It was always going to take time to build trust, but I thought that it would be a good enough fit for now and eventually the relationship would develop. I knew that I could never cry (even if it’s screaming inside) in that room because the parts that needed to feel safe just didn’t – and that’s not H’s fault – it’s a time thing and a lack of relationship, but it was fine for now, because I have been crying plenty outside of it so it’s not like I am not releasing emotions…and it would come eventually…maybe.
I realised early on that I was intellectualising my experience, and whilst that’s fine, it doesn’t really get beneath the armour and into the agony that I am feeling. And it is agony. It’s annihilation for the youngest parts. However, I also knew that I needed to lay the groundwork and I would never just go to someone new and let my guard down and I knew the process can’t be rushed so I knew it would take time ESPECIALLY because I’ve just been hurt so badly in therapy. Because I was so stuck in my brain and doing the articulate, ‘this is how it is’ stuff I think it created a dynamic where H probably thought I was looking for solutions and to problem solve the situation which sometimes felt like I wasn’t being seen…but then that’s because I wasn’t letting her see me! I think she wanted to dig down but also knew I was resisting.
Sometimes she’d suggest things, and whilst adult me probably would quite like to go on a retreat one day, right now that isn’t what I need. I am not in need of a journey of self-discovery. I know who I am…I know all the parts of me, their fears, triggers, and what makes things better. The issue I have is the person that helped make it all better has gone before the work was done – it’s been like learning to ride a bike and suddenly whipping the stabilisers off when I was nowhere near ready for that – and I was confidently pedalling along and whoosh -it has floored me.
There are grazed knees, bruises, broken bones even, and what’s worse, no one to help. The little ones are crying on the floor…hurt and abandoned again.
What I really need is someone to sit with me in the grief and make space for all those small parts to feel safe enough to talk about how bad it feels to have Anita gone. I don’t need anything more than that. Of course, that’s where the issue of intellect comes in because whilst I know what I need, I am defending against it and any time H would tentatively edge towards the vulnerable stuff I’d literally tell her no. And so, we’d go back to trying to think of ways to make my day-to-day better.

I would always take my shoes off and curl up on the couch at Anita’s but my shoes remained on and firmly rooted to the floor in the new room with the new therapist – I wasn’t wholly relaxed, and whilst part of me would have loved to have been able to go and sink into the space and perhaps take a soft toy with me to help soothe the parts that are never going to be held again, I just wasn’t there yet. I think, now, I actually probably need an invitation to do these things because I am so scared of being too much. I am so terrified of being vulnerable because I just can’t be hurt and rejected AGAIN.
I realised I had a way to short circuit some of this errr resistance, protectiveness, or whatever it is a few sessions in. But how? Well, I mean I have this blog, don’t I? This is me. Vulnerable and unarmoured. I took a leap of faith and emailed H and asked her to read some posts I’d written because I was struggling with feelings of shame and didn’t know how to break through it. I thought maybe seeing stuff would allow H to know what it’s been like for me and to really see the level of attachment work I’ve been doing…I mean it’s basically been reparenting.

I had mentioned that A had read me stories, hugged me, and given me gifts in session and I felt H bristle a bit even though she hid it well. And I’d felt this a couple of times round other things I had mentioned about how Anita and I had worked. I know how it’s not really in the therapy training modules to work how Anita and I have – but actually it’s not uncommon especially with C-PTSD. H is a relatively new therapist and I think that coming across someone like me and this kind of situation with two therapies that have left me reeling is new territory for her. Or at least I’d hope so because frankly, it seems all too bloody common for those of us here, doesn’t it?
Anyway, she agreed to read my posts over a few weeks, and I think it helped her see what things have been like for me even if I couldn’t tell her completely how it felt in sessions. As I say, I suddenly felt a lot of shame for having had the kind of relationship I have had with A because being in the room with H was such a stark reminder of what normal talking therapy is like. Part of me felt like maybe it was wrong how Anita and I were because I felt like H probably felt it was. And yet in my heart and for those little ones I really refuse to let that take root because how we worked, and that relationship did me such a lot of good for such a long time and it was through that closeness, I was able to get down into the trauma and for the first time in my life feel held and safe. It was Anita’s willingness to meet me exactly how I needed that moved such a lot on. And despite everything that’s happened – the love was so there and it was real…
It’s just an absolute killer that that therapy has been cut short when it has because it’s now so traumatic losing A and the work wasn’t done. It hasn’t reached its natural conclusion, the individuating and moving to independence, and an end because the client was ready…I just wasn’t there yet and so it’s now just another abandonment and rejection to deal with.
Anyway, if I felt shame in the room with H and it stopped me talking then I could at least circumnavigate that via the blog posts and keep things moving forward. I felt like allowing H to see the blog was giving her the map and things seemed to be going ok. It was also a massive exercise in trust.
I had been really guarded for the first seven sessions, then last week something shifted a bit. I don’t know if it was just that I felt like I was getting to know H or what, but we had a more real and vulnerable conversation. Somehow, WordPress had refreshed when H was reading a post I’d sent and taken her to the most recent one I had written about how I had gone about selecting a new therapist. It didn’t talk about the new therapy or her, but it mentioned her. She told me she’d read it and asked if she was Hannah. Initially it shocked me that she’d read it because it wasn’t something I had directed her to. I mentally had to track what I had written as we started talking – but actually there was nothing there other than more reference to Anita and the messages I had sent since we’d finished.
H explained that she’d had a bit of a reaction to realising that she might be in a blog and that it had made parts of her feel vulnerable, and probably tapped into some insecurities but that she’d take it to supervision. I said I understood that, and we talked a bit around it all. It felt like a connecting conversation and I left feeling that for the first time probably we had actually met each other on a deeper level. On the way home from the session I did a lot of thinking and I realised that that I really didn’t want H to feel awkward or for this to get in the way of the therapy and so I sent her an email explaining a bit about the blog and the anonymity etc. That evening I started to get a bit of a sick feeling – anticipating a reply. I had hoped that the blog wouldn’t turn out to be a problem but deep down I could feel that it was going to be.
She replied at length the next day. I won’t copy it here because, ultimately, what came out of it is that she is not comfortable being included on a blog and so I don’t want to disrespect that by putting her words/email here. Essentially, boiling it down, she said that whilst she thinks my writing is a great way to process, she won’t work with me if my experiences of therapy are on a public blog even if it is anonymous because she feels it will affect our developing relationship. She would, instead, want me to write privately and only share it with her.
Basically, I think she feels vulnerable and as if her practice is being scrutinised and no amount of me trying to explain that that’s not how it is will change that which is a massive shame.
She tried to make it land as softly as she could and said she hoped it didn’t feel rejecting, or patronising, or attacking … but, it kind of does – the timing is just crap and it feels like the rug has been pulled out from under my feet. I know I had a choice, I could have stopped writing the blog and kept seeing her…and I do get it from her side. She doesn’t know me and how does she know I would never expose her… but I just wouldn’t. I never have with Em or Anita despite what they’ve done to me.
The world is changing such a lot in regard to social media and it’s not uncommon now for clients and even therapists to have TikTok accounts or Instagram accounts with videos detailing therapy. Obviously, therapists can’t speak about clients directly, but lots anonymise interactions in books and articles or talk about general experiences online…some are in ‘therapist’ Facebook groups and aren’t even discreet at all asking about issues in their current practice. ‘I have a client who does x… what should I do?’
So whilst I get it – I also don’t. I feel like I trusted her with a massive part of me and it’s backfired.

Em was Mrs Boundaries (wasn’t she?!) with years and years of experience in the NHS and privately, and Anita has twenty under her belt and neither one of them ever once told me that my blog was a problem or that they wouldn’t work with me because of it. In fact, both of them encouraged me to write it – even if Em once really struggled to read one of the posts after we’d had a massive rupture and were trying to process what had happened together. My blog has never been a huge part of my therapies, my therapists don’t read all my posts, but there have been times when I have written and shared it with my therapists, and it’s been so helpful. But mostly – it is my space to process and my support network.
We all know how useful this space can be for us – and so ultimately, I had to make a horrible decision. And as much as I don’t write as much as I used to, or in the way that I used to (there is no session-by-session accounts anymore and it’s more general or after the event), and the blog sees much less engagement than when I would write regularly, I decided that I couldn’t drop the blog in order to keep the therapy and I wrote an email to outline why:
Hi Hannah,
I’ve tried to formulate my thoughts on this, but there’s a lot of conflict inside and so it’s been really hard to try and listen to all that and give it space. Firstly, though, I just want to say that I am really grateful to you for having seen me when things have so spectacularly disintegrated with Anita. I had hoped that we would, over time, build a good enough relationship to do some of this work, and felt that Thursday had been a shift into something more real and less guarded, but I did also get the sense that this was what you were going to come back at me with after I emailed you so had been preparing for this.
On reflection, letting you see the blog was clearly a mistake – if I hadn’t have shown you, you’d never have known about it, and I guess we would have continued on. As it’s not identifying, had you have ever come across it by chance you’d never have known it was mine. As you said, lots of clients journal, some might bring that to sessions, but actually lots blog, too, now – especially younger people (not that I am young now!). The thing is, I’m not a liar and don’t deliberately conceal things in therapy because I actually think it’s useful for you, or whoever I work with, to know about it and see it here and there when it’s relevant.
I let you into this place in my world because actually it’s my most vulnerable stuff. I could really easily have hidden from you for months and months in the room and never have got beneath what’s really going on. I’m good at running rings round people and looking like I am talking about something important when it’s really just a screen for what’s underneath. The blog might feel exposing to you, but it completely exposes me – hence the fact that it’s anonymous but I wanted you to see it because ultimately that’s me…or the part of me that’s hurting and needs the therapy.
You might wonder why on earth I would bother writing and posting this stuff if it is so vulnerable and exposing? What purpose does it serve? I do it partly because it’s a creative process that allows me to process my feelings. It’s a kind of journal. It’s safely out on the platform and not sitting in my computer possibly being read by someone at home – that happened years ago when I would keep a journal on my laptop and it caused no end of friction. The blog is about me and my experiences and feelings – it’s not a spotlight on the therapist, although I can understand how it might feel that way from your side.
Another reason I write publicly is because it was finding someone else’s therapy blog when I was seeing Em that completely changed things for me. I was in such a bad place. I was constantly dissociated, swimming in shame, and feeling like there was something very wrong with me. I was chronically anorexic and basically just a fucking mess but I was in therapy once a week so surely what I was experiencing was normal…nope. It was finding this person’s blog, that made me feel like there was someone else in the world like me, that I wasn’t somehow defective for feeling how I felt, and it went a long way to dispelling the shame and embarrassment I felt in the therapy…and in my general existence. It was this blog that first introduced me to the idea of structural dissociation and parts.
It also allowed me to see that therapy doesn’t all look the same way and doesn’t have to be a horrible experience of feeling inadequate and defective. It also highlighted to me that big feelings happen in therapy, it’s not always plain sailing, that ruptures happen and can be navigated effectively and you shouldn’t fear being ‘too much’ all the time, or at least if you feel that, that it can be worked with rather than being reinforced. I was always so concerned about not being viewed negatively that I ‘behaved’ – basically spent my time hiding in the room until this point when I realised that actually you ‘should’ be able to bring all of yourself to therapy, not just the bits that seem palatable. The thing is the bits I felt were unpalatable weren’t the angry parts or the teen – it was the youngest, most needy ones. It’s horrific feeling so many feelings but also feeling so embarrassed and ashamed that you dissociate all the time. I mean it doesn’t help when the therapist confirms that narrative of being too much… but there we are.
Clients have no idea what to expect when they enter therapy – TV doesn’t really depict it and books…well, like I say, they’re written from therapists’ and academics’ perspectives. Perhaps the closest we get to something is work by Carolyn Spring but even she doesn’t really delve into the depths of the relationship. Clients just don’t get a voice. The reality of therapy and how it can be is a big void, the unknown. You just go in and give it a go, not knowing what is possible or what to expect but honestly, face planting into attachment injuries is no fucking fun and is actually terrifying.
There’s a lot of good therapists out there, I am sure (maybe!), but there’s also a LOT of bad, and it’s all hidden behind closed doors. The power is so unbalanced from the get-go in therapy and clients, are out on a limb, we’re pretty isolated because most of us don’t talk about our therapy with people in our day-to-day lives. I totally get that lots of clients are ‘easier’ than me, or the people I come across, but Complex Trauma is really a minefield in therapy, and we need all the help we can get both inside and outside the room…but that’s not easy.
My wife knows nothing of my therapies, or what’s happened in them. She doesn’t even know your name. I haven’t said a word about any of it to anyone. I don’t talk to my friends in my everyday world about it because – well – can you even imagine? I felt you bristle when I told you about Anita and how it had been with her, and you’re a therapist, so imagine having a coffee with a friend and trying to explain to them that you feel suicidal because someone who you’ve seen for years, who has read you stories and held you for hours without words just so you can hear their heartbeat, and worked extensively with your young parts, and essentially been a mother figure to you, has dumped you!
If I said that my young selves were totally broken and feel like self-harming – they just wouldn’t get it. If I said that I miss her and cry most days – most people would think I was a fucking lunatic because how could anyone understand? Most of my friends are lucky enough to have had good enough childhoods so they don’t understand the mother wound at all. I mean I guess you don’t either [for x reason]. And yet it is breaking me inside. I have this great coping exterior, but I am so tired of trying to hold it together with my rubber bands and chewing gum. All I want to do when it’s like this is be back in that familiar space, with Anita who knows me inside out, and put the weight of the world down and fall asleep. My nervous system is … fucked.
Only she’s gone and no one knows or gets it…except these merry band of bloggers.
It was so helpful to me to alight on a community of people who experience similar things to me because there are a lot of us out there with significant trauma and attachment injuries and we speak a language that most people just don’t understand. In fact, lots of therapists don’t understand it either. When I talk about what feels like a black hole in my chest that has edges that are ulcerated and there’s just a sense of falling through an endless abyss because there has never been any containment or holding for parts of me… they get it. Therapists don’t. If you haven’t felt it, you just cannot begin to truly know how fucking debilitating it is. It’s beyond words. It’s trauma so deeply locked in the body from a pre-verbal time and it’s impossible to understand…but these people do.
I know that my blog has really helped other people and whilst I don’t feel like I have to write because of this, I do it for me first and foremost, it feels like it would be a shame to stop that when it has done such a lot of good not just for me but for others, too. I’ve been blogging for seven years now. It’s been massive in my processing and growth but at times it’s also literally been a lifeline. The handful of people that I know via the blog that have become friends have got me through some really tough times. When everything went south with Em it was that group of people that assured me that I was not a tick, that I wasn’t all the things that she made me believe and the Inner Critic was screaming at me. People that had followed my journey had seen how things had developed and were there to help me when I was completely alone in my ‘day-to-day’ life. Same goes with what’s happened with Anita. It’s a peer support network. And there’s no guarantee it would work out with you and then I’d be left totally stranded…again.
Clients are usually really discreet in their day-to-day lives about their therapy. Noone in my [county] world knows who Em is or Anita is or what they’ve done to me. I could have spoken to people in this area, used their names, slammed them, made public comments on their social media… but I haven’t. I haven’t done that on the blog, either. As I said, I never would because I’m just not that type of person. None of what I write is about wanting criticise practice…it’s about what’s happening to me. How what has happened has impacted me – good and bad. But it is sooooooo private. And I know that seems absolutely bonkers to say when it’s online, but it is.
Therapists get supervision and peer supervision…and personal therapy, and clients get absolutely nothing – and yet it is us who often suffer harm at the hands of therapists. As I say, it is rife. You wouldn’t believe it, or perhaps you might be beginning to. I don’t follow many blogs but five of my online friends have been terminated since October alone and are left to pick up the pieces. If it wasn’t for this network online, it would be really crap. I can honestly say that it’s been a couple of these people checking in with me on a daily basis that has got me through this recent shit show because it is pretty bleak inside.
Like last night, I dreamt about my daughter when she was a tiny baby, not old enough to support her own head. She was locked inside a car. I couldn’t get in to get her out. Someone had put her in a car seat but not strapped her in properly and she was slumped forward screaming and stuck. It doesn’t take a genius to see what that’s about…but I am literally stuck in this kind of loop. And I need help to reach into that stuff. But I see you an hour a week – and there one hundred and sixty seven others I need to get through.
You say you’d like me to continue to write in some kind of capacity and maybe process that together. I don’t know how I feel about that. I wanted to share stuff with you and that’s why I let you into that part of my world. My writing a blog doesn’t mean that part of the process gets skipped, it’s not like because I blog, I then withhold important stuff in sessions, and I can understand how that might be seen as a problem. As I said the other day, so much of a client’s experience never makes it into the room anyway and this is for lots of reasons – so sharing writing helps. I get you would prefer me to write like this, to you, and not online… I just don’t know how I feel about it.
Part of me thinks it’s not a huge deal because I don’t write like I used to anyway. I don’t write session by session accounts. But I think the biggest kick back I am getting is the fact I feel like my blog and whether I have it should be my choice.
I get that you’ve issued this ultimatum and I get that it’s where you are at. I understand how from your side you feel like me writing would potentially jeopardise the relationship because you would feel exposed. From my side, I know that if I stopped writing because you’ve told me I have to or that’s the end of things, and I agree to stop writing to try and keep the relationship, then I think there’d be parts of me that would really resent that. Here, yet again, is someone with power dangling the relationship over me and making it conditional. And that’s fine. I really do get it. And to be honest it’s such early days that I can just chuck this on the pile with Anita and process it all at once… but on my own.
I feel like I am done with therapy now. I can’t do this to myself again…which ironically kind of means the end of the blog doesn’t it? So why am I having such a strong reaction to your request? Don’t blog and keep the new therapist. Or have a dead blog and no therapist. Great.
I was trying to think of a work around – what would happen if I made the blog private accessed with a password, and it was there only for a handful of people that I actually have contact with… but then that doesn’t work because they can still see it and I don’t think given what you’re saying that would be any better. Then I thought I could try and write like I sometimes do about particular issues, like eye contact in therapy, or shame, or the mother wound…but then that all is through a lens of my experience so that doesn’t really work. I thought about not writing at all for a while – because I really have been AWOL on the blog for the last year – and seeing where things got with us but then I wouldn’t want to develop a relationship and then have the same ultimatum when I actually care more.
So, I don’t think I have a solution that works for either of us and so that just leaves it that I’ll have to say goodbye. It’s not that I value the blog more than I do spending time with you working together but it is/has been a really important part of my journey and I just don’t think I can cut off that support network in the hope that things, this time, work out…because things just don’t seem to work out where I am concerned with therapy.
Thank you for your time. I don’t see any point in coming in on the 10th because that won’t change anything. I don’t need help finding someone else. I thought I had done a good job this time around, but I’m just not interested in doing this again. I’m sorry that this has happened but to be honest I think you’ve probably dodged a bullet anyway. I know you haven’t meant for any of this to feel rejecting or attacking or patronising…I do get where you are coming from. This has to be a new record even for me, though, I usually manage three years before it goes to shit!
Take care,
RB
So, there we are. I haven’t heard back from her – I don’t really expect to as she’s on a break until the 10th. I imagine when she does eventually read it, I’ll get something back like:
Hi RB,
Thank you for your email. I understand your decision and I am sorry that we can’t agree on this aspect of the therapy together. I wish you well for the future.
Best wishes,
H
And that’s fine. That’s what they do isn’t it? It’s about the best I can expect from someone who’s seen me for eight weeks and doesn’t really care about me or know me. So, I’m ready for that. But there’s a part of me that feels massively disappointed about all this. I hate that I have had to choose between two sources of support because they are both important in different ways. It’s just awful timing, and whilst this is not anything like what Em or Anita have done, it is yet another example of me not fitting with a therapist, and my need being shelved as ultimately, we don’t have much power in our own therapies and the therapist holds all the cards.
I feel lost if I am honest.








When I lurked on WordPress, experiences of good therapy meant I literally sought therapy. It also meant I continued to seek therapy after my first therapist was a misogynistic, victim blaming ass. Bloggers showed me that good therapy is possible. I could never have entered the depth therapy I need (and still very much need for me and my system) if it wasn’t for WordPress. Sure, my therapist is nowhere as giving as some, but she would probably be seen as unprofessionally giving by some too. She also has never said I couldn’t write a blog and she had public social media for some time.
Hell, I know of a blogger (not personally but found a blog) who literally has audio recordings on their blog with a paragraph on each post saying their therapist knows of it and thinks it’s alright.
Plus you are so right on the asymmetrical power dynamics. Therapists say their job is lonely due to the need for confidentiality and yet they’ve dedicated spaces to process or vent.
What about us clients?
Sending you lots of care.
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Likeeee I wonder if therapists think about how exposed WE might feel when we know they can just talk about us in their groups and even publicly on Reddit etc.
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When A had been talking with her supervisor snout maybe needing move me on it felt awful. Of course I know therapists have supervision and need it – but yeah we never really know what they’re taking to them. I actually am happy to share my writing! It’s just such a mess. It’s the last thing I needed and I just feel like I’m in freefall.
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🫂🫂🫂 You’re welcome to email us if you ever want (even if it’s a bulk email to more than just us), we’ll do our best to read and respond. We deeply miss support on WordPress, it sucks that we are weighing our words a lot due to fears of unsafe people (eg family) finding our blog.
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🫂🫂🫂🫂 yup, you make sense.
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About not snout!!
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Exactly all of this. It’s very isolating for us. Before I found the blog community I was sinking in shame and just absolutely feeling horrific. To find people who experience similar issues to me and to see how they navigate that has been massive. I just feel so bloody sad about this as I never imagined this would happen. I’d have stayed silent.
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Oh no, this makes me so angry and sad for you!! I wish I had something uplifting to say. It’s really just rotten that Hannah couldn’t see what a beneficial tool your blog is; she made it all about herself. I suppose I understand the fear of being exposed, but that exists whether or not you have a blog. For some of us, these blogs have been so helpful and healing. I get that. I just spent hours over the last few days reading tons of my old posts and then reading her some old posts from 2018; it became a connecting point to M when nothing else worked. I don’t say that in a way to rub that in your face, but to reaffirm that you are so right when you say that this is a place of safety and connection that shouldn’t be removed from you because she’s the uncomfortable one because look at the insights it’s created for you and so many others. Again, I’m so sorry. Will you keep looking for someone else? It sounds like you’re burnt out on the search, but you deserve to find a strong support.
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I just feel like I have nothing left to give so far as therapy goes. I miss Anita so much and then this with Hannah has highlighted just how precarious therapy is. I simply haven’t the energy to start over again because – as you well know – it’s hard work and I need someone who knows me and gets me now, not in a few months time. I feel like I am bleeding out. I’m resilient but this is really testing me. I’ve been reading over my blogs too – and it is really helpful on lots of levels. Thank you for your support, as always. xx
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Gosh … this is so, so hard 😦
It’s a shame there couldn’t have been some kind of middle ground with H and the blog situation. It all sounds so big and I completely understand how terrifying it must be trying to move through this alone. Although … I suppose sometimes we don’t know how strong we are until we’re forced into a situation like this and the only way out is through. It’s so, so unfair that you have to be strong in the first place … but I believe you will make it through this somehow, even in the agony of it all 💛
On a slightly different note … and there’s no pressure to respond if it feels too personal or just like there isn’t space for it … but I’m genuinely interested and wondering about what you’ve written here re: your wife not knowing anything about your therapy things … I’m just … I suppose thinking that it must really exacerbate the pain of it all when you’re so alone with it? Does it not feel safe to share it with her, even if it were just a small piece of the picture ? … it must be so difficult holding an entire world separate from your life with her? … I suppose that is the structural dissociation stuff, right? Like, I know that certain parts of ourselves need very specific spaces and conditions to emerge and receive etc … but … yeah … I’m wondering how you do this huge stuff and keep it soo separate from your ‘adult’ life? Is there any room at all for resources and support in that part of your world? (These really are genuine questions and not at all meant to be advice-y or solution focused btw xx)
Sending big hugs and warmth to you in all of this. One minute at a time. We hear you and understand you and you are not alone in the bigness and mess of it all 💛
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When it went to shit with Em I spoke about it with my wife a bit, about the attachment stuff etc because I couldn’t hide it – when I walked in streaming tears, and so then with Anita she knew what I was working on – i.e childhood trauma and mother wound but I have always kept my therapy separate. When it goes wrong it feels like a lot to hold but then at the same time the world inside the room felt like it was a place where I could let all those very needy parts be and come out and allow me to function in my life still. She knows I am devastated about what’s happened with Anita but also I think she thinks because I had got a new therapist I had it all in hand. It’s complicated. Because if you don’t experience this stuff I think it’s impossible to really grasp how massive it is. I feel like I am grieving a parent when everyone else sees that I have simply lost a therapist who I pay to see. 😦
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Yes, it makes a lot of sense that it would be complicated 😞 and you’re absolutely right that it’s just something that some people cannot understand … through no fault of their own, of course. And it can just feel so much more painful and lonely trying to share this stuff with someone who just can’t grasp it. So I understand why you’ve kept it all relatively separate. For brains like ours, therapists hold and fill SO many roles at once. I’m in a masters program studying to become a counsellor, and even in this course that really emphasises the elements of attachment in therapy, even in my group of great, competent, and compassionate friends, I know that they don’t REALLY understand what the process is like from the side of a client who is complexly attached. I hopes, at the very least, your wife is able to hold some gentle, loving, and comforting space for you in the pain of all this … but I know that, really, nothing compares to what we experience in therapy. Although I don’t have a partner, I often wonder if I’d feel more lonely WITH someone who I couldn’t be real with … I guess it’s maybe the same hard, just in different ways … the lonely, desperate, longing ache that flows like a current through everything is the same regardless of the different spaces it moves through. I wish so much that I had answers … or some way to soothe the sharp edges … all I have is virtual hugs and a hope things will get even the smallest bit easier as time goes on x
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Interestingly I don’t experience this feeling with my wife – my relationship with her has never triggered this attachment stuff and my child parts just aren’t around. I feel securely attached to her. None of the crazy comes out at all – and it’s not through hiding it, it’s just not there. The maternal stuff got triggered in therapy and disorganised attachment but it’s never made it into my real life… which is a blessing, I guess. I always thought our attachment styles were the same in all relationships but it’s not like that with me. With my friends and wife I’m fine. It’s just parental figures! It is lonely having the pain of this stuff and no one really getting it, though. I hope things get easier soon. It just feels like falling through the abyss right now. I so wish I could see A.
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I wish you could see her, too 😞💛
Sending so much love x
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I am starting to develop a generalized resentment for the profession, reading this. Stop writing a blog or stop seeing me?! The fucking gall. 🤬🤬🤬
Sometimes, I find myself pissed off at just the thought of my t, thinking about how much power she has, how much hurt there is, how much hurt I’ve experienced at the hands of other ts…when we pay them to help. And then, at other times, I am really grateful for her reflections and perspective, even with the small amount I have let her in. But always, i have a simmering anger that I can’t even just go to a therapist like other people, coz I have all this garbage from a previous therapist to work through before i can actually get any real help. It’s awful and makes me feel beyond bonkers.
So all this to say, I’m so sorry you’ve had this experience. I mean, it was always going to be guarded and different, and you had hoped that over time, it would be just good enough – not such a big ask. I’m just so disappointed for and with you. You deserve support, and for someone to stick with you until you can ride that bike confidently on your own. We’re not looking for someone to be the training wheels (I think you brits call them stabilizers), we want to do it on our own, but need to learn how. It sucks so hard that there seem to be so few that can help us do that, without endless bruises, broken bones, and broken hearts along the way.
Sending care – feel free to email if ever you want. Xo
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It didn’t eat it. Sometimes, and for no apparent reason, comments go to approval and it’s not until I go on the app and see there’s a message that I can press approve – so never write twice as I’m generally online each day and then it will show up. But thank you for taking the time to comment on this.
I totally get what you’re saying because I’m so much in this camp too. I feel like I’d totally lowered my expectations of therapy and was being realistic about what might be possible after Anita. I knew it would be more traditional, less holding and containing, and generally I’d be drowning many hours of the week – but it was at least ‘something’. I just never expected sharing my blog to help move the therapy forward would create this issue. I really do understand how it might feel but I just don’t see how you mandate this as a condition of therapy. I feel like I’ve just been totally steamrollered.
I feel like, yet again but in a different way, I’m too much.
Tbh I just feel like sobbing on the floor with bruises and broken bones is all that I can expect now. When it comes down to it no one really can go the distance.
I feel like a right miserable git but I’ve run out of energy. I’d had such high hopes for this summer break after a really hard going few months and yet here I am – totally fucked.
Therapists ought to be kept away from people like us- they do more harm than good.
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I think WordPress ate my last response 😕. Will try again… But sending care in the meantime. I feel so angry and sad and disappointed with, and for you.
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Oh UGH. I have no words except ugh. Therapists suck. The end. 😤😂 sending love. I know it’s so awful. Going to email you when my brain gives me some functioning cells. 💞
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If you work out where the functioning cells are can you give me the heads up? I’m decidedly out of them 😵💫
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Yep as soon as one shows up I’ll split it in half and send it your way 🧠
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Thank you so much 😂
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I’m so sorry to hear that things are so hard right now and that starting with a new therapist has been plain sailing.
I absolutely believe that losing a therapist you were so dearly attached to can be as painful as losing a loved one like a parent. Yet without the validation from others and ability to speak about it openly or can be even more painful .
I know I’m in the minority here but I think it’s okay for your therapist to not want to work with someone who has disclosed they write in-depth blog posts about their session even if you don’t mention them by name. I mean if roles were reversed and your therapist shared that they wrote a blog but details were hidden I’d expect you to be able to make the same decision and for her to respect that boundary. It absolutely still sucks though and I only wish for you that the conversation came up in the first session so that you didn’t have to experience more pain and suffering. Perhaps it is something worth sharing in the intake sessions with any future therapist. I hope I don’t sound unempathic because I really do appreciate how hard this must all be and I hope things get a little less painful with each passing day
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Oh I think she absolutely can make that choice- however I think she should have done it in week 2 when she knew about the blog and read a post, or the next weeks when she read more and more… rather than in week 8. It would have saved us both time and energy…and £400!
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