Dear A, It’s been Two Years…

Dear A,

It’s hard to believe that it’s two years since the Anita that I knew and loved was last properly in the room with me. It’s two years this weekend since you went off on your holiday for your birthday, full of reassurances, telling me that “nothing will change” and that you would be “coming back” and that you “love(d) me very much”. Little did I know, then, what would happen to us barely two weeks later. Little did I know you’d never properly come back to me. Had I have known you would pull the plug on us, on me, I would have made more of an effort to take in those last moments of feeling (relatively) safe and held.

I would have taken so many mental pictures of the room, and of you, and tried so much harder to commit the feelings of connection and safety to memory so that I could refer back to them and use them to soothe all the hurting parts of me later down the line. I would have breathed your familiar smell in, carefully listened for your slow, steady heartbeat all the while soaking up every last second of feeling safe in the moment because I can count on one hand the times that I have managed to settle my nervous system since we ended.

Having said that, I think it’s actually all the memories of the connected moments that now hurt me the most. I find it so difficult to sit in this place where I know what we had, how it felt, how you made me feel…and to now be here – it’s all gone… Of course, I have so much of ‘us’ evidenced in my writing and in voice recordings as ‘proof’ but I can’t bear to read back over my blogs or listen to our sessions anymore.

It hurts, too, that the tangible items that you gave me, gifts and transitional objects, now only bring me pain. On the one hand they serve as evidence that we really did exist for a moment in time, well three-and-a half years, but on the other hand that no matter how much “love and care” there was, it wasn’t enough to make you stay. We don’t exist in the here and now and it breaks my heart.

Sometimes I wonder if there was anything I could have said or done differently in those last sessions before your holiday? Could I have said something to pull at your heart enough so that you wouldn’t have ever considered leaving me in the first place? It’s hard to know. I spent months saying ‘less’ and hiding myself away, trying to give you space for fear of being too much because I knew that you weren’t well and things were hard in your personal life…as it was I ended up being “too much” and “not enough” all at the same time regardless of my best efforts to behave in the right way.

When you came back from your trip you were not the same Anita. From the moment I walked in the door I knew something was wrong and it took less than five minutes for you to say, “I’m going to have to bring the counselling with you to an end” and that you were ending with all your “long-term clients”. It’s funny. It’s so much easier to say “counselling” rather than “relationship” and for you to refer to me now as a “client” rather than “RB”. It’s easier to say “I need to cut the stress out of my life” rather than “I am cutting you from my life.”

For someone with the kind of wounding I have, and the issues around rejection and abandonment I struggle with, the way you handled our ending…or should I say ‘not ending’ (?!) couldn’t have been worse.

The day you told me we needed to end, you broke down, there was a complete role reversal, and you even said, “This is meant to be your session not mine.” And yet, I still paid you for it – and for all of those ridiculous sessions where my heart was basically being emotionally stomped all over in hobnail boots.

I focused on trying to save you (not for the first time), because if I could rescue you then it would mean I would be saved too. At the end of that first bomb-drop session, you shifted and said that we would, “find a way to connect” and that we would “figure something out.” I left devastated but somewhat hopeful because this back and forth with you wasn’t completely new territory for me.

Looking back over the last eight or so months of our time together, there was such a lot of push/pull and it wasn’t coming only from my end. I absolutely have a wonky brain, and things get messy, but there is generally a trigger. One minute I was “too dependent” and the next you’d tell me that you “love” me “such a lot.” It’s weird being someone’s “stress” but also being “so important” to them. It’s no wonder I got more and more panicked, and more and more clingy because things weren’t really safe, were they? – I wasn’t imagining it, even though you tried to tell me it was all in my head and that you “hadn’t changed”.

You said so many times in those weeks, “This isn’t what I want” but it was you who made this happen. You chose to cast me adrift and yet keep working with your other clients even if it was because you couldn’t “afford not to work”. I will never ever be ok with that. No matter how many angles I come at this from, and no matter how much benefit of the doubt I want to give you, I can’t let that go. You chose to sever our connection and chose to maintain others. It doesn’t make sense to me. I get that different clients demand different things from you but I just don’t understand how if anything you ever said to me was true that you would do this to me…and to others like me.

You wax lyrical about the importance of ethical practice but I am struggling hard to find anything ethical in how this all went down. At the very least, surely you would ensure that the clients that you were letting go were safe, and had someone else to go to. Like what on earth were you and your supervisor doing when all this was happening? You must have been speaking with her throughout this car crash time. Surely, there’s a fundamental understanding that you, as a therapist, safeguard your vulnerable clients – I mean you do understand complex trauma, don’t you?

And on a human level…well, on a human level you just do better.

Perhaps I am just too sensitive. Maybe I care too much. I have always worn my heart on my sleeve and this has proven to be both a blessing and a curse. But I sure as hell know that if I had hurt someone in the way that you have hurt me that I couldn’t just let it go. I couldn’t just bury my avoidant head in the sand and pray that when I came up for air that everything had gone away. I would have to try and make amends even if the other party didn’t want to hear it. Like how can you sit in your therapy room week in, week out and not be perpetually reminded of what you have done? Are you really able to just blank it all from your mind? – I just don’t know how you possibly could.

I think this is partly why, now, even two years later I am struggling to let the last bit of hope of you go. There’s a little bit of me that wonders if one day you’d try and repair because this isn’t how we treat people we love is it? Surely, somewhere in you there is a part that wants a proper resolution, a proper goodbye, to know that you have repaired some of the harm you’ve done…because that’s what I would want if it were me.

I know that is really only the hope of a little part that thinks you might come back, the one that trusts and always wants to see the best in people…and ultimately the one that always gets so very badly hurt. It’s certainly not my adult self, because there is no way on earth I’d let you near my poor vulnerable heart ever again. Even if you did muster up an apology that acknowledged and reflected the magnitude of the damage that you did to me, I could never trust you again and I think I would even struggle to accept an apology now. I no longer respect you. In fact, I think you are pretty dangerous.

I know too, that I cannot continue to judge your actions and behaviour by my standards. You are not me. And whilst I couldn’t do what you’ve done to me and your other poor clients…you clearly aren’t bothered by your conduct. You probably now just notch it up to having burnt out and “stress” so of course you weren’t at your best…but that doesn’t mean you aren’t responsible for what you did and the harm you caused…it just gives you a sense of justification for it.

I have spent years and years waiting for people to change and do better – but the thing is, people rarely change. It’s a good thing then, that the majority of my system has, not exactly let you go, or moved on, but there’s some thick scar tissue forming where that open wound was. I’ve protected myself from what’s happened – to an extent. I don’t long for you anymore. I don’t look for you out in the world. In fact, if I were to come across you now, I imagine I would walk the other way and avoid meeting you because really, what is there to say?

It’s done now. You’ve moved so far past it and our relationship. You’re still working. You’re still advertising that you work with trauma and on a long-term basis. None of the things you said about moving to “couples work” or “online work only” and “no more trauma clients” are remotely true. And I think maybe that’s one of the hardest parts. The lies. Like why bother? It hasn’t protected me any. It hasn’t made it easier. All it’s done is make me question everything about what I thought to be true between you and me.

And where am I left in all this? Well, it’s two years on and I am still hurting – although not like I was. Anniversaries – or should I say ‘traumaversaries’ are rough. I hate the fact that once again I am super aware of dates and how they correspond to our relationship disintegrating.

I hate the fact that I have been a depressed, frozen, dissociative wreck all week.

I hate that once again I am left trying to process all this by writing you a letter that you will never see.

I hate that I will spend the next month struggling hard to keep my head above water as the various anniversaries of aspects of our final month together unfold.

I especially hate that the emotional upset is already making its way into my relationship with my therapist Elle. I am scared stiff that something bad is going to happen between us because I am hard-wired to look for problems and the slightest sense of something being ‘off’ feels completely catastrophic – and it’s not fair.

Elle is going to be away in May right at the time that it was all unravelling with me and you… it couldn’t be worse timing. She did ought to be able to go away without my wheels falling off… and yet there seems to be almost an inevitability that the shit will hit the fan this month. I get that I should be able to circumnavigate that, but when all my system is activated it’s so much harder to hang onto any sense of safety.

Part of me is so angry about all this. I am mad that two years down the line I am still trying to undo the damage that you have done. And I am mad that I’ve basically spent the last five years trying to heal from failed therapeutic relationships on top of the original traumas I came into therapy for.

So, happy birthday Anita, I’m sure you will have a wonderful time… I hope you choke on your cake and the candles set fire to the table cloth! See… I don’t even mean it. I really want to but the truth is, I still wish you nothing but love and happiness because as much as I wish I didn’t, I still love you. x

The Apology That Never Was…

Since last week when I opened the box with Elle and received the rather lack lustre apology from Anita my brain has been looping thinking about all the things she could have said, or should have said, or maybe more what I would have liked to have heard in the ideal world.

Over the years I have got pretty good at writing letters to my therapists when they won’t engage (honestly, it really feels like a me problem sometimes!) trying to process and get closure when they won’t help me with that. I think the one I wrote to Em ‘Kind Regards (And F*ck You)’ stands out in my mind!! lol. But actually, this time I need to give myself some words to move through the end with Anita when she very clearly won’t. I guess it’s a kind of written empty chair exercise.

So, Anita, this is what you could have said. Best wishes…or maybe…lukewarm regards RB x :

Dear RB,

I am sorry that I haven’t felt able to meet with you during the last eighteen months to give our work and the relationship we had the end it deserved and to return your things to you in person. I haven’t known how to deal with what’s happened with you and me, knowing how much I hurt you, and the more time that has passed the harder it has got to return to it and look at what went wrong. You know I am good at avoiding things that are uncomfortable!

I know that I have let you down and I should have done better. You placed your trust in me and I have shattered that trust – I am sorry. I can understand how being stuck in limbo for so long and my inability to properly engage with you will have caused you even more pain on top of what was already there from last year. No one comes to therapy to end up worse than they did when they started, and knowing what had already happened to you with Em I can only apologise for doing you more harm.

I know that May 2023 was terrible, and the couple of years leading into that if I am really honest. I fucked up. I lost control of your therapy and my feelings and things got really blurred between us. You should never have had to hold so much of what was going on for me just to be in the therapy with me – and I know that this is a total reenactment of how it was for you as a child.

I should have taken your advice and taken more supervision and gone into personal therapy when stuff started going wrong with my mum and wider family and I felt like I was burning out. Instead, I chose to walk down the path of denial ignoring all the warning signs that my life was blowing up around me and pretended for as long as I could that I was coping (in between my mini breakdowns with you).

I know you noticed that things weren’t right when I was in my ‘head in the sand’ periods and told me over and over – and rather than have to face the truth of what you were saying and feeling, I made out that it was you being too sensitive and wrong. I know I apologised for this when I last saw you, but I see now how my “you were right, you saw it before I did” wasn’t a good enough sorry when actually the last eight months of our time together was frequently an exercise in gaslighting. I am sorry that my avoidance of my own mess left you constantly second-guessing what was going on and endlessly triggering you. You were right. Things were different and I had changed.

I know that how I have behaved towards you will feel rejecting and abandoning… devastating… especially to the young parts of you whom I made so many promises. What has happened must feel very confusing for them. I am sorry that I couldn’t provide a space for you to be able to express these feelings and work through what ending meant to you. You deserved better than this – especially given the unexpected losses you have experienced in the past.

I have sent back your books today and I have included the ‘Rabbit Listened’ not because I don’t want it, but because it is a symbol of so much of the work we did together. Thank you for trusting me with you for all those years. I am sorry that you have been left holding so much as a result of my inability to handle my situation.  

I know that you probably now wonder if any of our relationship was real given how it has been since we last saw one another. It was. My love and care were real. I just reached a point in my life where I couldn’t cope with anything or anyone outside of my immediate unavoidable life demands and actually, in truth, I’m not even handling those well even now.

You were the collateral damage as everything blew up around me and that should never have been the case. I should have stopped my therapeutic work months before I took the decision to end with you and other long-term clients. I was doing a disservice to you and others and not working ethically when I was hanging on by a thread. I see that now and I can only apologise.

I am also so so sorry that I left you with no support last year knowing how massively this was all going to impact you. Given the type of deep relational/attachment work we were doing together and the frequency of our sessions, as well as the sheer length of time that we had been working together, I absolutely should have ensured that you had someone to help you in the immediate aftermath given I was unable to hold an ending. I should have made sure there was a safety net to catch you.

It’s not an excuse, but I was so caught up in my own survival that I totally neglected to safeguard you. I am pleased to hear that you were able to source your own support but I am again sorry that I failed you so badly – I should have done better.

I know that you know that I am still working and I know how this feels painful to you especially as I have not met with you to end. I can really understand how it must feel abandoning and rejecting to see my advertising for clients and seemingly taking on work that is similar to ours. I can understand that this would be really upsetting and perhaps even make you feel angry.

The truth is, I am ashamed of what I did to you and I don’t feel competent or confident enough to handle the very delicate situation between us now. I think I will only make things worse and set you back and I really don’t want to cause any more harm than I already have.

You told me that it felt like I had cut my end of the invisible string. I didn’t mean to. I disconnected from myself first and then went wild with my scissors and very little of anything remains intact. I know it’s not much comfort but this was never about you. It wasn’t your fault. I know nothing can make this right but please know that I am truly sorry. I hope that one day you might be able to forgive me.

With love and care,

Anita.