I heard it for years. "You need therapy." "You should talk to someone." "You're finally in therapy? Thank god!"
And I gave the same responses. "Eh, it's not for me." "I'm not good at the whole 'talking' thing." "Yeah, but I think I'm doing it wrong."
This Tuesday, I got confirmation that I was right all along.
I have to admit, I've been doing a bang up job with this whole recovery thing. I've been meditating, going to my class, writing in my journal, reading books about recovery, being totally compliant with every damn intake I've had to do to get into my programs, taking my meds at exactly the same time every day, (I'm bragging a bit,), getting myself to all my appointments, exercising. And therapy. The life-saving, years overdue, "Mary, you need this," answer to all the world's mental health problems, one-on-one, talking to a stranger therapy.
Tuesday, I met with my therapist for the first time since coming home from the hospital. I walked in there totally hopeful, even toying with the idea of bumping therapy up to twice a week. Because, according to everyone who's ever told me I needed help, this was the key to full recovery. I got there early, sorted out my thoughts in my journal, and walked in with my head high, ready to embrace this form of healing. Ready to let go of my checkered past with therapy.
And I walked out of there feeling like shit. Two days later, I still felt like shit. Three days later, I'm canceling all future appointments.
I don't see the point. Having trust issues and being conversationally challenged aside, I don't see how bringing horrible issues just to the surface and sending me on my way can help. I leave with more questions than answers. I leave with different problems and the same coping mechanisms. I leave with my head down and hours of unguided, unproductive, intrusive contemplation ahead of me.
Maybe therapy shouldn't be just one hour once or twice a week. It should be 5 hours. Enough time to get through the idle chit-chat, break me out of the mask, throw the shit on the table, and figure out how to approach it going forward. Brain-storming, problem solving, crying, drying, and conclusion. If nothing else, after 5 hours, I will be too exhausted to continue the contemplation when I leave. And then it may not ruin the next three days.
So, that's my confession. I'm weird. Therapy is a giant step backwards in my recovery, and I quit. I'm not going to apologize, and I'm not going to stress myself out finding a therapist that is as weird as me.
I love you.
ReplyDeleteI love you too. :)
DeleteWhile I was reading this, I was thinking to tell you do not stop therapy and it is what will help you recover,maybe you just had a bad therapist, etc. Then you said going to the therapist brought all the things to the surface and then you just went home and nothing was resolved. This is exactly how I felt when my mother made me go to therapy with her. We would be having a good week until we would go and see the psychologist and it would go to the shit hole. Nothing was ever resolved in an hour and I would just leave angrier than before.
ReplyDeleteI don't think you should give up on your recovery because you have been doing so great! You can do it! Maybe you need to have longer appointments or something. Be strong, Mary.
I am certainly not giving up on my recovery. But I'm glad you understand how I feel with the whole "leaving angrier than before" thing. It's hard to explain to people who think therapy is a magical cure.
DeleteI'm considering now quitting therapy now. Maybe at my next appointment, I will go in there and tell her just how damaging traditional therapy is for me. Maybe there is something else she can offer.
Food therapy... :) That's such a lovely blog, I have learned a lot from here. Thank you for writing and sharing such article.
ReplyDeleteRegards,
Finn Felton
Thank you so much. It is so wonderful to hear that I am actually teaching someone with my horrible rants. I hope you keep reading!
DeleteSO many thoughts. I agree that therapy often makes things worse first. I am not in the same boat as you as I have enough emotional distance from my baggage that I can actually talk about it as if it happened to someone else... no barriers. However, first sessions are always awful. I pretend not to care, and I go home almost puking because I am so upset and it unearths so many awful things. But I feel like over time it gets better. I don't really know what therapy is supposed to do. I havent had any crazy breakthroughs or life altering moments. But I feel like its a good thing that I went. I have had lots of bad therapists though, and those were absolutely counterproductive. So, instead of real therapy, maybe you need a close friend or confidant first. Then when you can figure out where you need help on how to move forward, ask an expert. But hang in there. And if therapy just isn't it. Well, screw it. :-)
ReplyDeleteSo what advice would you give me? Should I give it another shot or two and see if it stays this awful? Should I accept that therapy is not for me? I'm good at opening up on paper, but even with friends, I try to put on a front. What I would really love is to get into some sort of art therapy. But without insurance, my options are limited.
ReplyDeleteI am not in the same boat as you as I have enough emotional distance from my baggage that I can actually talk about it as if it happened to someone else.
ReplyDelete