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10 Reasons to Run From a Therapist

 
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PostPosted: Tue Jul 08, 2008 3:38 pm    Post subject: 10 Reasons to Run From a Therapist Reply with quote

Selecting a Therapist Part III: Top 10 Reasons to Run From a Therapist
by Mark Sichel, LCSW


Sexual relations of any kind are inappropriate, unethical and unacceptable between a psychotherapist and patient. This includes any kind of kissing, fondling or lovemaking. The goal of therapy is often to help the client become more comfortable with intimacy and less fearful of physical contact with others. It is highly appropriate to talk about sex and sexual feelings, and it is even appropriate at times for a patient to talk about their sexual feelings toward the therapist. It is never helpful, however, to act on any of these feelings in the treatment situation, and any therapist who tells you it will be is either a charlatan, a fraud or an exploitative sexual predator who should be reported to his or her professional association.


Any other form of exploitation of a patient is inappropriate. Remember: You are paying for a therapist's help; it is never appropriate for a therapist to ask for your help.


While a therapist may use examples from his or her life to help you feel better about something, you should never become a therapist's confidante. You don't want to hear about intimate details of the therapist's life, their marriage, children, sex life, parental problems, or anything smacking of an inappropriate use of the time for which you are paying.


There have been actual instances of a therapist requiring patients to cut off ties with their families of origins, spouse, children or other important people in their lives. This is never acceptable, and should never be a condition to which a patient agrees.


Your beliefs, religious or political, should never be questioned, or construed as signs or symptoms of psychopathology. Beliefs and values are just that; they are never synonymous with emotional illness.


You should run for the hills if your therapist falls asleep on you. I have heard this happen to clients with the excuse that it is the patient's resistance that is causing the therapist to fall asleep. This is never the case; if the therapist is sleeping, he or she is not doing their job and should be fired.


A client or patient should not be kept chronically waiting for their scheduled appointment. Emergencies are inevitable and every therapist runs late once in a while, but you shouldn't have to chronically wait for a late, disorganized, or confused therapist who can't be respectful of your time.


If you feel you are being treated with contempt, disdain or disgust in relation to any of your questions about the therapist, you should look for the nearest exit.


If you feel that your therapist is taking a stand directly contradictory to your value system, you are fully entitled to walk out. For example, a couple recently came to me for marital problems because their former couples' therapist told them that the husband's having had an affair was "no big deal, and more common than they could imagine."


Sometimes people in therapy have insights, which lead them to feel worse than when they came into a session. If, however, you chronically feel worse after your therapy session, and you're not making progress in meeting your goals, you have every right to at least go for a second opinion, or begin to see someone with a very different orientation and technique.

Okay...so there are eleven reasons, not ten. But here's the last one, and it's just as important as the rest.


No therapy is magic. Any therapist who promises a quick and easy "cure" is trying to sell you a bill of goods. This is not to say that a patient can't possibly feel better after just one session, but overall, most problems take some time in developing, and more often than not, take some time to resolve.

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Kirsty
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PostPosted: Sat Jul 12, 2008 10:34 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thats interesting Changes and yes I can agree that most of them are reasons to flee! I have a question about this one though

Quote:
Sometimes people in therapy have insights, which lead them to feel worse than when they came into a session. If, however, you chronically feel worse after your therapy session, and you're not making progress in meeting your goals, you have every right to at least go for a second opinion, or begin to see someone with a very different orientation and technique.


I have often left feeling far worse than I came in .. I put up with it because somehow I have the idea that"it gets worse before it gets better" but sometimes I leave angry and upset and more depressed the next couple of days even though I went in quite chirpy. Is this something to question? I have told hm this but no response, well other than to take care of myself

Quote:
You don't want to hear about intimate details of the therapist's life.... their sex life


you bet i do lol
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cec57
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 14, 2008 12:33 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

My 1st Therapist feel asleep on me, we had been together for some time she also talked a lot about herself and family. I thought it was my fault, that I must be boring and that I didn't matter.

Luckily it was at the start of my level 3 where my own perceptions of self and my understanding of counselling were beginning to take shape, so instead of sinking down, I was able to, with the help of my classmates explore and see what was happening and end with her. I did try to explain how I felt to her but she never heard it or talked over me.

It was a particularly painful time for me and it will always haunt me, I did however learn a great deal from it. I believe it has made me a better practitioner today.

I have been with another counsellor for the last two years, we BOTH work very hard.

teddy Cec

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Kirsty
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PostPosted: Mon Jul 14, 2008 2:11 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I had a therapist once that kept looking at the clock .. I got fed up with it in the end, leaned over and turned it round and said "here you are now you dont have to strain you neck" she didnt do it again, but I never went back!!

My T now is brilliant .. but he's moving some distance which is a shame
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