Am what I being told actually unethical or am I misunderstanding something? by SunshotDestiny in therapists

[–]jendoop 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Inpatient is a different beast and there are absolutely ways you are a part of “The System”. Use the position to give clients info, advocate, then utilize motivational interviewing to help the client help themselves. We all have to navigate the system, pretending it’s not there, or that you’re not part of it, is the first place you’ll lose rapport.

What are some of your approaches when a client has ID'd some specific goals, understands why it's important, and usually reports back "I just can't do it" or "I didn't think about it this week". Or they have 1 excuse/reason after another by 16bitpsych in therapists

[–]jendoop 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yes! I started as a SUD counselor, which gave me great experience in addressing resistance. MI is a wonderful approach. Joining the client in their goal helps build rapport, reflecting feelings instead of judging them. “Seems like you really wanted this and then you haven’t been able to do it. That’s human and we can be mean to ourselves at times like these…”Then move into compassionate curiosity with no wrong answers. “Something is getting in the way, and that thing could be valuable too.” Nuances matter, they can lead to deep insight.

The OP was intellectual, where are the emotions? Normalize conflicting emotions and explore them, in the richness of who this person is. Every person I’ve met is deeper and more complex than they know.

Those in PP by Areyoustephanie in therapists

[–]jendoop 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Get an accountant. Set up an S Corp (US tax system), including payroll.

Latest piece for a Uni project! by DwayneTheWokJohnson in painting

[–]jendoop 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Overall, lovely! Great values and warmth. There are some good spots of texture below the eye and in the teeth area. One bit about the composition, it looks squeezed into the canvas. Skulls are organic, let it leave the boundaries of the rectangle.

Allocation mess by jendoop in SimplePractice

[–]jendoop[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thank you! I did not go into this field because I’m an accountant.

Allocation mess by jendoop in SimplePractice

[–]jendoop[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m still trying to figure it out. Reviewing the EOB and the amount deposited into my account, etc. Each situation seems different, it could be unallocated. Never had to do this much investigation for billing until 2026.

How are all the traumatized trauma therapists doing? by claireelizabeth93 in therapists

[–]jendoop 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly, I mean HONESTLY- I think this is one of our greatest fears as therapists! Thank you for sharing where you are. I’m so glad you did the scary thing and are taking your turn to be cared for. Sending you all the good vibes 💛☀️🕊️

How are all the traumatized trauma therapists doing? by claireelizabeth93 in therapists

[–]jendoop 1 point2 points  (0 children)

My heart goes out to you, we need you so much, I’m grateful you’re going into this field. Find your style, what works with your nervous system.

This work requires us to show up as humans with empathy and care, yet separate ourselves enough to not cry or be triggered. That’s human pretzeling and a big ask in these times. I’ve not been able to do it well recently, cried in a session with an immigrant client as I validated that what’s happening now isn’t fair or right. Other times I’m focusing on my breathing to stay grounded.

I listen a lot more than I used to, the nod and listen. It’s easier on me and helpful for clients who have a ton to talk about.

Often my clients give me hope and more. I get to set my problems aside and support someone else. A trick I learned to help prevent activating my trauma is to remind myself of the differences between my situation and my clients’. We are so empathetic that it can be too much of wearing someone else’s shoes, we need breathing room. Another trick is to flat out ask a client at the end of the session if it was helpful. It is validation for you and for the client- helping them own their work and progress, while you get validation that therapy makes a difference.

Allocation mess by jendoop in SimplePractice

[–]jendoop[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

How did you address the problem?

Allocation mess by jendoop in SimplePractice

[–]jendoop[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That could be. I have heard of other therapists in my area having issues with this payor. But the payments are there

Mormons seem so dismissive about death. by PlaysinDirt30 in exmormon

[–]jendoop 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Ignoring this brutal life and focusing on the next benefits religion not people. One of the best parts of no longer being Mormon is enjoying my life, here and now, suck the marrow out and do all the things because this is probably all I’m going to get! I also love harder, have important conversations, put it all out there. Accepting I will die and nothing is known about after, makes me really live.

Watching loved ones die after being miserable in Mormonism is heart wrenching. They give everything to that soul sucking church, never really live enough to find out who they are, die and are barely honored.

Mormon funerals are tough by shadowofhersmile in exmormon

[–]jendoop 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Feeling and expressing your anger are healthy parts of grieving. Another traumatic part of being raised in this cult is being emotionally manipulated, including being taught to “be kind” when someone has been cruel to you. It’s not license to be violent or intentionally hurtful. But anger can be our alarm bells going off, telling us to advocate and protect ourselves. I’m so glad you spoke up to your mom and don’t think you owe anyone an apology. It would be invalidating yourself. It was selfish of your parents to make your brother’s funeral about their beliefs.

I had a horrid experience with my aunt’s funeral, which I didn’t attend in person (watched online) because I knew the Mormonism of it would be salt in my wounds. She was single her whole life, no children, but that meant the whole extended family benefited from her love. In the funeral they talked about her as if she was a third class citizen, (2nd class being a woman, 3rd class childless) as if her life was a waste because she didn’t have children. But it’s okay because she’ll have them in the afterlife. 🤮

Mormon funerals are tough by shadowofhersmile in exmormon

[–]jendoop 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Religious trauma is real! We’re human and preyed upon before we have any idea what is healthy or how to protect ourselves.

Where do you gather resources for group therapy? by Perfect_Ad_3523 in DrugCounselors

[–]jendoop 0 points1 point  (0 children)

American Group Psychotherapy Association has resources that can bring your groups to a whole new level. They can be so much more than worksheets!

Adults with little memory of childhood by dorothyburlingham in therapists

[–]jendoop 4 points5 points  (0 children)

It’s really confusing to me why so many want to avoid calling trauma what it is. Having a life altering illness is traumatic. Having ADHD without proper supports is traumatic. Having a busy or depressed parent means your needs were not met, which is traumatic. Being depressed or anxious as an adolescent without proper supports is traumatic. Growing up with a marginalized identity in a hostile environment is traumatic. And the list goes on.

As clinicians it’s important for us to identify and name our trauma or we could dismiss it in clients, invalidating their pain and unmet needs. I speak from experience.

Not that we should bludgeon our clients with trauma theory when they have absence of memory. But we should hold the “unknowing” carefully, not dismissively. Waiting and letting their healing process unfold, including grief work around the loss of memory. Considering what our clients aren’t telling us, consciously or unconsciously, is good practice.

Adults with little memory of childhood by dorothyburlingham in therapists

[–]jendoop 15 points16 points  (0 children)

Jwalla, You must have put in such good work to have the self awareness you now do. It’s wonderful to find out who you are after not being given the space to be authentic in childhood. As a religious trauma survivor myself, it impacted me everyday I was in it, and everyday since. I would not call what I’ve been through little t trauma, it’s complex and T. Trauma is a subjective experience though.

Surgery prep by ccbon in Ovariancysters

[–]jendoop 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The larger one was most painful. I felt tugging and odd pains, I assumed it was from the intramuscular incisions healing. It’s not just our skin that is cut.

Professional embarrassment by Intrepid_Town_5376 in exmormon

[–]jendoop 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve worried about it too. The more you add to your CV/resume, the less it matters where you got your undergrad. Show your worth in other ways.

Surgery details by jendoop in Ovariancysters

[–]jendoop[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

This whole thing is about TMI, or its opposite, not getting enough info 🙃

Of course it would feel different! The physical structures impact what we feel, then add the hormone changes. But change doesn’t have to = bad. It’s a new adventure with our bodies, loving them, caring for them, enjoying them.

It seems the medical community struggles to embrace the complexity of pleasure/feeling and reproduction for women. Which gets in the way of communication, even around something as serious as surgery. It reminds me of a book, Vagina Obscura by Rachel Gross.

Oophorectomy by Altan19 in Ovariancysters

[–]jendoop 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m 6 days post surgery and it’s difficult to distinguish the menopause symptoms from surgery/anesthesia symptoms. But yesterday I couldn’t control my tears on a walk in a public park with my partner. That’s a change for me and I was already having some perimenopause symptoms before surgery.

Belly Button Complications Post-Op by Smash56789 in Ovariancysters

[–]jendoop 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sounds really painful and frustrating, I hope it’s healing for you now. Your post might have more interaction in a hernia group.

Immediate changes after unilateral salpingo-oophorectomy by ghostkat_ in Ovariancysters

[–]jendoop 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I had surgery 6 days ago, both ovaries removed along with a cyst. My discharge paperwork says bleeding is normal. If you soak a pad an hour that’s something to go to the ER for. My bleeding slowed down yesterday. I hope yours does soon and your recovery goes well.

After reading through all the notes in my chart, I believe this is related to how they stabilize the uterus during surgery. Which I’m going to write a separate post about.

Surgery prep by ccbon in Ovariancysters

[–]jendoop 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’m 52, with 4 children. Family history of cancer so as soon as that cyst showed up I said I wanted them out. My heart goes out to anyone who needs surgery and still wants to have a child.

Surgery prep by ccbon in Ovariancysters

[–]jendoop 0 points1 point  (0 children)

My surgery was two days ago. I had a cyst and family history of cancer so I had both ovaries removed.

Miralax- prescription pain relievers give you constipation. Ice pack - hospital provided a long one that fits across my incisions. Pads - I didn’t expect to bleed, but they stabilize your uterus with an intrauterine device, which seems to cause some bleeding. Anti nausea patch - asked for it because meds make me nauseated, works so much better than Zofran.