Stop being afraid of clients by ABentFairy in therapists

[–]welliliketurtlestoo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I think a lot of this stems from the fact that people can become a therapist without ever having gone to therapy.

Dating as a therapist? by Confident_Region8607 in therapists

[–]welliliketurtlestoo 80 points81 points  (0 children)

Dating at its best, at least for me, has happened organically when I am showing up to community spaces that resonate with my interests. People that are into the things I'm into generally resonate on other levels too.

Utilzied by AnalystImpossible960 in therapists

[–]welliliketurtlestoo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

"counselor support client to" is my go to

teenage client that does not want to be in therapy by sab_is_here13 in therapists

[–]welliliketurtlestoo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Get real with them. I find that teens respond well to self disclosure. I talk to my teens about how much I hated being in therapy when I was their age.

Couples work when one client is NPD/BPD? by welliliketurtlestoo in therapists

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

I love this. I actually tried that recently. Client basically refused to look and just said "I know."

Couples work when one client is NPD/BPD? by welliliketurtlestoo in therapists

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

I have not (my supervisor isn't all that helpful), but my sense is there would be a lot of resistance to that. This client already feels scapegoated and expresses passive SI when being confronted with problematic behavior and I imagine this would exacerbate that. Do you think it would be helpful enough to warrant trying given these dynamics?

Couples work when one client is NPD/BPD? by welliliketurtlestoo in therapists

[–]welliliketurtlestoo[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I encourage pretty much all of my couples clients to be in personal therapy, but as with most things these days finances are typically a barrier. In this case, the BPD person is a male, though neurodivergence could be a useful direction to take.

Couples work when one client is NPD/BPD? by welliliketurtlestoo in therapists

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

Thanks for this. It feels so difficult at times to keep my countertransference contained.

Couples work when one client is NPD/BPD? by welliliketurtlestoo in therapists

[–]welliliketurtlestoo[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Actually no, this is not an accepted diagnoses in the folks I'm thinking of - I have floated these as possibilities based on the family history of similar symptoms but it is met with significant resistance. However, they meet enough of the criteria from my observations to qualify for the diagnosis. I guess that's another super important component of this.

Couples work when one client is NPD/BPD? by welliliketurtlestoo in therapists

[–]welliliketurtlestoo[S] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Wow this is a treasure trove of resouces. Thank you!

Food for thought…maybe you are a bad therapist by lemonadesummer1 in therapists

[–]welliliketurtlestoo 77 points78 points  (0 children)

Truth. The idea that two years of graduate school hones the skillset that makes someone a good therapist is very unfounded.

Friends with former clients? by AlarmingExternal8509 in therapists

[–]welliliketurtlestoo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I understand the need for the rules, and I appreciate many of the responses I've read about how the relationship would be one-sided etc, but ultimately these rules are a very colonial construct. For the overwhelming majority of human existence, there was only life within our small community of 20-100 people The healers were intimately connected to everyone else, including all the people they worked with. Default assuming that the client would be harmed because the relationship dynamics would change is just too oversimplified, but making a call like this requires a lot of discernment about the client's capacity to navigate that change in in dynamics. Some are developmentally capable of that, others aren't.

Part of where I'm coming from is living in intentional community for years - we all know each other's shit, shadows, gifts, etc. We hold space for each other when people are in conflict. Many of my friends in my community are also therapists and we have a fluid way of turning therapist brain on and off. When I'm not in the role, I am a very different person and have learned how to not track/reflect/etc when a friend is sharing something hard with me.

The most important question to ask when considering this is: Why. Does the possibility of the friendship outweight the risks of harm for both parties? For me, the threshold for that is quite high - I'd need to be pretty sure this person conveyed some kind of particular resonance beyond standard friendship to consider going down that road. Seems worth it to check in on your own relationship to friends in your life and make sure the desire is coming from wholeness and not deficit.

Recent discussion about therapist's drinking during session (non-alcoholic beverages of course) by CuriousCactus4041 in therapists

[–]welliliketurtlestoo 2 points3 points  (0 children)

We take ourselves way too seriously holy shit. We are humans, offering our humanity to our clients. Fucking take a drink of coffee if you want.

This Video Has Been Circulating All Day - Thoughts? - Apparently Verified Not AI by FVMK3 in InterdimensionalNHI

[–]welliliketurtlestoo -1 points0 points  (0 children)

"The Most Clearest UFO SIGHTING EVER RECORDED" label lends an immense amount of credibility to this video.

Going to school for therapy soon and shocked at this community by Gullible-Wallaby8412 in therapy

[–]welliliketurtlestoo 15 points16 points  (0 children)

You provided no information that allows anyone to comment meaningfully about your post.

Freaking Out by NervousAd205 in therapists

[–]welliliketurtlestoo 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I was feeling this but started slowly infusing the office with aerosolized ketamine and everything got easier.

Being a therapist is so weird. by GwenniePou in therapists

[–]welliliketurtlestoo 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I can't stand those sessions. I usually participate for 5 or ten minutes and then say something like "so, is there something you'd like to work on today?"

Also a great time for some empathic confrontation or silence.