Submitted by dumbass__stupid t3_10otfb2 in explainlikeimfive
Gluten_Tolerant_2 t1_j6grres wrote
Why have you seen 14 of them?
And what are you expecting of them?
dumbass__stupid OP t1_j6gsqrk wrote
Cant find someone who fits. Its been four years of trying to find someone right.
Weedsmoker4hunnid20 t1_j6gveck wrote
At that point, it’s definitely not them, it’s you.
stiveooo t1_j6guq0w wrote
In a few words, is to get better, perform better, live better, happier.
Is it that needed? no cause people can live fine performing worse, living worse, and living less happy, etc.
In the end most of the times it makes sense cause it makes economic sense, spend x money+x time to perform better the rest of the years is cost effective.
Like running with deflated tires, sure you can run with deflated tires fine for years until the car goes bust but inflating them takes so little time and is cheap.
Or living your entire life without shoes, shoes are not needed but you perform better with them.
canadianclassic308 t1_j6hh7o7 wrote
My guy uses calculus. I get ya
PaddyLandau t1_j6h9ajf wrote
I'm seeing a lot of judgementalism going on in this thread from people who don't know you and don't know your circumstances.
Everyone has had some trauma in their life; a few lucky ones have had only minor incidents that barely count, and too many unlucky ones have had serious trauma. Most people fit in between.
Trauma affects your brain, physically — yes, genuinely, e.g. the amygdala might be enlarged. It also affects how you make decisions in life, and your internal thoughts and beliefs about yourself.
Unresolved trauma, or keeping unhelpful patterns of thought and behaviour as a result of your upbringing, leads to unhappiness and, in bad cases, to dysfunctional behaviour that causes distress to both yourself and to others.
The purpose of therapy is to undo the damage (although you can't undo physical changes to your brain, your brain is "plastic" and you can overcome it) to allow you to lead a better life — happier, more fulfilled, and a part of society.
If you've seen 14 therapists and none of them has helped, either you are seeing the wrong type of therapists (there are different types who use different methods), or you have a deep internal fear of changing your thoughts and behaviour. Or maybe both.
I wish you the best of luck in finding someone suitable for you.
DigitalSteven1 t1_j6h23hj wrote
It honestly sounds like you don't want them to help. A big part of therapy is believing that therapy can work... If you have a negative feedback loop of believing that therapy never works, it's never going to work. A big part of this is actually understanding your reasoning for wanting to see a therapist.
InconsolableDreams t1_j6h5ijg wrote
It's not really going to be the therapist to "sort you out", it's still going to be you who does all the work. Specially the first visits will be extremely uncomfortable because you have to face things you don't want to face. Face the problems that you need to work on, and realize that it really is you who needs to do the work. It can be very frustrating at first. But the therapist is there to give you the tools and keep motivating you, you still have to be the one going back time after time.
There are no miracle solutions or magic pills, it's all just tools so you can help yourself.
Tfresa t1_j6hfys2 wrote
I was going to say exactly the same. It's difficult at the beginning to understand what you have to do or what do you have to work in. But you have to trust the therapist and also work on yourself. For me it was good to go there and tell him: "Hi, today I want to work on how to forgive someone because of X" or "I have feel like I'm the worst and want to work on that". You have to see your flaws and tell them what do you want to "change" or do better. They also can help you to see your flaws, but you have to be willing to open and grow.
Konseq t1_j6hkw62 wrote
Do you want to change things too? Or do you expect the therapist to "convince you"?
misersoze t1_j6hlqcy wrote
This is a very low cost solution. But check out the documentary Stutz on Netflix. It’s a documentary about Jonah Hill’s therapy and therapist and his theories. I think that will give you an example of how this works for some people and some tools that may work for you. If it doesn’t help, it was not much of your time so it’s a low cost experience.
[deleted] t1_j6gzn4z wrote
[removed]
Ganders81 t1_j6hpp2r wrote
I'm curious if this is a situation where things get uncomfortable and OP ghosts.
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