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Poohbah
Member Since Nov 2017
Location: United States
Posts: 1,332
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#1
I’m wondering when the transference will stop. In particular, I’m wondering about the strong desire for email responses from my T despite the fact that he’s made it clear he won’t reply (but will willingly read) and despite the fact that I can respect this boundary at least on a logical, adult level.
I had an a-ha moment this weekend where I genuinely felt like I was mourning the loss of my mother who is very much alive, just not available to me emotionally. I had a brief moment where I imagined her telling me something unequivocally positive and mom-like and it made me genuinely sad to realize I won’t get that from her because she’s not capable. I cried about it and it even felt cathartic. Later I realized that what I imagined wanting from her (a positive response) was exactly what I have been longing for from my T. This felt like a huge revelation. I would think that this would allow me outgrow that young sort of obsessive desire for email replies from my T. Will that happen eventually? Because despite having this realization, I think I still kind of feel like I’d like him to respond. I want him to respond in a way that I’d like my mom to respond. I’m hoping that this experience and realization will help me move past this, but I’m not sure and would welcome any thought. |
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Anonymous56789, LonesomeTonight, SlumberKitty
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Jun 2012
Location: USA
Posts: 3,515
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#2
Once I connected up the pain at being rejected by my last T with the unconscious, now conscious, pain of being/feeling of rejected by my female relatives, I have been able, after 2 years and experiences of being non-rejected here and in a support group, to move on somewhat. Being rejected is not the end of the world, maybe, though it had felt like that. Or something. Though I didn't know I felt that way, until I did feel it, because it had been so unbearable, apparently, and hence dissociated.
So, I would guess, yes, wanting those responses from him may continue but the distress at not getting them may be lessened. AND, you may feel better able to tolerate the distress and not feel so much that you have to avoid the appointments, and the pain? Congrats on the realization and your persistence, including asking for input on here. This kind of stuff really ain't that easy IMO. It will be interesting, I think, how things are for you going forward. Please keep us posted? |
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Lrad123, Omers
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Aug 2012
Location: Anonymous
Posts: 3,132
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#3
It does sound like an aha moment about your mother. Not having a mother capable of emotional responding is a difficult way to grow up. But I am not sure (not like I can possibly know better than you, I'm just saying what I think) it's connected to the email.
It seems to me from what you have said that he is very nurturing and supportive, and emotionally available to you in session. If that is true, why isn't the session time enough for you, and how much nurturing really happens by email? (I'm assuming you and your mother didn't communicate by email when you were growing up. I can see wanting to repeatedly nurse at the nipple of the therapist fountain of emotionality and maybe that is what getting an email response does for you, but that seems superficial compared to what is available during an actual session. For me, transference has been linked to a current deprivation in my own life. Looking at that, and seeing what I could do to get my needs met by my spouse or others in my social network. When I did that, my transference simmered down. |
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Lrad123, unaluna
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Poohbah
Member Since Nov 2017
Location: United States
Posts: 1,332
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#4
Quote:
As for why session time isn’t enough (vs. emails) I haven’t figured that part out yet! |
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Anonymous56789
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Anne2.0
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Grand Magnate
Member Since Nov 2010
Location: Crimson cattery
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#5
I think this is interesting. My mother was not available to me as a child and T and I are looking at that now. My T though doesn’t mind being the “good enough parent” for me even though he doesn’t really get parent transference. He has said before that he looks forward to discussing something with me in session, he initiated touch last week because I hadn’t gotten it as a child, and I can see him letting me know he was there for me. I guess some of it is that he is a different type of T than most of the others (more like yours) that I have worked with. Personally, I am finding his nurturing to be very healing without creating a huge increase in dependency... well come to think of it, less dependency than the therapists who encouraged the frustration of unmet needs so that I would survive or what ever and heal from being deprived a second time as an adult.
__________________ There’s been many a crooked path that has landed me here Tired, broken and wearing rags Wild eyed with fear -Blackmoores Night |
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Anne2.0
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#6
It takes a while to work through these issues before the transference goes away. Your T will sometimes represent your mother, sometimes your father....
Something I've noticed over the years is many people don't realize how much impact their parents' way of relating has had on them. and what you are experiencing now is a good deal of how the therapy is supposed to work. All this is just unfolding in your therapy right now. It's a new phase after building trust in your T, lowering defenses, and navigating the initial resistances. You've redirected your focus from him to you-that's progress right there; a change that represents that the therapy is working. If I could answer your initial question, I would just give you my perspective that the transference ends when your past no longer has that kind of influence over your behavior, which is a process that happens alongside getting to a place where you are separated from your T and relate to him as an independent person. It's not a quick change by any means. |
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Anne2.0
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