I am a PhD psychologist. DCUM is fascinating. We use it in class. |
Agree |
Do your students think you’re as useless as we do? Anyway, what would you tell your students here? |
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I was off DCUM for about a week while on vacation, and come back to see this thread is still active, which cracks me up.
OP obviously has no issues, no need of help whatsoever (despite seeking input from strangers). 20 pages worth of debating and denying and proclaiming his superiority clearly indicates how balanced and self-aware he is. Pretty amusing. |
And even though his wife continually brings it up, he is totally healed and perfect! The only issue was 18mons ago, even though she brought it up again just a few weeks ago! |
DP here - My parents are both gone now. I am able to reflect on their parenting and my childhood and can sum up in a few sentences the issues and the results. I no longer grieve and have accepted that both them and I contributed to our relationship. I didnt do therapy to reach this point. I became a parent and a partner in a relationship. Couple that with being a logical thinker and open minded enough to accept that I could be at fault. I am also aware of their parenting influence on mine both good and bad. I can reflect that some reactions to my children and situations are based on my own parenting. I have sought therapy for this to help manage the guilt I feel defaulting to those reactions and to work on ways to interrupt the reactions. |
| Unpopular opinion: not everyone benefits from therapy. I’ve tried several therapists and stuck out some of them over the years, but realized years ago that therapy doesn’t “work” for my personality or needs. I find it very odd that mankind survived many millennia without therapy and now it has become somehow paramount that every person attend therapy. |
This. I asked my exDH and new boyfriend to see a therapist because I was tired of dealing with their issues myself. Be proactive and fix your problems yourself. |
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I had two good therapists; one ran its course in three months and couldn’t come up with any more decent coping methods for me to handle my mentally I’ll spouse.
Second was fantastic, I read all her books on aspergers/ many relationships, did support groups. After a year of that things starting repeating and now I run some of the groups or loop in occasionally. I definitely got stronger and more rested and good clarity on my situation. I also consulted with a few divorce attorneys experienced with abusers and trauma, so I know my options there too. Knowledge helps. But I still have only bad options to choose from…. |
There is a difference between surviving and thriving. You do you. |
I am dating in my 40s. a LOT of emotionally broken (but fixable) men out there. A few divorced ones are emotionally stunted, I think. At least I know my issues and won’t spew them out. All by way of saying, I understand your comment ! |
And hey! Science backs that up! https://www.nytimes.com/2023/05/16/magazine/does-therapy-work.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare |