This is the dumbest phrase ever and my guess is you’re a therapist 🤣 |
Totally. Most aren’t but are too addicted to the bank roll to stop. It’s a shameful profession in many ways |
My work with my therapist was life saving as changing for me and I dare say my kids lives too regarding how I parent |
Hi therapist! |
therapy doesn't help anything. It's a scam. |
I just think therapists have no accountability whatsoever and the impetus to keep delivering ‘services’ without any benefit is too great for 99.99 percent of them. I know everyone hates insurance companies but at least they try to keep therapy on track somewhat. Otherwise pretty much every therapist I know will be more than happy to keep seeing a patient for year after year. |
Oh and of course if you say it didn’t help, it’s your fault and you weren’t open to it. Or you just didn’t find the right therapist. Again, the fault of the patient and too bad they spent thousands on a useless service |
My therapist helped me when I wanted to end my life. |
Start with a neuropsych test for you or whomever you live with who suspect has a disorder. Then do targeted therapy for any Dx there. Anxiety and depression can be common acute things. But if chronic there is usually an underlying primary DSM diagnosis to find. |
Use phd psychologist therapists in specialties that match your Dx. |
They should be giving you little new habits or things to do each month as work, and you need to ACTuALLY DO THEM! |
Same. It only caused more harm and damage than it helped. Plus it cost a ton of money. |
DP here, who also trained to be a therapist. I spent two years in grad school, 4.0 GPA (which was shockingly easy to attain, compared to my engineering undergrad), completed 3 internships with glowing reviews, and was 95% done with the program. However, a little reading is a dangerous thing. I read the text books, but I also read lots of unassigned journal articles on psychotherapy research, on bioethics, and related topics. Finally I had to admit that there was nothing behind the curtain. Sure, people are helped by a sympathetic ear. Until 100 years ago, that kind of person was called a "friend" in English. Probably similar terms in other languages, I can't help but guess. For spiritual issues, someone could go to a priest, minister, rabbi, imam, etc. For medical issues, someone could go to a medical doctor. You get the idea. The difference between me and a lot of the other students is that I had an existing low six-figure career I could return to. For a lot of them it was either finish this or work at Whole Foods. And for some, it was finish the program AND work at Whole Foods. Of the people I saw in internships, 70% just needed to speak honestly with a friend, 20% needed to talk to a spiritual advisor, and 10% needed a physician. |
A stranger on the bridge would have helped. Some people just love to trauma dump, and therapists are there to take your whining and your money. If you have decent relationships, you don't need to pay someone to listen to you. |
Bravo! Mike-drop post. |