Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Therapists are not supposed to judge.
A therapist will not discuss anything with your spouse without your consent.
If you end up divorcing, your spouse can request access to your file and the information in it can be used against you.
Ever heard of HIPPA?
I am a healthcare attorney, not a family law attorney so take this with a grain of salt. All HIPAA means is they can't disclose without your consent. But if you place your mental health in dispute in a legal proceedings you have consented to disclosure. I could see this being discoverable to a cheated on spouse if you claim emotional distress as a reason to end the marriage etc
Right, but the information becomes discoverable b/c of your choice to put your mental health in dispute, not simply b/c spouse decides they'd like to see your record.
Your spouse can claim that you have mental illness and include it in the discovery process.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any therapist worth their salt will urge you to come clean with your spouse and end the affair.
But I agree, you can’t really benefit from therapy when you’re hiding such a massive secret from your therapist. You’re not tackling the underlying issues.
Lol, you know jack about therapy, clearly. Any therapist worth their salt does not offer judgment or recommendations on stuff like this. It’s not your BFF.
As for OP’s question, yes I have discussed this with mine. To be honest I’d also love to have sex with my therapist. So there’s that as well.
The sad thing is you still can't figure out why you're in therapy. Stop all the dysfunctional behavior, raise the bar and odds are you might get well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Therapists are not supposed to judge.
A therapist will not discuss anything with your spouse without your consent.
If you end up divorcing, your spouse can request access to your file and the information in it can be used against you.
Ever heard of HIPPA?
I am a healthcare attorney, not a family law attorney so take this with a grain of salt. All HIPAA means is they can't disclose without your consent. But if you place your mental health in dispute in a legal proceedings you have consented to disclosure. I could see this being discoverable to a cheated on spouse if you claim emotional distress as a reason to end the marriage etc
Right, but the information becomes discoverable b/c of your choice to put your mental health in dispute, not simply b/c spouse decides they'd like to see your record.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any therapist worth their salt will urge you to come clean with your spouse and end the affair.
But I agree, you can’t really benefit from therapy when you’re hiding such a massive secret from your therapist. You’re not tackling the underlying issues.
Lol, you know jack about therapy, clearly. Any therapist worth their salt does not offer judgment or recommendations on stuff like this. It’s not your BFF.
As for OP’s question, yes I have discussed this with mine. To be honest I’d also love to have sex with my therapist. So there’s that as well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Therapists are not supposed to judge.
A therapist will not discuss anything with your spouse without your consent.
If you end up divorcing, your spouse can request access to your file and the information in it can be used against you.
Ever heard of HIPPA?
I am a healthcare attorney, not a family law attorney so take this with a grain of salt. All HIPAA means is they can't disclose without your consent. But if you place your mental health in dispute in a legal proceedings you have consented to disclosure. I could see this being discoverable to a cheated on spouse if you claim emotional distress as a reason to end the marriage etc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you're projecting. You're feeling pretty darn guilty about this affair, and you're attributing all the judgment to a (hypothetical) therapist.
You're at war with yourself. You need some therapy.
LOL. When Dumb Posters Think They’re Smart.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Therapists are not supposed to judge.
A therapist will not discuss anything with your spouse without your consent.
If you end up divorcing, your spouse can request access to your file and the information in it can be used against you.
Ever heard of HIPPA?
I am a healthcare attorney, not a family law attorney so take this with a grain of salt. All HIPAA means is they can't disclose without your consent. But if you place your mental health in dispute in a legal proceedings you have consented to disclosure. I could see this being discoverable to a cheated on spouse if you claim emotional distress as a reason to end the marriage etc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Therapists are not supposed to judge.
A therapist will not discuss anything with your spouse without your consent.
If you end up divorcing, your spouse can request access to your file and the information in it can be used against you.
Ever heard of HIPPA?
Anonymous wrote:OP, you're projecting. You're feeling pretty darn guilty about this affair, and you're attributing all the judgment to a (hypothetical) therapist.
You're at war with yourself. You need some therapy.
Anonymous wrote:Any therapist worth their salt will urge you to come clean with your spouse and end the affair.
But I agree, you can’t really benefit from therapy when you’re hiding such a massive secret from your therapist. You’re not tackling the underlying issues.
Anonymous wrote:Therapists are not supposed to judge.
A therapist will not discuss anything with your spouse without your consent.
If you end up divorcing, your spouse can request access to your file and the information in it can be used against you.
Anonymous wrote:Therapists are not supposed to judge.
A therapist will not discuss anything with your spouse without your consent.
If you end up divorcing, your spouse can request access to your file and the information in it can be used against you.