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Picture of Kats
Posted
I love this place and all the advice. You people are wonderful.

Wow, 2 months ago I would never have been able to do that. Compliment anyone or even go out on a limb and say somethng like that.

This brings me to my question.

As we progress and make changes within ourselves, can we fall backwards. I mean the 3 steps forward 1 step back sydrome. I would really like to know as I feel progress and am scared to fall back.

Thanks
 
Posts: 100 | Location: Canada | Registered: 15 November 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of Wynne
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Katskill,

I did this just this week - the stepping back thing, and it felt like a full 3 steps back, and it freaked me out. After I'd been home with my 'rents, I got all anxious and not-wanting-to-go-outside again, a real return to how I was over this summer.

I talked to Tfella about it, and it helped - we went over what I did right to deal with the issues, and what probably set me off about it all.

So maybe I get a few steps forward from that. But yeah. 3 forward, 4 back, 2 forward, 2 forward, 1 back, 3 forward...

s'like Chutes and Ladders, I think.
 
Posts: 278 | Registered: 06 November 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of Just Me
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quote:
As we progress and make changes within ourselves, can we fall backwards. I mean the 3 steps forward 1 step back sydrome.

Hi Katskill,

It sure feels that way sometimes. But falling back sounds like regression and that does not usually happen. It feels like a step backwards I think because there are so many different levels we are working on at the same time and most of it is being done neurologically where we can’t see it. So while we make all this progress I notice that it feels like I am working on the same stuff and will remark “I thought I already worked through this!” My T always reminds me that we did, its just a new layer. –That’s my experience anyway. I believe that we reach a point of no return in our therapy. Once we've come to know that there is something different, something better, we will never go back. Not that we can never have upsets or set backs, but I believe those become more temporary. You know what I mean?

I am glad that you are able to reach out like this. It is a pleasure to have you aboard with us.

JM
 
Posts: 809 | Registered: 22 July 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of Just Me
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One more thing: I also think in the beginning we sort of wobble back and forth like an unsteady toddler learning to walk as we explore our new found sense of ourselves and others. So that can feel like stepping forward and stepping back. But just like a toddler learning to walk they fall down some, but they learn to get right back up until they master it.

Therapy becomes a centrifugal force in our lives where we learn to move forward. I hope this sounds reassuring.
 
Posts: 809 | Registered: 22 July 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of River
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quote:
s'like Chutes and Ladders, I think.


To me it feels more like a combo of Chutes and Ladders and Twister.

My T says that progress in therapy is anything but linear, in fact it is all over the map. It is a very messy organic process. Hearing her say that made me feel better since it was exactly how it feels to me.


River
"There is an eternal landscape, a geography of the soul; we search for its outlines all our lives." ~~Josephine Hart
 
Posts: 336 | Location: So Cal | Registered: 30 July 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of Kats
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River I can relate to that feeling of progress being all over the place..That is how I feel. In that regard how do we know when we have truly made progress

Katskill
 
Posts: 100 | Location: Canada | Registered: 15 November 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of Wynne
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I believe ShrinkLady has an interesting post/page on this: Tracking Progress in Therapy. Personally, the only way I've managed it is by keeping a journal - an honest-to-goodness, mostly-only-about-therapy-stuff daily journal. It's been going for four months now, and wow! It's terribly useful for gauging progress.

'Cause like the page says, once you get better at something, you kinda forget that you were bad at it. Smiler
 
Posts: 278 | Registered: 06 November 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Moderator
Picture of Attachment Girl
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I just want to add one more thing to alot of good responses. When we are dealing with issues from our childhood, often the emotions are primitive and intense and remembering them can make us feel very young and like we don't have access to some or all of our adult resources. And that can make it feel like you've lost ground when you really haven't. I think of therapy like peeling an onion, you keep circling around but going to a deeper level each time. And by the time you get to the center you're pretty smelly. Big Grin (Sorry, couldn't resist the last line.)


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Everything will be ok in the end. If it's not ok, then it's not the end."
My blog: Tales of a Boundary Ninja
 
Posts: 3300 | Location: Syracuse, NY | Registered: 23 January 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of Kats
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Thankyou everyone for your responses. This is starting to make more sense.

Katskill
 
Posts: 100 | Location: Canada | Registered: 15 November 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of Wynne
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*rant alert*

We seem to go round and round on how hard therapy is. One of us (sometimes all of us!??!) have a bad session, we come back here, we barely sound like human adults, we're reduced to gibbering masses of affect and barely comprehensible words.

And then we get ready and hype ourselves up into an anxious state and get all bothered and go back for some more.

And most of us _pay_ for this.

Sometimes I don't worry about making progress; I worry about having been crazy enough to sign up for this business in the first place.

*endrant*
 
Posts: 278 | Registered: 06 November 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of Just Me
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Love your rant Wynne. Big Grin

It isn't bad enough we used to get treated badly w/o "monetarily" paying for it, but now we dish out exuberant fees to feel this way all over again. Wink (dang!)
 
Posts: 809 | Registered: 22 July 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Moderator
Picture of Attachment Girl
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The only thing worse than going to therapy is NOT going to therapy. Big Grin

JM's right though, good rant. Smiler


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
"Everything will be ok in the end. If it's not ok, then it's not the end."
My blog: Tales of a Boundary Ninja
 
Posts: 3300 | Location: Syracuse, NY | Registered: 23 January 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of Kats
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Very good Wynne Big Grin Big Grin
 
Posts: 100 | Location: Canada | Registered: 15 November 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of jane
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wynne

you know when you "can't put your finger on it"? well, you got your finger on it now!!!it's absolutely the truth!!!

but so is AG's post: the only thing worse than going to therapy is not going....
 
Posts: 122 | Registered: 20 September 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of Russ
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Dr. LaCombe's quote regarding change in therapy that "the processing has been non-conscious...almost as if you were the last to know" makes a lot of sense. I've read this elsewhere, too.

I've always hoped for some sudden, dramatic epiphany about myself that would melt away all my suffering and make me well beyond my wildest dreams, but it just doesn't work that way. It happens, but it kind of sneaks up on you.

"Maybe it no longer bothers you to ask a stranger for directions." This is a perfect example of a subtle but profound change. You just do it without thinking about it. Then, you might think, "wait, did I just do that? Whoa."

That's change. Smiler


----------------------------------
"May the good Lord shine a light on you,
Warm like the evening sun."

-Keith Richards
 
Posts: 534 | Registered: 23 August 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post

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