Hi Jones,
I'm sorry for what you're going through, I know just how painful and confusing it can be. First of all, let me say that SG's response was very insightful and I agree with everything she said to you, especially about trusting yourself.
The thing that makes healing from these kinds of injuries are that the injuries themselves make it difficult to do what we need to do to get better. When you did not have good attunement or a caring other (or even more so were actively abused) you either weren't taught how to discern when your perceptions lined up with reality or you were outright told that what you KNEW to be true wasn't ("there's no abuse going on in this family"). So usually people with problematic pasts have a difficult time trusting their own perceptions. On the flip side, our experience has so entrenched the lesson that getting close to someone will get you hurt that we are constantly vigilant (think of a meercat lookout) for when the blow is going to fall and from which direction it will come.
So sometimes we ignore signals of danger we should pay attention to and other times we see malice where none exists. I spent a long time being very creative about looking for reasons to leave because moving closer to my T was so incredibly terrifying. On the other hand, you have people like SG or FOT who have had experience with bad Ts who didn't handle things at all well (or were outright exploiters). So how do you tell the difference?
My T throughout a long haul of being open about all kinds of feelings has always been very respectful and accepting of those feelings, even the ones that weren't so accurate. He has told me many times that the only way we know ourselves is in relationship. And that emotions come and go and sometimes they accurately reflect reality and sometimes they don't. So I asked him how you figured out when they did or didn't. And he told me "you have to ask."
You need to talk to your T and express how your feeling and see what she says. It may be that there may be misunderstandings that need to be cleared up. If that happens you'll know you can trust her. On the other hand, if you bring up being upset with her and she gets all defensive, can't hear you or tries to blame it on you, that's a good sign that you may be picking up on actual problems in the relationship and that you need to protect yourself.
I know that's its a terrifying thought to go in and be that open and you are risking getting hurt. But getting hurt won't kill you, it will just hurt and you've already survived a lot of that. And better that you know now before investing more time, energy and attachment in the relationship.
FWIW, I've felt the way you do on a number of occassions only to have it cleared up by talking about it. I remember once putting in an emergency call to my T and when he called back, he uncharacteristically rushed me off the phone (and my calls were usually only around 2-3 minutes). Things had been very intense and I was leaning on him very heavily. I was convinced that he was really frustrated and approaching burn out with me. I ended up sending him an (incredibly long, I know hard to believe
) email telling him my perception and offering to take a break from therapy if we needed to and I talked about not being sure about trusting my reaction.
I got an awesome answer, that he was rushed on the phone and he could see how I would see that as frustration but that he wasn't frustrated with me, he understood why I needed to contact him. And I should always ask when I felt that way so it could be clarified.
I would also add that one of the things I've most appreciated about him is that even though we have both acknowledged "transference" in the relationship in that my feelings have led to understandings about my past, he has openly acknowledged that my feelings are very real and valid and even that some of the attraction is about the here and now (while also assuring me that nothing will be acted on and keeping his feelings to himself). So I can see where calling it a "fantasy relationship" would sting. On the other hand, "fantasy" when discussing therapy does not have the same perjorative weight. Therapy is a "play" space where we have the freedom to consider things we wouldn't be able to otherwise. The word is also used to refer to things that simply are not possibilities such as having a relationship outside of therapy with our therapist. So it's not a statement of being deluded or immature but simply a description.
Just know that whatever happens you can come here for people who understand what you're going through.
AG