On The Mend

My ther­a­pist has the curi­ous habit of push­ing his low­er lip into his upper gums when think­ing. He also has a very par­tic­u­lar way of talk­ing, and some­times I won­der if I could imi­tate him.

I went into my ses­sion feel­ing great, and left with a lit­tle more mod­esty than when I start­ed. I may pride myself on my self-aware­ness, but he’s always there to remind me that some prob­lems are root­ed in my sub­con­scious. While my feel­ing of empti­ness has dis­ap­peared, there are still a few under­ly­ing issues, such as why I start­ed to feel that empti­ness in the first place. He said that when we meet again that it should be on a reg­u­lar basis, and I should­n’t wait for a cri­sis to begin fix­ing issues. I agreed, but want­ed to give things a chance on my own first, armed with this new-found enlight­en­ment.

He approach­es my sit­u­a­tion from such a per­pen­dic­u­lar per­spec­tive. It’s always a view I’ve nev­er con­sid­ered before. When I first went to see him, it was for my anx­i­ety attacks. Not for the oth­er deep-root­ed emo­tion­al prob­lems I had (and was unaware of). Sometimes, I won­der if we’ll ever get to the point where he’ll say to me, “You know what, Jeff, I don’t think you need to come here any­more.”

6 comments

  1. I don’t think it’s being unkind or over­ly cyn­i­cal to sug­gest that those who rec­om­mend long-term ther­a­py may be doing so, in part, because they ben­e­fit finan­cial­ly from pro­long­ing the rela­tion­ship. It’s true tha I may be being unfair to your ther­a­pist and only the two of you will ever know how ben­e­fi­cial his lis­ten­ing and advice has been to your deal­ing with your prob­lems.

    Each of us can car­ry self-reliance too far but I like the com­ment by the late writer/philosopher, Bertrand Russell: “Passive accep­tance of the teacher’s wis­dom … involves no effort of inde­pen­dent thought and seems ratio­nal because the teacher knows more than his pupils; it is more­over the way to win the favor of the teacher unless he is a very excep­tion­al man. Yet the habit of pas­sive accep­tance is a dis­as­trous one in lat­er life. It caus­es man to seek and to accept a leader, and to accept as a leader who­ev­er is estab­lished in that posi­tion.”

    • I tend to approach any kind of busi­ness ser­vice with the same cyn­i­cism, but I’d say that so far, he isn’t try­ing to milk me of my mon­ey. There are def­i­nite resid­ual issues to be fixed or resolved. I would def­i­nite­ly start get­ting sus­pi­cious if I start­ed to dis­agree with his assess­ments but he con­tin­ued to push for more ses­sions.

  2. They are use­ful, though, aren’t they? I’d have one for life if I could afford it.

    • Yes, they’re very use­ful. Hopefully, your ther­a­pist would be good enough that you’d have res­o­lu­tion at some point and would­n’t need him for life though!

  3. I’ve just start­ed again and on a week­ly basis — at least, when I make it or her sched­ule does­n’t call for a dif­fer­ent plan­ning. I am anx­ious that any kind of per­spec­tive she’ll bring to the par­ty will uproot my hand­i­ly craft­ed about-turns when I want to avoid, defer or negate any issues. I wish I was “more nor­mal” and did­n’t have to go.

    • Nowadays, I don’t think any­one is nor­mal. It’s just whether or not we’re hap­py. Some of the most fucked up peo­ple I know don’t “need” ther­a­py, and some of the nicest do. At the end of the day, it all comes down to whether or not we can live with our­selves.

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