Many people don’t have any idea what goes on when psychotherapy is effective.
Effective psychotherapy is not:
FEELING BETTER when you leave the session because you’ve “vented.”
This kind of psychotherapy can make things worse by supporting the following misconceptions:
1. Venting improves lives and relationships.
2. The psychologist, because he can tolerate your venting, is a much better person to be emotionally intimate with than your spouse or family.
3. If people love you (spouse, family) they should put up with anything, including your venting which is laced with criticisms and claims of victimhood.
4. Having not been challenged to THINK, you leave your session more convinced than ever that YOUR MADE UP VERSION of the WORLD and EVENTS and the PEOPLE in your relationship system
–is indeed correct.
That’s where we’re going with this. REAL CHANGE is difficult because to CHANGE your BEHAVIOR, you must first CHANGE YOUR MIND.
Really. You have to accept that what you respond to on a daily basis is not THE WORLD, but the STORY YOU’VE MADE UP ABOUT THE WORLD
based on facts plus lots and lots of powerful ANXIETY.
Are you willing to challenge your own mindset?
Are you willing to consider that your spouse IS NOT the person you’re convinced he is?
(Now, we’re not talking paranoia, but going the other way. Is it just possible he’s a more caring, kinder, brighter person than you ever thought possible?)
What would your life be like if you gave him the benefit of the doubt? Jumped to the best possible assumption instead of the worst? (He’s late because he’s a selfish, disorganized, uncaring person. Or add in a worse case senario that puts yourself down. He’s late because he doesn’t respect me, because I’m a doormat, because I’m not attractive.)
Yes. I know it sounds ridiculous to think a husband would not bother to be on time because his wife was not as attractive as she used to be–but somebody’s buying all those exercise machines, programed meals, four stage cosmetic routines.
