E
everydayiloveyou
Arcanist
- Jul 5, 2020
- 490
So I have a bad case of social anxiety disorder, I've been in and out of therapy but every time I go, I can't escape from psychs who seem to be totally lost on how to help me and treat me like an idiot who has never thought about social interaction.
My last session went really badly, we focused on school, and how I'm worried people will judge me because I don't drink or do drugs. My therapist told me to think up a scenario where people ask me to go out and party with them. Then she said, "you can reply, 'no thanks, but would you like to go <insert nerdy thing I'm into> with me instead?'"
I was so shocked and frustrated that I started tearing up, like first of all how would I even end up in that situation? Also what kind of partier would be into doing nerd shit with me? Do you want me to get bullied or something??? LMAO
I told her that it would be a stretch to say that irl, and we eventually worked out something else, but still. This always happens in therapy! Only my first therapist was more realistic and focused on the basic components of my fears rather than asking me to say ridiculous things that I know they would never say themselves. Like focusing on walking by the places I'm afraid of and getting used to that before actually going in and trying new activities.
I get that I'm having distorted thoughts because of the anxiety, but I'm a grown woman, I know what's socially acceptable and what kinds of things are awkward and strange. I always mention that I was bullied over my awkwardness, weird hobbies, and looks in my intake sessions yet somehow the therapists think it's totally cool to set me up for failure as if I haven't already dealt with plenty of that.
I feel like they treat me like a baby who is simply overexaggerating people's negative judgements of me, but people called me fat, weird, ugly, dumb, annoying, etc., to my face! And this was multiple times with multiple people, at different ages in my life. I don't think I'm being delusional or unreasonable. Ideally I want help to accept that this is my reality and get real social skills advice. Like actual advice that the psychs themselves use, not what they think will work out in Carebear Therapy Land.
Anyone else with similar experiences? How have you handled it (without offending your therapist lol)?
My last session went really badly, we focused on school, and how I'm worried people will judge me because I don't drink or do drugs. My therapist told me to think up a scenario where people ask me to go out and party with them. Then she said, "you can reply, 'no thanks, but would you like to go <insert nerdy thing I'm into> with me instead?'"
I was so shocked and frustrated that I started tearing up, like first of all how would I even end up in that situation? Also what kind of partier would be into doing nerd shit with me? Do you want me to get bullied or something??? LMAO
I told her that it would be a stretch to say that irl, and we eventually worked out something else, but still. This always happens in therapy! Only my first therapist was more realistic and focused on the basic components of my fears rather than asking me to say ridiculous things that I know they would never say themselves. Like focusing on walking by the places I'm afraid of and getting used to that before actually going in and trying new activities.
I get that I'm having distorted thoughts because of the anxiety, but I'm a grown woman, I know what's socially acceptable and what kinds of things are awkward and strange. I always mention that I was bullied over my awkwardness, weird hobbies, and looks in my intake sessions yet somehow the therapists think it's totally cool to set me up for failure as if I haven't already dealt with plenty of that.
I feel like they treat me like a baby who is simply overexaggerating people's negative judgements of me, but people called me fat, weird, ugly, dumb, annoying, etc., to my face! And this was multiple times with multiple people, at different ages in my life. I don't think I'm being delusional or unreasonable. Ideally I want help to accept that this is my reality and get real social skills advice. Like actual advice that the psychs themselves use, not what they think will work out in Carebear Therapy Land.
Anyone else with similar experiences? How have you handled it (without offending your therapist lol)?