Advertisement
Do you suffer from chronic pain?
Learn how straightening up can ease your pain
Chronic pain management tips
Learn how straightening up can ease your pain
Chronic pain management tips
More DailyStrength




|
Couples Counseling and Abusive Relationships
|
Watch this |
| View More Posts Ignore |
Cut-and-Paste post from tooday's
Wolf's Daily Howl Greetings Readers and Posters ---- I said Thursday I'd talk more about injury, over the weekend. I'm going to shift sideways, slightly, and talk about Couples Counseling in the context of an intervention for an abusive relationship. [1] Couples counseling are trained to start from the presumption of an even playing field, which of course, is not the case, in an abusive relationship. [2] Few couples counselors are trained to recognize emotional abuse. Fewer counselors know how to intervene safely and effectively. [3] A slick manipulator will con and control most therapists. [4] When the target/victim in an abusive relationship brings a complaint, if the therapist misses the gravity and rolls over the complaint, the abuser gets much-coveted validation. [5] If the therapist misses the point, the target/victim may be abused a second time, in the session, by either the abuser or the therapist. [6] If the target/victim is admonished by the therapist, the abuser gets much-coveted validation BIG TIME. [7] Whether or not the therapist has admonished the target/victim, the target/victim is likely to be abused again after the session, as punishment for bringing up the point or complain to the therapist in the session. This punishment can range from the silent treatment to rage to mortal threat. [8] Knowledge is power. Inherent in the way therapy works in session, whatever the target/victim reveals within the session becomes a tool for the abuser to use against the target/victim later, at home. This can be any piece of information, small or significant. [9] The abuser will pick up whatever issue the therapist focuses on that the target/victim may need to work on, as evidence that the target/victim is the problem. Later at home, this will be hammered upon endlessly, and will become the subsequent point of all sessions. [10] The abuser will learn the terminology and buzz words of therapy. The abuser will then use them constantly to make his/her point and position against the target/abuser. [11] If the therapist urges the abuser to go home and express his/her emotions more openly, the target/victim is likely to experience an increased torrent of abuse around the abuser’s complaints. [12] The abuser is likely to latch onto a small issue brought up in therapy, change him/herself for the better, in relation to that small issue, and then point to that small change as evidence of good faith and more to come. The small change for the better was, in fact, an insincere token change. [13] The abuser will forever-after point to his/her participation in couples therapy, even if just once, as proof that s/he cares about the relationship and has done what s/he could to save it. S/he may even say things like: I've been to therapy and I'm fixed. These are my reservations about couples counseling as an intervention in the context of an abusive relationship. Have I left any out? IW (material copyrighted 2008 Healing Wolf Tracks) Posted on 02/08/09, 03:33 pm |
| 144 Replies | Most Recent | Add Your Reply |
| View More Posts Ignore |
Good one!
|
|
|
|
||
| View More Posts Ignore |
bump for Hummingbird
|
|
|
|
||
| View More Posts Ignore |
I completely agree. I stopped going to marriage counseling because I was afraid to be open and honest. I didn't feel like the therapist was doing anything wrong, but my husband was there to make me happy. I never felt like I could truly talk about the issues I was facing because I was afraid. I tried testing the water with some of the smaller complaints I had, and that didn't go over well. If the therapist told him something he didn't like, he just shut down completely. We had our good moments through it, but it felt pointless if I was afraid to be open and honest.
|
|
|
|
||
| View More Posts Ignore |
Oh my goodness. This site is wonderful. This is exactly what happened in what I assumed was a safe environment. Things I said and looks that the counselor presumably gave me were fuel for belittling comments and evidence that I was the problem and an idiot. Thanks so much.
|
|
|
|
||
| View More Posts Ignore |
We tried counseling once before and that's why i stayed - big mistake! Everything listed here happened, including the false hope where he made small changes and i felt everything could get better. Then things got worse later. He used the therapy to 'prove' that everything was my fault, and it worked for awhile! Now i've been told the damage will probably take the rest of my life to deal with. Anyone thinking about couples counseling for abusive relationships: Don't do it! It will destroy you in the end. Just leave and be happy your alive, some don't get out, you already won by being alive.
|
|
|
|
||
| View More Posts Ignore |
Makes some sense to me - thanks x
|
|
|
|
||
| View More Posts Ignore |
bump
|
|
|
|
||
| View More Posts Ignore |
In my opinion and research supports it, couples counseling does not work with abusers because abusers brains are wired in a way that is not flexible.
|
|
|
|
||
| View More Posts Ignore |
I went to 4 therapists, and none of them called him on his behavior.
After he abandoned me on the street on vacation, lied and went to a strip club, and wouldn't tell me where the hotel was (or give me a key), I told the therapist that it was "unacceptable behavior." She stopped, give me a shaming look and said, "Oh now...you need to be careful of your language. Unacceptable? That is a strong word that you shouldn't use." It was unacceptable. Flat out. I was floored and more angry when she said that. I almost left the office. Then they talked about his feelings that "made" him ditch me, for the rest of the hour. She seemed to enjoy siding with him. He actually said he felt "cleansed" after blowing up at me, and he liked that feeling. She didn't see a problem with that. I think some therapists are abusive also.
|
|
|
|
||
| View More Posts Ignore |
magnadoodle,
Your post almost made me cry, because it was so similar to my own experience with couples counseling. Unfortunately, marriage counselors today (and most counselors in general) are trained that there is no "right" or "wrong" behavior. There is no 'black" or "white". There is no benefit to placing "blame" (my counselor told me this). Well, this sounds all loving and cozy, but the fact is, it is WRONG. There ARE some behaviors which are unacceptable and just plain wrong! But you will never get a marriage counselor to say that. I then went to our pastor for counseling, thinking that someone who preached about sin and right and wrong week in and week out would surely see that my husband's inappropriate attention to other women and abusive anger toward us was wrong. Sadly, I was wrong. Pastors apparently don't like to lose church members, even if they are abusers. Many male clergy are frankly misogynist, sorry. They believe it's the wife's duty to submit no matter what. Christian/religious counselors are no better, as they are trained in the same schools as secular ones. I found all this to be the most disheartening part of my whole experience. That no body in a position of authority or accountability would validate my experience or hold my husband accountable.
|
|
|
|
||
| First | Previous | Page: 11 12 13 14 15 | Next | Most Recent | Add Your Reply |

Advertisement




Good one!

