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Reconsidering Professional Help

Emotional Help-Seeking

Once upon a time, the world was simpler. People lived robotic lives with cultural scripts. There were few decisions to make about how you live your life because enduring emotional pain in silence was a significant part of the script.

Now, the scripts are being rewritten. Living with unaddressed emotional pain is optional. Professional or paraprofessional help is available. Books, podcasts, and membership programs are available for minimal cost. Insurance and private pay services are options depending on your resources. Yet, many people refuse to address their pain.

I talked with some friends, colleagues, and even clients about their experience healing pain and why they thought so many people refuse to seek professional help. Highlighting these issues is the least I can do to help relieve unnecessary suffering.

Healing in Silence

Professionals in the field of emotional wellness work behind closed doors with little recognition despite the lives we save. Meanwhile, movies display an avatar professional helper and client that make seeking help distasteful. In truth, many practitioners do profound work helping clients reorganize their thinking and lives to match their ideal selves.

The most vulnerable I’ve ever been was sitting on my therapist’s lap. She invited me to do so after 15 minutes of deep grief sobbing. It was a moment that changed my worldview by validating my right to grieve. Yet, I never wanted to be reminded of it and thought I’d never speak about it again.

Stereotypes prevail because people don’t know what to expect from professional help. These are some misinformed reasons people do not seek help.

  • They don’t think they need professional help
  • Dealing with painful emotions is scary
  • They’re not ready to forgive
  • They need someone to admit the wrongdoing
  • It’s too expensive
  • They’re too busy helping others

These reasons are based on misguided stereotypes about an unfamiliar profession. What goes on in the helping profession is mainly unknown because people don’t typically discuss it when they seek help. So, misinformation prevails. If you have been using any of these excuses, you can finally put them to rest.

You Don’t Need Professional Help

I used to be a diehard DIYer. I take pride in my do-it-yourself projects. I am also the first to admit that they never look professional. It looks like I did it myself. From tiling my bathroom to landscaping and cleaning my car, the highest points are for effort, not outcome.

Reprogramming the mind requires a similar level of expertise as repairing a broken body part. You can tend to your sprained wrist without a doctor, but not your broken hand. Emotional injuries that impact your ability to navigate life with ease also require professional attention.

You may have a hypersensitivity to criticism that makes relationships difficult. A lack of confidence may prevent you from advancing on your job. Fear of being alone could trap you in abusive relationships.

Moreover, people like to do what they are good at doing. You risk perpetuating life problems when you become an expert problem solver. When you allow professionals to help you, you can release your identity as a problem solver and stop creating problems in your life to be solved.

Dealing With Painful Emotions Is Scary

Whatever you are afraid to feel will do more damage at the unconscious level than allowing them to rise to the surface. Not knowing you have high blood pressure puts you at risk of a heart attack. Refusing dialysis will cause death. Ignoring trauma can make you wish you were dead.

Any underlying issues can be supported better professionally than unprofessionally when you find the right practitioner. The first practitioner I went to focused on helping me express my anger.

So, I hit a lot of pillows and cried. But, I never told the therapist that I was angry and hated myself for not preventing my abuse. Almost 20 years passed before I found a practitioner who helped me address my problem’s root.

Many people withhold essential information from practitioners to feel safe. That is a trauma response. Specifically, it relates to a maladaptive attempt to protect your inner child. Withholding information, hiding, or being secretive may have been used for survival. You still carry that pattern. Ironically, silence doesn’t protect you. It keeps you vulnerable.

You Must Forgive

I have written liberally about the myths of healing and forgiveness. I know firsthand the damage forced forgiveness can do. I knew religious organizations, families, and communities espoused forgiveness at the expense of survivors’ well-being. But, I only recently realized that some therapists also proselytize forgiveness.

In the book “Before Forgiving: Cautionary Views of Forgiveness in Psychotherapy,” Holmgren cautions therapists to work through clients’ pain before raising the issue of forgiveness. There is plenty to work on other than forgiveness.

Quality therapists meet clients where they are on their healing journey. So being unwilling to forgive should not stop you from seeking help. A therapist should not raise the issue of forgiveness with clients unless the client clearly indicates a desire.

When there is no more pain to hold onto, forgiveness arises organically. So, I never work with my clients on forgiveness, not even self-forgiveness. I work on helping them connect and understand their inner selves and create healthy patterns of being in the world. Most professionals work that way.

If you are working with a therapist who forces the topic of forgiveness, that is not a normal therapeutic experience. Before you agree to work with a professional, you can ask them how they plan to help you. If they bring up forgiveness, look for another professional.

Confessions

Some people refuse to seek help for something that was done to them. They would rather see their violator or perpetrator in therapy. Victims sometimes believe that the one who does the wrong is the one who needs help.

They have a point, but it’s irrelevant. Even in the best-case scenario where the violator admits wrongdoing, you still need professional help. Seeking professional services does not identify you as the problem. It helps to minimize the effects of the harm. An apology may soothe your heart but doesn’t heal your mind.

You developed behaviors to survive that no longer serve you. Your biology may have been altered out of the fear. You may lack mental flexibility and have a brain on hyper-alert.

A professional can help you sort through the effects of whatever wrongdoing you endured. They can support your transformation even if you never receive any acknowledgment.

It’s Too Expensive

“You can’t get blood from a turnip,” my dad would say. He would tell me stories about being broke so I wouldn’t follow in his footsteps. He even once told me the bill collector retorted, “We didn’t loan the money to a turnip, sir.” We laughed.

One thing is for sure. You can’t buy professional help with turnips. Good therapists can be as challenging to find as good car repair persons, attorneys, or plumbers, and can cost as much. But they are worth it.

One of the reasons good therapists may cost more is because they take on fewer clients, the greatest benefit to private practice. Fewer clients means more focus on the ones they have.

To offset the cost of therapy, find someone willing to work with you for a limited number of sessions instead of having an open-ended amount of sessions. Lay out a plan and revisit the plan once your sessions end.

You Are Too Busy Helping Others

Professionals know better than anyone that making time for professionals is important. But, some people would rather help others rather than heal themselves for all the reasons mentioned above.

It’s easy to see the need in others that you never see in yourself. Doctors, activists, clergy, teachers, life coaches, counselors, and therapists can devote their lives to helping others while emotionally numbing themselves.

Counselors use the term “counter-transference” to acknowledge their tendency to bring their unresolved personal issues into client sessions. Still, many therapists are slow to recognize when it is happening. They don’t see their role in how little their clients progress.

Those you help will go further when you give them your best. Your support will flow with more ease when your unhealed wounds are not the motivator for your work. In love, you can be more present with those you help.

If you dedicate your life to helping people, you need no other reason to seek professional help. If you give yourself an excuse to avoid it, you need it even more.

The greatest respect you can show for your constituents is self-awareness. Self-awareness and a commitment to emotional well-being are how you make sure you don’t put your stuff on the table when you are supposed to be helping others.

When to Seek Professional Help

Healthy minds exist on a continuum with varying degrees of peace, joy, love, and laughter. But most people think about healthy minds according to accomplishments of wealth, popularity, beauty, family, and other external factors.

Having markers of success should not be a deterrent to seeking professional help. Celebrities like Prince Harry have spoken publically about his therapy. I’m no celebrity, but I continue to see a therapist and will only see a therapist who has their own therapist. If we value emotional wellness as much as physical wellness, we should have access to a professional helper. That doesn’t mean we should be a perpetual client. But, some markers should concern you.

Family history matters for physical and emotional wellness. If you have a family history of violence, sexual abuse, addiction, or relationship separation, you should understand your vulnerability to emotional distress.

The field of epigenetics illuminates the path generational trauma takes. Parents can pass down behaviors and responses to the environment in the most subtle ways.

In other words, you don’t have to be a victim of abuse to have indicators of being abused. If your parent is a survivor, you may show signs of emotional distress, such as depression or a high level of mistrust.

For example, my extensive work with adult survivors of childhood sexual abuse has taught me that they raise their children with a hypersensitivity toward safety. Unwittingly, the children may lean toward risk intolerance. Social skills may also be delayed due to the lack of opportunity to make choices for themselves.

Generational trauma doesn’t always mimic the trauma. It mimics the response to the trauma. High-conflict relationships, fear of failure, abandonment, intolerance to risk-taking, and an inflexible mindset can be hand-me-downs.

If you experience behaviors that are obstacles to peace, joy, love, and laughter, it’s time to seek professional help. Seek help because you want to live your best life. You don’t need a trauma story to seek help.

If you are concerned about protecting your image, consider how you mention help. You don’t have to say you are in therapy. Instead, you can share that you are seeing a professional for personal development.

How often you should see your professional depends on you. Your professional will have some input you can ignore or take. Unless there is active trauma, many people see their therapist once a month or once every two weeks. See them as often or as little as you need.

 

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