| How
to Select the Right Therapist for You |
Raubolt Newsletter |
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There
are thousands upon thousands of psychotherapists in this country
with over a few hundred in Grand Rapids alone. It is, you might
say, a growth business (pun intended) but of course not all therapists
are equally well talented, ethical and responsible. Finding someone
you can trust to share some of your most frightening, embarrassing
and intimate details of your life, is no easy task. Finding the
right fit is essential whether you consider your problems large
or small. If you are going to spend the time, effort and yes, money
to learn more about yourself and hopefully live with greater confidence
and ease, then also spend the time getting the very best therapist
for you.
How can you tell?
I suggest you
start by asking trusted friends who have been in therapy. Ask what
their experience was like: Did they feel safe to say what was most
important to them? Could they count on their therapists to listen
carefully to what they said? How did the therapists handle conflicts
or disagreements that may have arisen between them? Were their therapists
defensive or more open and reflective? Did their therapists have
an agenda, perhaps feeling they knew what was best, a “one
size fits all therapist”? Were their therapists careful about
time and money? Were they on time for sessions or did they cancel
abruptly. Did they bill promptly, and this may be a surprise, did
they charge enough? These last issues, while perhaps seemingly insignificant,
are very important to the ultimate success of your therapy. If a
therapist can’t handle his or her time and money well, this
sloppiness may reflect a lack of self care and potentially problems
in providing a professional, therapeutic and safe environment for
you.
The answers
to these questions may help you decide the type of therapist you
want. Still you won’t really know until you meet with him
or her for at least a few times. One meeting may be enough to rule
out a really obvious “misfit” but sometimes even really
capable therapists take a while to warm up and for the budding therapy
relationship to begin to gel. But a few more questions to consider,
which may be helpful: How are you greeted? Too effusively and there
are likely to be problems with boundaries i.e. you become a friend
not a client/patient, too stiffly and there may well be problems
with rigidity and a difficulty handling strong feelings. How is
the office set up? Is it comfortable; is there respect for your
privacy and confidentiality? Is it well put together, not necessarily
with expensive furniture but not with “cast offs” either?
The office is the therapists “second home” and if he
or she spends a lot of time there it reflects who they are and what
they value. How attentively are you listened to? When the therapist
speaks does he or she have something important to add maybe a clarification,
question, reflection or interpretation? What is the therapist’s
range: emotionally and intellectually? Do you feel understood? Are
you treated with respect for ideas and with your time? If need be
can you see yourself meeting with this person for months maybe if
not years?
If not, feel
free to choose another. Don’t allow yourself to be cajoled,
pressured or made to feel guilty if you decide the fit won’t
work. If you experience any of these feelings you are probably right
to leave. After all you have many choices and it is your life.
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