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Expressed empathy is so huge. I've noticed the effect when people don't react much at all to something serious. It makes the person with the experience feel like they're just exaggerating.
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Especially if the person experienced the trauma in childhood. Such people's lives very often are a search for what's "normal", and learning that what they experienced in childhood was indeed not "normal" is so very liberating.
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This is what made me realize I had a major psychotic episode that was anything but normal.
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I was 31 bfr I figured out it was not normal, unremarkable or good for my parents to have turned me over to the courts to raise because they couldn't be bothered. It took a priest reacting with stunned silence and horror when I told him. It had been normal for me all my life.
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@scarlettrfranks what do you think?Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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I went to a therapist & when I told her what was up she said “Wow that sucks” It was quite helpful instead of people sugar coating it It helps to think of how to cope when you can acknowledge the situation is bad
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I think some practicum coaches confused "non-anxious presence" with studiously neutral impassivity. Appreciate your saying this out loud.
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