“My patients tell me about their experiences. But I can’t tell...

“My patients tell me about their experiences. But I can’t tell them about mine. It’s frustrating. Like the connection is so close. Like we could be friends in different circumstances. But it’s impossible. I have a role to fill. The therapist’s role is to hear. To listen. To help without asking. To understand my patients’ problems, but to control my emotional response. So I can’t tell them what I’ve been through. I can’t tell them that I have no close relationships. I can’t tell them that my mother didn’t want me. That she abused me with hands and words. That she was never happy that I existed. As a child I was kept hidden from the outside world. I couldn’t speak of my experiences. I couldn’t express my emotions. If it wasn’t for the church, I would not have survived. The Bible was the first place I ever heard: ‘It’s good that you are alive.’ These are words that every child needs to hear. If you go too long without hearing them, things get very dark. And I didn’t hear them until I was seventeen. Even today I’m constantly fighting the temptation to be alone. It’s so difficult for me to form friendships. I must challenge myself to trust people: that they won’t hurt me, that they won’t make fun of me, that they like spending time with me. Because if I don’t keep fighting, I’ll spend all my time alone. It’s so comfortable to be alone. To become lost. And to lose the will to live.”
(Berlin, Germany)
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