T
Tabitha1
Guest
The psychology books say that your psychotherapist is not supposed to deem you to be psychotic if what you believe is a commonly held religious belief. That sounds pretty simple but a psychologist or psychiatrist is not required to have taken any college classes that make him familiar with what beliefs his patients churches may hold in common. Also he is not supposed to show support for what the patient believes. This leads to a sort of thing where if the patient mentions a religious belief he will always say he doubts that it is really true that the patients church has that belief. He doesn’t really but he has to say that just in case.
It the patient reports that to their priest his orientation toward being subordinate to authority causes him to find something to dispute about patients understanding of what every belief was discussed.
For example, having never head of such a belief my psychotherapist says he doubts my church really believes Christ is present in the Eucharist. If he has heard the idea, it is likely to be from a source that says that most Catholics no longer believe that. To him that means it is likely that those who do suffer from a psychotic illness.
I go see my priest and he feels he is obligated to be subordinate to the idea I am imagining something that isn’t so about the Eucharist. He assumes therapists are always right and/or that all patients need to feel that way about their therapist even if it is not completely true.
He starts talking like that mine must have found that I have some common notions about it that are not true and lectures me those notions are wrong. Even though it is obvious he believes the Eucharist is the body and blood of Christ that never gets said which was the only information I needed from him. Maybe in writing such as in a book on the subject for me to talk back to my therapist.
I go back to the psychotherapist who has me trained it would be dishonest to not tell him the priest accused me of those far-fetched imaginings about my Catholic belief in the Eucharist. Being used to small close nit protestant congregations he assumes the priest knows me real well and as this to the evidence in my psychiatrist record that might get my HMO medical insurance company to finance more therapy sessions.
Because the psychotherapist controls the conversation, zeros in on that and keeps the conversation on that subject, he never lets to conversation get to the point of my telling him the priest agreed the Eucharist is the body and blood of Christ even if that did happen.
As a result he continues to believe my belief is my imagination. And maybe makes a plan to cure me of this psychotic belief.
It the patient reports that to their priest his orientation toward being subordinate to authority causes him to find something to dispute about patients understanding of what every belief was discussed.
For example, having never head of such a belief my psychotherapist says he doubts my church really believes Christ is present in the Eucharist. If he has heard the idea, it is likely to be from a source that says that most Catholics no longer believe that. To him that means it is likely that those who do suffer from a psychotic illness.
I go see my priest and he feels he is obligated to be subordinate to the idea I am imagining something that isn’t so about the Eucharist. He assumes therapists are always right and/or that all patients need to feel that way about their therapist even if it is not completely true.
He starts talking like that mine must have found that I have some common notions about it that are not true and lectures me those notions are wrong. Even though it is obvious he believes the Eucharist is the body and blood of Christ that never gets said which was the only information I needed from him. Maybe in writing such as in a book on the subject for me to talk back to my therapist.
I go back to the psychotherapist who has me trained it would be dishonest to not tell him the priest accused me of those far-fetched imaginings about my Catholic belief in the Eucharist. Being used to small close nit protestant congregations he assumes the priest knows me real well and as this to the evidence in my psychiatrist record that might get my HMO medical insurance company to finance more therapy sessions.
Because the psychotherapist controls the conversation, zeros in on that and keeps the conversation on that subject, he never lets to conversation get to the point of my telling him the priest agreed the Eucharist is the body and blood of Christ even if that did happen.
As a result he continues to believe my belief is my imagination. And maybe makes a plan to cure me of this psychotic belief.