How Do/Would Therapists Feel About A "Perfect" Patient?
In the UK, they recommend CBT for people on the spectrum. It's mentioned in the autism guide for therapists.
To the OP, not sure how a therapist would feel about a perfect patient. Relief, perhaps? They won't have to put much effort into doing their job.
_________________
"A loaded gun won't set you free. So you say." - Ian Curtis

I tried CBT as an adult in 2012, and didn't find it very helpful. After 6 sessions, my therapist praised me for becoming less anxious. While I found him to be intelligent and sincere, I don't know if it was his CBT helping or me masking.
As for me, I was a better patient than I was 15 years prior, but still not perfect. I was on Klonopin at the time, and admitted to it. He didn't seem pleased, although he was polite about it.
ThisTimelessMoment
Deinonychus

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Trying to do therapy with the idea that you are expected to do certain things and not others is not really engaging with the therapy. A therapist can only help if a client is willing to work with themselves. Having an antagonistic relationship with the therapist is just a non starter.
I would suggest looking inside yourself for why you feel certain things are expected of you. Perhaps you are projecting some internal issue onto the therapist. It may also help to read up on "transference".
At the very least one should be honest enough with the therapist to say exactly how you feel about the therapy. And then be open to working through that with them.
_________________
Ever onwards and upwards!
I would suggest looking inside yourself for why you feel certain things are expected of you. Perhaps you are projecting some internal issue onto the therapist. It may also help to read up on "transference".
At the very least one should be honest enough with the therapist to say exactly how you feel about the therapy. And then be open to working through that with them.
Nobody said anything about antagonism! Adapting to your therapist is like adapting to any other authority figures, like parents, teachers, police officers, or bosses. Children obey their parents to avoid being grounded or losing their TV "privileges"


Adapting to expectations, a.k.a. "having social skills", is something NTs can do before they can walk. So why can't aspies learn it too? Which includes adapting to therapists, which leads to positive therapy experiences.
ThisTimelessMoment
Deinonychus

Joined: 15 Apr 2021
Age: 49
Gender: Male
Posts: 322
Location: South Africa
My point is that the relationship with a therapist is NOT a relationship with an authority figure. I can understand that might be the feeling one has if you are being forced into doing therapy. But to my mind that kind of arrangement is not great to start with.
A therapist is someone you are paying to help you with understanding the relationship between what is happening inside you and what is happening in your outer life in the world. Feeling that the therapist is an authority figure rather than a helper is going to skew the results that are possible.
There certainly are a spectrum of therapists, from good to bad. And if the therapist doesn't understand autism, that can be a huge issue. In such a case being honest about it with them is probably the best idea.
That aside, your attitude going into therapy is yours. You can change it as you wish. Without a sense of cooperation between therapist and client, there is no point in continuing. The relationship is the most important thing.
Please realise I am not being judgemental here. I have experienced the same feelings myself. In my case I finally managed to see that my feeling that the therapist was an authority had more to do with how s**t I felt about myself, than with the therapist. I was putting myself lower than him. Once I saw that how I felt about myself coloured everything in my life, I began to improve. The relationship with the therapist is precisely a tool for understanding that, so we can move forward.
_________________
Ever onwards and upwards!
There certainly are a spectrum of therapists, from good to bad. And if the therapist doesn't understand autism, that can be a huge issue. In such a case being honest about it with them is probably the best idea.
That aside, your attitude going into therapy is yours. You can change it as you wish. Without a sense of cooperation between therapist and client, there is no point in continuing. The relationship is the most important thing.
Please realise I am not being judgemental here. I have experienced the same feelings myself. In my case I finally managed to see that my feeling that the therapist was an authority had more to do with how s**t I felt about myself, than with the therapist. I was putting myself lower than him. Once I saw that how I felt about myself coloured everything in my life, I began to improve. The relationship with the therapist is precisely a tool for understanding that, so we can move forward.
Well, you kind of are lower than your therapist, and he/she kind of is an authority figure. Your therapist makes $100+ USD an hour. You make what you make. A therapist knows how to put a person into a crippling 2-week depression where they're crying for hours nonstop, with just one "perfectly" (no pun intended) worded phrase. (Which happened to me, and caused me to turn to alcohol and household inhalants at age 12.) You don't. And they wouldn't do it to a patient they genuinely respect; they'd only do it to a patient they feel is "resistant" or "immature". That's why it's extremely important to stay on your therapist's good side.
Therefore, I want to know how therapists feel about a "perfect" patient. Because all I know, from first-hand experiences, is how therapists feel about a "bad" patient.
P.S.: Maybe we're having a cultural difference here. Maybe therapists in South Africa are equivalent to shopkeepers, rather than wealthy, intimidating woo-woo wizards/witches like in the US.
MagicMeerkat
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