I was just curious how many ex-JW's are in therapy to work through the shunning, family issues, bad experiences while still in, etc.
I don't know, but I'd venture to say a lot. Please, everyone out there, see a professional therapist. Do not become a therapist or enter the helping professions as a way to help yourself. It's not healthy or effective, trust me.
I go every other week, and sometimes I feel like it's helpful, and other times I feel like it doesn't really change anything and wonder if it's even worth going.
It helps you analyze your past, your present, and develop coping skills.
It's not horrible, but it's not really enjoyable to go either
Actually, if you said it was enjoyable, I'd say your therapist is probably be doing nothing wrong. Imagine going to physical therapy and feeling no pain or being pushed to do nothing uncomfortable for the sake of healing. It would be nice, but it wouldn't help you heal.
Friendships are what provide you with the feel-good kudos, affirmations, and hugs. Therapists are supposed to push you to work on difficult stuff.
and sometimes I feel like my therapist just doesn't understand the manitude of the situation. But then again how could she, she has never dealt with it firsthand.
Any qualified therapist knows how to treat the effects of emotional abuse. If he/she isn't seeing your time in the Borg as emotional abuse, educate him or her about it. I wrote a comparison of the elements of being in any type of emotionally abusive relationship and being in the Borg. (oops! I see BabaYaga already posted that.)
There is a prevalent belief that a therapist must have personally experienced things he/she is counseling patients about. That happens to be a myth. A therapist uses evidence-based professional techniques to treat patients, just like an oncologist does to treat patients. An oncologist does not need to be a cancer survivor in order to go to medical school and go into practice.
Good luck in your journey.