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Sadly, I saw 3 different professionals, it does not work.
I was expecting that they won't have a magic phrase to say and solve my issues before I go to them and I partially went due to the advice of the people around me.
After going and finding out myself, I can confirm that I was right.
Therapy is a vehicle, and you are the driver. You're only going to move forward if you drive.
That being said, finding a therapist you work well with is hard, and, in my experience, takes quite a few tries before finding someone with whom you are comfortable.
My suggestion is to find someone who specializes in cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), and literally read this post to them. I've had luck using Alma to find a therapist (in the US).
I genuinely hope you are able to work through this - I've been there, as have many people. You can do this, and you're not alone
Therapy takes work, my friend. Professionals can't help you unless you want help and are willing to work toward change. If you're expecting some external factor to "fix it for you," you're going to be disappointed
Therapy isn't geared towards men who don't know how to put their expressions into words. It's geared towards women. Many professional therapists agree that Therapy is not suitable for all men. Therapy is W.E.I.R.D. Designed around White, Educated, Industrialized, Rich, and Democratic. It's only one tiny slice of the pie when it comes to human emotions, expression, and the science of psychology - which makes psychology -- at best -- a pseudoscience.
As a (male) psychotherapist, I really have to disagree with you on all counts. A common goal in psychotherapy is to learn how to recognize and describe your internal experience. Lots of people struggle with this, men and women. Every single person walks into therapy with a different set of circumstances and a different set of objectives, and I've never once heard a single psychotherapist say "therapy is not suitable for all men." That doesn't make sense.
Anecdotally, it is true that men seem less likely to approach therapy with willingness. This is a trend I've noticed, and is by no means a rule. What this demonstrates is a difference in socialization and acculturation between genders, so that men and women tend to "start" psychotherapy in different places in regards to social/emotional development. But psychotherapy as a discipline is absolutely not geared toward women over men.
This is sexist af
If you think me pointing out that therapy isn't designed around how men operate somehow makes ME sexist, you need to step back and evaluate yourself.
Why'd you respond to this guy and not me, who posted a long, professional response ten hours before him? Btw, I agree your take is sexist, because you're basing your view on stereotypes of men and not on any evidence.
Whether it's through professionals IRL or strangers on the Internet, it'll require effort on your part. You're going to have to want to be an active participant and willing to work on yourself. It will be a process, not a single event.
What does "work on yourself" mean in this context?
Changing habits, thought patterns etc. A therapist can't do that for you, that's something you have to do yourself thus "work on yourself"
I am tired from people who talk in wide way that can be applied everywhere and would result in nothing.
To add to this, I was following therapist orders, it did nothing.
That is actually is kind of what I meant when I said that I assumed that they don't have a magic pharse, meaning that they their orders and pills sadly did not work and I was right in the sense that they were unable to solve my issues as I expected.