NO CODEPENDENCY CURE?
Treating Codependency & What You Should Know About Co-dependency Treatment Centers!
Many people wonder whether Codependency can be cured. A “cure” represents the permanent end to the specific instance of an issue.
One of the challenges faced by people who have Codependency — is that not too many people will talk to you about “curing” your condition. (Except the snake-oil salesman, who will claim they can cure your Codependency with their amazing book, technique or CD.) I do not believe it is possible to read your way out of Codependency. In fact, you’d be hard-pressed to find an authority that talks openly about “cures” for Codependency.
What we have instead of cures for Codependency are a bunch of Codependency treatment methods. Most of which work pretty well, to varying degrees. But to most people seeking Codependency assistance, treatments for Codependency can take a frustratingly long period of time before finding one that works. For instance, finding the right, experienced Codependency therapist that you feel comfortable working with can also take months (even longer if the “good” therapists have waiting lists).
Once in Codependency treatment, your Codependency psychologist or psychotherapist rarely will mention the word cure. The word Cure is what doctors do for a broken bone. Set the bone and voila! Done. Treating Codependency rarely results in a “cure,” per se. What it does result in is a person feeling better, getting better, and eventually no longer needing Codependency treatment (in most cases the symptoms go away). But even then, rarely will an expert say, “Yes, you’re cured of your Codependency.”
Why is that? Why is there such a reluctance to invoke this magical word CURE? I mean, cure literally means, “recovery or relief from a disease,” so if someone has recovered from Codependency or has found relief, why not say the person has been cured?
I think our reluctance comes from the belief that Codependency is psychological and not physical. Whereas once you’ve treated a broken bone, it’s not going to return (unless you break it again).
Specialists have a term for this “non-curing” too… Instead of removing the diagnosis from the chart at the end of treatment, they often place the phrase, “In remission” onto the end of the diagnosis instead. It’s good to hedge your bets, because you see, even when you are “cured” of your Codependency, nobody will come out and actually say it.
Naturally professionals can’t lie to people and tell them Codependency can be readily cured. They cannot. In virtually every instance, treatment for Codependency takes time, effort, and money. And even treatment takes 2 to 4 months, in most cases for Codependency, before one starts feeling any sort of relief.
Which brings me back to the question — how do you cure Codependency? The answer — you may but don’t expect a therapist to tell you that you are cured. Therapists help people understand what Codependency is, then learn and engage new ways of resolving Codependency symptoms, and help clients do the best they can with the resources they have available.
Answer:You maybe healed through this process by the symptoms just going away.
More at: http://codependency-treatment.weebly.com/
Of course you know the treatment method I recommend click here!
http://theliberatormethod.com/Welcome.html
END
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Treating Codependency & What You Should Know About Co-dependency Treatment Centers!
Many people wonder whether Codependency can be cured. A “cure” represents the permanent end to the specific instance of an issue.
One of the challenges faced by people who have Codependency — is that not too many people will talk to you about “curing” your condition. (Except the snake-oil salesman, who will claim they can cure your Codependency with their amazing book, technique or CD.) I do not believe it is possible to read your way out of Codependency. In fact, you’d be hard-pressed to find an authority that talks openly about “cures” for Codependency.
What we have instead of cures for Codependency are a bunch of Codependency treatment methods. Most of which work pretty well, to varying degrees. But to most people seeking Codependency assistance, treatments for Codependency can take a frustratingly long period of time before finding one that works. For instance, finding the right, experienced Codependency therapist that you feel comfortable working with can also take months (even longer if the “good” therapists have waiting lists).
Once in Codependency treatment, your Codependency psychologist or psychotherapist rarely will mention the word cure. The word Cure is what doctors do for a broken bone. Set the bone and voila! Done. Treating Codependency rarely results in a “cure,” per se. What it does result in is a person feeling better, getting better, and eventually no longer needing Codependency treatment (in most cases the symptoms go away). But even then, rarely will an expert say, “Yes, you’re cured of your Codependency.”
Why is that? Why is there such a reluctance to invoke this magical word CURE? I mean, cure literally means, “recovery or relief from a disease,” so if someone has recovered from Codependency or has found relief, why not say the person has been cured?
I think our reluctance comes from the belief that Codependency is psychological and not physical. Whereas once you’ve treated a broken bone, it’s not going to return (unless you break it again).
Specialists have a term for this “non-curing” too… Instead of removing the diagnosis from the chart at the end of treatment, they often place the phrase, “In remission” onto the end of the diagnosis instead. It’s good to hedge your bets, because you see, even when you are “cured” of your Codependency, nobody will come out and actually say it.
Naturally professionals can’t lie to people and tell them Codependency can be readily cured. They cannot. In virtually every instance, treatment for Codependency takes time, effort, and money. And even treatment takes 2 to 4 months, in most cases for Codependency, before one starts feeling any sort of relief.
Which brings me back to the question — how do you cure Codependency? The answer — you may but don’t expect a therapist to tell you that you are cured. Therapists help people understand what Codependency is, then learn and engage new ways of resolving Codependency symptoms, and help clients do the best they can with the resources they have available.
Answer:You maybe healed through this process by the symptoms just going away.
More at: http://codependency-treatment.weebly.com/
Of course you know the treatment method I recommend click here!
http://theliberatormethod.com/Welcome.html
END
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