In a family woven together by love and complex identities, the adopted siblings seek solace and understanding through therapy, hoping for a safe space to voice their truths. The arrival of a new therapist shatters this fragile refuge, replacing empathy with frustration, and silencing the voices that once found comfort in being heard.
Caught between their need to be seen and the harsh dismissal of their feelings, the siblings grapple with a painful choice: to stay and endure the misunderstanding or to retreat into silence, risking the very healing they desperately crave. Their struggle is a raw testament to the longing for validation and the courage to demand it.

AITAH for refusing to continue family therapy unless we get a new therapist?










Dr. John Gottman, a renowned relationship expert, emphasizes the critical role of validation and effective communication patterns in therapeutic settings. When a therapist actively discourages a client’s expressed reality by forcing rephrasing or outright denial, as described by the poster, it fundamentally violates the trust required for beneficial therapy.
The behavior attributed to Dr. B—interrupting, demanding specific rephrasing, diagnosing the poster’s feelings as resentment or tantrums, and labeling non-engagement as ‘regression’—suggests a highly authoritarian and potentially emotionally abusive dynamic rather than a collaborative therapeutic one. This therapist appears to be prioritizing control and conformity over active listening, which severely undermines the safe space necessary for adopted siblings to process complex family history. The parents’ reaction, siding entirely with the therapist and threatening consequences, indicates a failure to acknowledge their child’s subjective experience of harm, shifting the focus from therapeutic efficacy to compliance.
The poster’s request for a therapist change is appropriate when the professional relationship is destructive. A constructive recommendation involves the parents facilitating a structured meeting with a supervisor or the practice manager, focusing on measurable outcomes. If Dr. B cannot adapt to an inclusive, validating style that respects the poster’s voice, the family should seek a therapist specializing in adoption issues who prioritizes building rapport before challenging deeply held feelings.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.














NTA

Sounds like they prefer a therapist that sucks. Dr. A sounds great. I’m sorry your parents are controlling asses. Dr.








The original poster is experiencing significant distress due to a therapist whose methods conflict with their personal needs and comfort level. They feel invalidated by the new therapist and unsupported by their parents, who insist on mandatory participation despite the negative impact on the family dynamic.
Is the poster justified in demanding a change in therapy leadership when they feel actively harmed by the current professional’s approach, or is this insistence a form of resistance to necessary, albeit difficult, therapeutic challenges imposed by the parents’ authority?







