I unfortunately don't have a say in any kind of therapy I go to as I am a minor. My mom doesn't like it when I pick my own therapists and would much rather do it on her own. I'll probably be starting therapy anywhere between now and October.
I was at the doctor's office today, getting my annual school-year checkup. As I'm starting the school year, my doctor wants me in therapy. My mom agrees. They want me in therapy due to Generalized Anxiety Disorder and because of the fact that I'm currently not taking any medication for it. Even then, though not all of them are, a lot of my problems are due to being trans. I decided that it was time to stop prancing around therapists and I'll be straight up honest about the whole gender-fiasco-thing to whoever my next one may be, because there'd be no getting out of it, anyways.
My doctor asked me if I knew what cognitive behavioral therapy was, I said no. That's the kind she and my mom want me to go to. This is how my doctor explained it to me.
"See this iPad?" she asked.
"Yeah." I said. It was sitting in her lap, the wallpaper of it being a kitten.
"Think about it like this. I'm afraid that if I touch this iPad, the little kitty-cat will jump out of the screen and scratch me in the face. What they do is they make you touch the screen to realize that won't happen."
I would've laughed at the example, but one of my "irrational fears" suddenly came to mind. Anyone who sees me will never see me without a hoodie on unless I absolutely have to take it off. It doesn't matter how hot it is outside, I always wear a hoodie due to chest dysphoria. I'd sit in the shade. I've had this problem for a long time, I even remember being around eleven years old and asking on Yahoo Answers, "I always feel like that if I take my jacket off in public that people will stare at my chest, even if my shirt isn't revealing?" (Poor eleven year old, had-no-idea-it-was-dysphoria-me) And sure, it can be part of GAD, but it's mostly due to gender dysphoria. I then knew it'd be best if I just straight up told my therapist, "Hey, I'm transgender, it causes me a lot of problems. I'm not comfortable with taking off my sweatshirt, and never will be until I've had surgery, I understand it's your job, but please don't try to fix that fear on your own." (Course, it'll probably escalate into a conversation about my trans issues, which I will have to mentally prepare myself for.)
This is the part where I ask for advice. Have any of you ever been to cognitive behavioral therapy? What was it like? I doubt the therapist is going to be built to deal with trans issues, so what could I expect from telling them I'm trans? One of my fears is that they'll say, "Sorry, I can help the best I can but I'm not very good with that field." and proceed to ask "innocently ignorant" questions, something like that. Hopefully they'll talk to my mom? I don't know. I guess they could advise I go to a therapist who deals with trans issues, but I just don't want anyone else in my family to find out I'm going to therapy for that purpose, because then things would get complicated and fights will probably break out.
Agh, wow. Why do things have to be so unnecessarily difficult? Sometimes I feel like my life is a mid 2000's teen sitcom, haha.