I have found my therapists to be very helpful. But please do not expect "answers" or "figuring me out" from the good ones. I think we understand that figuring you out is very much your job, not ours.
The major problem I find with therapists is actually a problem with the SOC and the patients: so many go "to get hormones." Quite honestly, in that regard I am willing to write recommendations after visit one, simply to get the real reason for being there through the door. Giving the letter might take 3-4 visits just to be sure there is no evident psychosis running wild.
The deal with seeing a therapist that is most important is that deal that encompasses a willingness to learn about one's self, what moves one, what shakes one. The therapist can be an excellent guide on that journey, but so many have that other thing in mind: Getting something they want.
Discovery and getting anything but knowledge is a particularly bad way to go about any venture, especially one of the heart and mind. A therapist will generally know at first visit what the score is, the patient generally allows that to be evident from the git.
The very uselessness of embarking on therapy as a means to any end except discovering one's interior is one reason why I think we should get out of the gatekeeping business. The patients aren't helped by a letter, at least not helped by the therapist. One gains from therapy, like much else, what she puts into it.
The gatekeeping should be dropped and if people want therapy then they should get it. Otherwise an endo can probably tell on their own whether or not there is psychotic thinking present in the patient.
Go for therapy, not a letter.
Nichole