As for therapy, there are several schools of thought. I believe that your fastest route to success would come with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT). Unlike traditional psychotherapy, CBT doesn't care about the causes of your heartache. Instead, with CBT, you learn a series of "Jedi Mind Tricks" that enable you to head off negative thoughts like fear, anger, and depression, before they get out of control. So I would look for a psychologist who does CBT. He will also be able to decide if you're unlikely to be responsive to therapy without medication; and if necessary, will refer you to a psychopharmacologist. From then on, they work together on your case.
The source of my anxieties and fears is no great mystery requiring hours of analysis. What I am feeling is not abnormal or unique, but the degree to which I am feeling these things is heightened to the point where I feel it physically, and that is not good. I am afraid of it getting out of control just like you mentioned, and I don't want that..
Oh jeez, Rerun, I whine enough in cyberspace without having to subject you to more on the phone! A question. As I was taking a shower, I was sort of imagining a conversation with a therapist, and I quickly realized that no one is going to be able to get through to me unless and until she/he has a basic understanding of my concerns. Would it be way out of line to ask a therapist/CBT to educate himself on everything the kidneys do and what their failure actually means? Do most therapists know about the heightened risks for cardiovascular problems in CKD patients? Bone problems? All of the scary things that happen to us on a daily basis? Can they evey spell "phosphorus"? I don't need my therapist to understand how I feel, but I'd like him to know WHY I feel the way I do. I just remember seeing a therapist once who suggested that I treat CKD like a 9 to 5 job, ie, stop thinking about it after 5PM. Have you ever heard anything so ludicrous? Does she think that kidneys function only from 9 to 5? I just tuned her out and never went back.Any opinions?
Would it be way out of line to ask a therapist/CBT to educate himself on everything the kidneys do and what their failure actually means? Do most therapists know about the heightened risks for cardiovascular problems in CKD patients? Bone problems? All of the scary things that happen to us on a daily basis? Can they evey spell "phosphorus"?
I quickly realized that no one is going to be able to get through to me unless and until she/he has a basic understanding of my concerns. Would it be way out of line to ask a therapist/CBT to educate himself on everything the kidneys do and what their failure actually means?
I know that my lifespan is going to be shortened,
I would suggest looking for another therapist who doesn't consider having an incurable illness to be an "unusual case." Because you want an experienced therapist who has experience with the reactions and anxieties of patients with incurable illnesses. You don't want to be her first guinea pig.There are plenty of therapists who work with patients who have suffered a serious illness. You just happened to pick one who doesn't.