SunnyVale I just searched for a new T and engaged that one. I've had therapy with a handful of other T's; and I have a go-to P. I wanted to get some DBT training, self-care, and find a more affordable practitioner—those were main reasons why I went beyond just having the one P.
I got heaps of good advice
here. Long story short is that I came very close to going back to "shopping" for a new T. I felt reluctant about continuing. But I used what I learned in that discussion, tried to observe the results of 'experimenting' with her, and I'm quite happy with my T today. I've had about 6(?) sessions with her so far.
I believe it’s about finding the right therapist.
I support this and I do think so too.
I understand therapy isn’t designed to be a one session thing however at $250 a go [...]
The therapist has made me feel worse.
I totally get you.
I've seen a horrible T that made me feel ashamed of myself and gave me horrible advice, and that experience was one of the reasons that I wanted to research beforehand. I dreaded the thought of paying a terrible T for an hour's rate while I ended up worse-off than when I went into the room. I understand today that sometimes therapeutic "intervention"(?) can feel quite psychologically painful—but I think it's important to distinguish that kind of discomfort vs the feeling of not trusting the T.
She was empathising with my mother more than me [...]
This would really get my goat. I appreciate what this probably felt like for you. I'd actually feel pretty angry because part of what I'd want in a session is to untangle the relationship and for the T to be as subjective as possible. If the T did the "taking the mother's side" thing with me, I'd think about walking out.
Harri put it pretty well.
I have had a couple of T's pull the "But she is your mother" stuff and talk about their relationship with their mom. None of that changed the reality of my situation or helped me heal or work things through. A T can't help you if they can't see beyond the veil of their own biases.
I started out looking for DBT-qualified people in my area, and those that have some kind of focus on it. So perhaps you can look for therapists that have the type of therapy you want—then go from there. For example, my P is quite famous for OCD treatment, so if I searched for OCD, then I'd probably book an hour with him. So you could look for someone that specialises in an area you want to work on.
Good luck and I encourage you to enjoy your search.