A lot of generalisations going on in this thread....
My impressions of them were quite bad and I had originally planned on becoming a therapist one day.
What's stopping you? This one guy?
The thing with therapists is that they're also people, not some emotionless, completely intelligent androids. They're humans with their own flaws and ideas. And, just like in society, sometimes you don't click with the first therapist you see. Just like how you don't marry your first partner (mostly), or you don't enjoy your favourite kids movie anymore, you do need to find a therapist that you're compatible with.
The idea that I have to go through years of therapy and move along through the right sequence of transferences before I can have friends or a family is a very heavy and oppressive thought. Therapy is one of the hardest things I have ever tried to do. In fact, I don't even know if it is possible. Staying in therapy and free-associating for years is possible, but the "working through" seems to be impossible.
Therapy is not a rapid fix. Nobody can expect to go to one or two sessions of therapy and be instantly cured. It doesn't work that way and if you do, then you're going to therapy for the wrong reason. It takes a lot of time and effort to make it work for you.
From what you've written, it seems you've been unwilling to accept that it will take a lot of time. Maybe you've not seen the right people, either.
I have gone to exactly one therapy session in my life and what a joke it was!
It was $25 for one hour and I was hellbent on getting my money worth so I talked as much as possible.
When the therapist talked all he had to say was "fluff".
At one point he said that I need to make more friends. Well, umm, that ain't exactly easy to do when you are in your 40s. People my age aren't out there just waiting for some new friends to come into their life. By this age people have learned to keep strangers at a comfortable distance. Which is understandable because by the time you reach middle age you have been burned enough times to know to all the ways that people suck.
No, you did this wrong. You can't be hellbent on getting your money's worth, because that makes it seem you only want to go once and expect it to work. Therapy doesn't work that way, I'm sorry.
This thread is a little bit annoying because there's so much expectation on a psychologist to get it right immediately, even before they know your name or any details about why you're there. It takes time to get it out there so they can help you. It's up to
you to put in the time to see a therapist, and the effort to make it work. If you don't like the psychologist you're seeing, see another one. If you don't like them, see another one. If you want therapy to fix you quick, don't bother because you'll be wasting your time.