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An Interview With Psychotherapist Louis Breger, Author Of Psychotherapy: Lives Intersecting * - Part 1

by Norman Costa PhD

Psychotherapy_lives_intersecting_book_cover
* Psychotherapy: Lives Intersecting, 2012, Transaction Publishers, New Brunswick, New Jersey

    Beatrice is a woman in her mid-thirties, and a smart, sharp attorney for a major law firm. She and three other women had been together in group therapy for two years. Each woman experienced severe childhood sexual abuse. In one very emotionally difficult session Bea put a question to her therapist. In tears, and with a voice of anger, pleading, and despair she asked, “What is the point of all this [experience of abuse]?” Her therapist, Francine, answered, “There is no point to it, except what you can give to it. And you have learned so much, and gained a compassion and a wisdom that few have. You can now tell the truth to people who need to know.”

    I was extremely fortunate to observe this group for a significant period of time, with the permission of all involved. I was doing research of my own on child sexual abuse. During the time I was observing I had regular individual therapy sessions with Francine. This is an absolute necessity, in my opinion, for anyone doing research on abuse from first-person accounts.

BregerLouis
Louis Breger, author of Psychotherapy, Lives Intersecting

    While reading Louis Breger's new book, Psychotherapy: Lives Intersecting, I kept going back to that difficult session when Bea asked her question. Yes, her question moved me, deeply. Equally significant, for me, was Francine's response. Francine is a therapist that Breger describes as having 'the touch.' Others might refer to it as 'the gift.'

    My experience with Bea's group and with Francine in individual sessions, gave me a perspective on this book. In a way, Louis Breger, PhD is the complement to a patient like Bea. As a therapist, teacher, researcher, husband, and father he has learned many things and gained much wisdom in a 50 year career. In this professional memoir, he is passing it on, and telling the truth to people who need to know.

Who needs to know?

    Certainly, Psychotherapy: Lives Intersecting is a book for psychotherapists, counselors, and others in the helping professions in psychology, social work, and psychiatry. It is for students in mental health and related majors from upper-class students at the undergraduate level to Masters and Doctoral programs. Beyond the academic and training institutions, faculty, and students, this book belongs in the hands of all friends of psychotherapy, those considering therapy for themselves, and those who are trying to help family or friends make a decision about psychotherapy. Though a professional memoir covering professional subjects, it is still accessible to an educated and interested layperson.

    If the reader can set aside preconceptions of the usual and obligatory book-jacket blurbs, they will discover that Psychotherapy: Lives Intersecting IS unique in its field. As a professional memoir he discusses substantive matters like the history of psychoanalysis, and varied schools of thought and theories of personality. Breger is as clear as he can be in his criticism of methods of psychotherapy based upon a dominating guru, inflexible dogma, and cult-like followers. He is equally clear about what is most important to a successful therapeutic outcome for the patient – Hint: It may be a surprise for many. What makes this book stand apart from others in his field are two things: 

First, the reader is going to learn a great deal about the personal and professional development of Louis Breger. While it is not a tell-all book nor a standard autobiography, Breger gives us a good dose of self-reflection, self-revelation, and self-criticism. Would that more therapists did the same. Professionals and those in training can benefit enormously from his experiences.

Second, Breger's former patients contributed, substantively, to this book. His survey of former patients, some from 25 years earlier, amounted to a long-term follow-up of psychotherapy patients that is rare in the literature. The reader will hear from those who had a positive experience and some who did not. Such are the seeds of learning for all of us.

    I told you this book was unique. I will have more to say about Louis Breger and his latest book Psychotherapy: Lives Intersecting at various points in this interview. So, why don't we hear what he has to say.

The Interview

AGAINST DOGMA

Lou, thank you for doing this interview on the occasion of publishing your latest book, Psychotherapy: Lives Intersecting. I'm sure my readers will appreciate the time you are devoting to this.  

Not at all. I'm honored that you asked, and I'm happy to do this.

So why don't you tell us about how you came to the field of psychology, and started a career in the helping profession of psychotherapy? 

Like so many psychotherapists, I was drawn to the field by the craziness in my own family. By late childhood, I was aware that the family was “different” with a hypochondriacal mother and a father who was often out of work for reasons I couldn’t understand.  

As early as high school, I stumbled on Freud – I can’t remember which book – and it struck a chord. People’s symptoms had meaning, typically unconscious, that could be understood and treated. Eventually, it led me to graduate school in clinical psychology. As I later found out, a large number of therapists had depressed mothers. It's a bit of an oversimplification, but we were trying to cure them by curing our patients.

You write critically about various theories of personality, different schools of psychoanalysis, and professional factions. What are they and what led to your criticisms?

When I was a young professor at the University of Oregon, Behaviorism, and its leading proponent B. F. Skinner, was all the rage. It always seemed too simple minded to me, especially as applied to psychological disturbance and treatment. My colleague Jim McGaugh was a research psychologist in the areas of learning and memory. Jim and I co-authored an article, Critique and Reformulation of ‘Learning Theory’ Approaches to Psychotherapy and Neurosis in 1965. 

We exposed the sham science behind the claims of what was then called “Behavior Therapy.” It was my first major publication and was widely reprinted. This was my first exposé of the lack of real research evidence behind psychological theories and schools. 

A little later, I immersed myself in a critical review of what was then classical psychoanalytic theory, drawing on the work of Robert Holt, George Klein, and others. There was a parallel to my criticism of behavior therapy. In both cases ideas and methods were expounded as "scientific" when a careful review of the literature revealed that there was little or no basis in scientific research for such claims.

At this point in my career, I had become very critical of psychoanalytic theory. However, I still clung to my belief that the therapy was still the deepest and best, even though I had no first hand basis for this idea. This began to develop when I left Eugene,Oregon for The Langley Porter Institute at the UCSF Medical Center in San Francisco. There, in this full time clinical setting, I had much more exposure to patients and therapists of many persuasions.

Yet, the strong criticism in your book is not a total dismissal of some of these approaches in psychotherapy. At first blush it seems a bit odd, so tell us, please, why you just don't chuck them all into the waste bin?

Here's why. At Langley Porter, my colleagues and I set up a research program for brief psychotherapy. Any potential patient that came to the outpatient department could be seen immediately, but for a maximum of ten sessions. We did away with the cumbersome medical-psychological-social work screening that took so much time and was, we believed, fairly useless. We divided the treatments into Freudian, Jungian and Behavioral sections. Each section had a seminar, led by an expert in the respective orientation. Cases were presented – via tape recordings of the actual sessions – and discussed.  

There were several important findings of this research. Many patients were helped in as few as ten sessions. If their difficulties continued or were severe they were encouraged to seek additional treatment elsewhere. Of particular significance to me is that there didn’t seem to be major differences in outcomes among the three different sections – Freudian, Jungian, and Behavioral.  

The more important determinant of positive outcome for the patient was the personality of the therapist. Some of these therapists just seemed to have the touch and others not. I could see this first-hand in my supervision of them, and in their presentations in the seminars. A therapist whose orientation was Freudian, Jungian or even Behaviorist can be helpful if the therapist is a certain kind of person.  

Is there current research that would support your earlier findings?

Yes, Recent research has confirmed this position. Relationship traits and skills in the therapist like empathy, a caring attitude, and a good therapeutic alliance with the patient are central to positive outcomes in a variety of approaches.  

It's clear to me that this finding is a central thesis in your new book, “Psychotherapy: Lives Intersecting.”

Absolutely. But I should add that one’s theory is not irrelevant. One can do good psychotherapy with a bad theory, but one has to overcome it. You don't have to compensate if you start with a better theory. 

Regarding your thoughts on psychology as a science, I saw three things emerge in your book. First, you've already talked about theories of personality and psychotherapy that purport to be scientific when, in fact, there was no supporting research. The second thing is that you had done research in your career, and cite published studies and reviews of research in your new book. If you will allow me, for a moment, I'd like to suggest to faculty and students in psychology and the mental health field – at any level – that they check out your bibliography and citations. Third, you did new research in preparing material for this book. Please tell us about it.

Well, before the writing of this book, I had been engaged in two kinds of research during my career. There was empirical research, such as that on dreaming where we monitored sleep through the night. At different times we would wake students and record their dream reports.

Yes, that was your 1971 study “The Effect of Stress on Dreams”.

Right. And there was the research on brief psychotherapy that I already mentioned. Also, I wrote a number of scholarly research papers. For example, I wrote critical reviews of Behavior Therapy and Freudian theory.  

Speaking of a critical review of Freudian theory, I had the opportunity to read your biography of Freud, “Freud: Darkness in the Midst of Vision” published in 2000. Then there was your follow-up book in 2009 on Freud and Breuer, “A Dream of Undying Fame: How Freud Betrayed His Mentor and Invented Psychoanalysis.” I'm not an expert on Freud but I can say that for me there was much new learning and very satisfying assessments of Freud.

Thanks for mentioning them. I'm very proud of them because they represent my most significant scholarly work. 

Whether empirical or scholarly I think it important to take an open-minded, scientific point of view. Too often the fields of psychology and psychoanalysis have been divided into sects, centered around a leader – Freud, Jung, Adler, Klein, and Kohut, to name a few prominent characters. Students learn the ideas of their school to the neglect of others.  

In my view, almost all the well known psychologists have some ideas and methods of value. The task of the therapist is to seek out what works with a particular patient. The strategy should be to take ideas from different theories that fit the therapeutic setting. Let's not begin by forcing the patient into a theoretical mold.  

The therapist should act like a non-dogmatic scientist. Try out hypotheses and pay attention to the patient’s response. There is a long tradition of research on the effectiveness of psychotherapy. However, not enough attention has been focused on the effectiveness of therapists, themselves. They can remain immersed in their “school” or “movement” which they believe sufficient in providing what they need to know.  

This gets at an answer to your earlier question of why not throw bad theories in the trash. Almost all the approaches that have lasted over the years have some valuable components. Our task, as scientifically oriented psychotherapists, is to tease out what is of value and use it when it fits the particular patient.  

Now let me get back to the research for this new book. I think it's best to call it an informal survey of my patients whom I had seen over a period of several decades. I wanted to get their assessment of the effectiveness and outcomes of their therapy. The response sample is biased since patients who had a negative experience were less likely to respond – though I did have a few – but I was open to what they said and reported it fully in this book with no editorializing. 

Were there any surprises?

Yes. I was surprised by the results. Relationship factors in the skills and traits of the therapist were mentioned again and again as most important for the outcome of their therapy. Even more surprising was that insight into their unconscious, while on the list, was pretty far down in importance. I didn’t expect this. It shows the value of keeping an open mind. 

Great. We'll get into the replies from your patients a bit later. First, would you tell us something about psychodynamic therapy? What is it? How does it work?

The word “psychodynamic” has been around for many years. It's in vogue now as a general term for the host of approaches that began with Freud and that were elaborated upon by the Neo-Freudians. Today, the term “Psychodynamic Therapy” is used by many independent therapists that are not a member of any of the official clubs or schools. I think it is a good, broad term to characterize these modern analytic approaches. It differentiates them from approaches that stress medication only, or brief behavioral approaches that are done from manuals.


EARLY PSYCHOANALYTIC CASES

One of the powerful elements of your new book is that we learn a lot about you as a therapist. We get an inside view of the personal, academic, and clinical experiences that shaped your professional life. Tell us, please, about your early training and experience, and getting into formal psychoanalytical training.

I began training at an official psychoanalytic institute in Los Angeles about 16 years after I got my PhD. During those 16 years I was practicing psychotherapy on my own, doing research on dreams and brief psychotherapy, and writing three books. It was a relief to sit back and be a student again. Also, I needed therapy for myself – not because I had terrible symptoms, but because I remained a sort of workaholic, and an emotionally shut down guy. To others it wasn’t that apparent on the surface.  

Psychoanalytic training in those days was divided into three parts, training analysis, supervised cases, and seminars. Training analysis was the most important to me and I threw myself into in wholeheartedly. I went four and five times a week for over four years. I reported on my therapy and came to understand many of my dreams, transference reactions, and so on. I emerged much more comfortable with myself, and emotionally open with others.  

The supervision of cases, with one exception, was mainly a waste of time. The supervisors seemed bored and just applied standard formulas. 

The seminars were equally boring. We went over papers and books by Freud and his loyal followers, with little appreciation of the many contributions of those outside the Freudian fold. Orthodox psychoanalysis, as taught in such institutes, had much in common with religious or political cults, though it took me a while, post- graduation, to become fully aware of this. 

Early in your book you begin talking about yourself as a therapist. I love one of your self-revealing sentences. “In the earliest years, I was quite green and uncertain of what I was doing…”. I'm sure most readers can identify with this. It's encouraging to read it from someone who is looking back on a long and productive career. There is hope for us all. Now, please tell us how you progressed from there.

That remark was made about one of the first cases I saw on my pre-doctoral internship, though it could have applied, with a little modification, to the cases I saw during my psychoanalytic training. Not buying the standard psychoanalytic technique, I was more finding my own way and this certainly left me feeling like I was groping around in the dark.  

My strong anti-authoritarian streak certainly led me to listen closely to the patients. I didn't want to impose theory-based interpretations onto them. I wanted to work in a collaborative manner with my patient and co-construct (to use a bit of modern jargon) our understanding of what was going on.  

Over the years, I gained more and more confidence in what I was doing, though I never became one of those all-knowing authorities like so many in the field.   

Now, let's get to one of your cases in the book. It's the story of Gregor. I found it moving, disturbing, and very sad. I've known someone like this. An important aspect, for me, is your telling of the developing relationship of therapist and patient.

“Gregor” – his pseudonym taken from Franz Kafka – was one of my most disturbed patients, suffering from a combination of anorexia, bulimia (quite rare in a man in his late 20s) and compulsive exercise. He looked like a cross between a starving Jesus Christ and Leon Trotsky.  

He was enmeshed in a very destructive family. His father, an extremely narcissistic surgeon, spoke of him with undisguised disdain. His mother, who had had anorexia herself in the past, required him to shop and prepare all their food. Father prescribed a variety of drugs for both of them. Gregor was very intelligent, he had – in his own words – read all of Freud and Marx and had been doing well in graduate school in social science when he crashed into a near suicidal state.  

He came to me for “a real psychoanalysis”, lay on the couch and did his version of free association, which mainly consisted of accounts of what he had eaten, vomited, the consistency of his bowel movements, how twisted or bloated his stomach was, and the like. This was not easy to listen to hour after hour but it was clear to me that no one had ever taken a serious interest in him. So I paid close attention, offered few remarks, and I made no attempt to control him. Very gradually a trust developed and he revealed the complex belief system that lay behind his eating rituals.

The case ended tragically in a sort of combination accident-suicide-murder. He was laying in bed after one of his lengthy exercise routines, heavily sedated on one of the drugs supplied by his father, when he aspirated his own vomit and died. As in the case of Kafka’s Metamorphosis the family made every attempt to cover up his death: as in life, they acted as if he never existed. 

This is a very tragic and difficult case. My personal view is that you give to the reader something very important that is not easy to come by in other books on psychotherapy – your personal reaction to Gregor's life and death. Would you tell us something about this.

My own reaction to his death was a complex one. I was certainly sad at the wasted life of this intelligent young man. At the same time, his family situation was clearly impossible and he was adamant about not moving out on his own, believing he had to stay home to “protect his mother from his father.” I didn’t feel particularly guilty about his death, feeling that as long as he couldn’t get free of his family, little could be done. Still, one can never be sure: perhaps a therapist with a different personality or orientation could have done more for him.

CONTINUING DIALOGUES

The case of Emily is, I believe, very important. You wrote two articles – two versions – of Emily's story. What I saw in your telling of the story in this book was your ongoing professional transition from Freudian dogma and vocabulary, to ideas and words that were more reflective of what was really happening with the patient. I was wondering if you could talk about this case and the ongoing development of your ideas about psychotherapy, and your personal views as they affect the therapist-patient relationship.

I saw “Emily” towards the end of my training at the Psychoanalytic Institute and, while moving to freedom from the analytic strictures, I was not completely rid of them. This probably led me to focus more on interpretations, an understanding of her unconscious motives, the sexual activities in her life, and overlook what, after our later, continuing dialogue, was her mother’s gas-lighting of her, which I missed the first time around.  

In the book you talk about your own life and your views of 'traditional roles' for husband and wife, and how this influenced your interaction with the patient. 

My own involvement in a traditional marriage with children again led me to overlook something. What seemed like her marriage to a “nice guy” traditional husband was, in fact, as she put it, “a trap in a velvet cage of his design.” It was the broadening of my own views that let me see these troubling sides of her life that I had neglected or minimized during the first analysis. By her own account, she had a helpful experience, though it took her a very long time to make a commitment to her second husband, and I think if I had been more open in my thinking the first time I saw her, things would have gone faster. 

End of Part 1.

Louis Breger is Professor of Psychoanalytic Studies, Emeritus, California Institute of Technolgy. You can go to his website at http://www.louisbreger.com. You can email Lou at lbreger@comcast.net.

Please come back to Accidental Blogger on August 2, 2012 for Part 2 of my Interview with psychotherapist Louis Breger, author of Psychotherapy: Lives Intersecting.

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10 responses to “An Interview With Psychotherapist Louis Breger, Author Of “Psychotherapy: Lives Intersecting” – Part 1 (Norman Costa)”

  1. Norm, thanks for posting a very interesting interview. Sorry, it took me a while to write a response. I was quite busy in the last few day and being mostly ignorant of the science, art or philosophy of psychotherapy, I wanted to read the questions and answers carefully. I am unable to contribute any scholarly comments except to say that Louis Breger’s line of thinking makes much sense to me.
    I was struck by this observation:

    Of particular significance to me is that there didn’t seem to be major differences in outcomes among the three different sections – Freudian, Jungian, and Behavioral.
    The more important determinant of positive outcome for the patient was the personality of the therapist. Some of these therapists just seemed to have the touch and others not. I could see this first-hand in my supervision of them, and in their presentations in the seminars. A therapist whose orientation was Freudian, Jungian or even Behaviorist can be helpful if the therapist is a certain kind of person.

    It appears that above all, what a severely disturbed person needs is a sympathetic ear. I am sure there are patients who are beyond mere psychotherapy and need medication to control their symptoms. But a vast majority of people who experience psychological upheavals may be helped enormously by “talking” to the right person. How simple that sounds and yet how rare the opportunity.
    Professor Breger seems to be the most useful kind of therapist – one who values common sense over dogma. I have no idea how “common” that approach may be in practice. In light of the recent massacre in Colorado by a young man who, I am sure we will learn had been battling unseen monsters of the mind, it is a pity that the access to good therapists is hard to come by but the doors to gun shops are wide open.
    I look forward to the rest of the interview. (Has Elatia seen this post?)

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  2. Elatia Harris

    Elatia has not seen it, Ruchira, until now. My computer with all its RSS feeds onto my home page has been in the shop. I know NOTHING!
    Very interesting interview, and a very unusual subject — a psychotherapist following his patients beyond their time of treatment to gauge their impressions of therapy many years out. In 1980, when the psychoanalytic movement was still riding high, though no longer at the high water mark, Janet Malcolm, the legendary “New Yorker” writer, devoted almost an entire issue to conversations with an analyst, whom she did not identify but to whom she gave the pseudonym Aaron Green. He was a classical model Freudian analyst, and a better look inside the thinking of one such would be very hard to find. Subscribers can read it free — “Psychoanalysis: The Impossible Profession” Nov. 24, 1980. A book Malcolm published, by the same name, is almost the article between hard covers. Malcolm asked “Aaron Green” how he might know, many years later, whether an analysis had been successful. He answered by way of describing two women who had been his patients more than 15 years earlier, when he was a very young doctor. Patient One told him her analysis was the most meaningful experience of her life, and that no day passed without her being conscious of benefiting from it. Patient Two told him that she felt quite well, most of the time, and never gave the analysis a thought. “Dr. Green” averred that the successful analysand, in that case, simply had to have been Patient Two. Because she was the more well of the two.
    Of course, in medias res, the analytic patient is obsessed with the analysis, but that’s true of most people in therapy, whatever therapy they are in. Anyone in long term therapy is in danger of forgetting Nietzsche: “Good things end by overcoming themselves.” And of prioritizing the experience of therapy, and its length, over its outcome. The exiguous length of psychoanalysis sets the trap for this to happen, but there was a time when a Jungian analysis took longer than a Freudian one. Freud would have been astonished at the very idea of four to seven years on the couch, and Jung thought a year of intensive analysis was about right. It is later comers who have turned the couch into the dinghy for Narcissists that it now is.
    Analytic therapy too may be culturally relative — it had better be! In the mid-70s, there was a Psychoanalytic Society of Bombay with 36 members. Their patients were mainly the daughters of the upper bourgeoisie, symptomatic in ways that deeply resembled the ills of the same type of girl in the Vienna of 80 years earlier when Freud was treating his first patients. Now, psychoanalysis is looking good to the newly moneyed middle class of China. It seems that deep cultural shifts, like that from agriculture to industry, may bind together societies with otherwise disparate folkways, and produce conditions favorable to disordered young people with money and time — analytic patients, in other words. What have we moved onto, in that case?

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  3. I want to comment but I’m eating a cold chicken lunch, and then I have work to do. Later.

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  4. prasad

    Just got around to reading this. I have not followed this world, don’t know much about the discipline, so my impressions will seem hazy and maybe off topic. It’s a very nice interview, looking forward to the rest!
    The more important determinant of positive outcome for the patient was the personality of the therapist. Some of these therapists just seemed to have the touch and others not.
    What does this mean for the training and credentialing of therapists? To what extent is this teachable? What advantage does the trained therapist have over the wise old woman with a good memory?
    question of why not throw bad theories in the trash. Almost all the approaches that have lasted over the years have some valuable components. Our task, as scientifically oriented psychotherapists, is to tease out what is of value and use it when it fits the particular patient.
    I guess this already partly answers the previous set of questions. But I was thinking of the list ‘Freud, Jung…Kohut.’ No doubt scientifically oriented therapists can be taught to navigate and balance between theories. But an alternate, also scientific approach would be to expose them to a large number of examples. (Like the example of ‘Gregor’)
    In particular I am trying to understand this: “The supervision of cases, with one exception, was mainly a waste of time. The supervisors seemed bored and just applied standard formulas. “ Especially since clinically speaking the results don’t seem to show strong impact of theory and very strong impact of personal and relationship factors (which sounds intuitively right..), I would have thought that the ‘practical’ aspect would be -more- valuable. Does this point to a defect in current training methods?
    And in addition to actual cases, we have a rich supply from literature, history and biography. I In fact, why isn’t Tolstoy (for example; and if abnormal psychologies are preferred, there’s plenty of writers for that!) on the list?

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  5. @ Elatia,
    “I know NOTHING!” Fat chance of that ever happening.
    Thanks for taking the time to read and comment. I was unable to read Janet Malcolm’s The New Yorker article, since I don’t want to spring for the subscription cost. Getting access to her book was just as unsuccessful, though a couple of reviews on Amazon were helpful.
    “Patient One told him her analysis was the most meaningful experience of her life, and that no day passed without her being conscious of benefiting from it. Patient Two told him that she felt quite well, most of the time, and never gave the analysis a thought. “Dr. Green” averred that the successful analysand, in that case, simply had to have been Patient Two. Because she was the more well of the two.”
    My personal view of Aaron Green is based on an impression from your mini-retelling from Malcolm. My impression is not favorable at all. It communicates not just an indifference to an understanding achieved by the analysand (hadn’t used that label before), but a manipulation of the patient’s own commonsense judgment. “Trust only me, no one else, and not even yourself,” is symptomatic of the insidious and self-serving nature of the analyst in that relationship. This is characteristic of cult leaders who maintain a physical and/or psychological control over the behavior of their followers.
    Having been in Graduate School in New York City in the 1970s I absorbed some of the vibe of the New York psychoanalytic scene by osmosis. A couple of aspiring therapists among my student colleagues easily and unselfconsciously betrayed their contempt for the field and their prospective clients. “The trick was to make them think they were sick and that they needed you.”

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  6. @ prasad,
    Thanks for taking the time to read and comment. As usual, you disclose that such a topic is not one with which you are greatly familiar. However, you have that knack to see through to the essential elements and pose the right questions.
    “What does this mean for the training and credentialing of therapists? To what extent is this teachable? What advantage does the trained therapist have over the wise old woman with a good memory?”
    Lou Breger or another therapist would be in a better position to answer your question. I have had a fair amount of counseling in my work history, and a limited experience with psychotherapy. So, from my own experience one can be trained to be a decent therapist, or to do a decent job at counseling, all things being equal. In my career as a psychologist with IBM Corporation I had the good fortune to do educational, vocational, and adjustment counseling under the supervision of two APA Diplomates in Psychology. I never had that innate sense of reading other people. I always envied those who did. When I had a good history, a thorough intake interview, feedback from my supervisors, and various test results I did a very decent job.
    At one point I held a management position in general and technical education for one of the semiconductor development and manufacturing divisions. I wanted to keep my hand in counseling/therapy so I had a small psychotherapy practice on my own. I came to realize that I did not have the emotional strength to deal with very difficult and complex problems for individuals and couples. What I dealt with in IBM among employees and managers was a cake walk by comparison. Also, I came to appreciate what was required of those who wanted to make a difference as a psychotherapist.
    We can all profit from a friend, wise old woman, a good parent who listens and can give us advice and encouragement. Sometimes a bit of loving chastisement or a stern admonition to “Snap out of it,” can be what we need. If your life is ruled by fear, great insecurity, disabling anxieties, suicidal thoughts, self-destructive behaviors, a succession of failed relationships, depression, emotional instability, somatic symptoms, etc., then you need a wise old women with lots of skills and training.
    MORE IN THE NEXT COMMENT.

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  7. @ prasad: continued…
    “In particular I am trying to understand this: “The supervision of cases, with one exception, was mainly a waste of time. The supervisors seemed bored and just applied standard formulas.” Especially since clinically speaking the results don’t seem to show strong impact of theory and very strong impact of personal and relationship factors (which sounds intuitively right..), I would have thought that the ‘practical’ aspect would be -more- valuable. Does this point to a defect in current training methods?”
    We need some comic relief, and one that makes a valid point. Here’s an old psychotherapist joke.
    A newly minted PhD clinical psychologist joins the staff of a world famous psychotherapist. He has high hopes to be able to study and do practice under the supervision of this master practitioner. The aspiring therapist sees clients in his office, eight hours a day, five days a week. At the end of each day he is tired and emotionally spent. At the end of his first week he comes out of his office completely spent, and in need of a recuperative weekend. Each day he observed the master therapist emerge from his office just as fresh and energetic as when he started the day. That Friday at the end of work, the young clinician asked, pleadingly, of his mentor, “How can you look so calm and undisturbed after a whole week of listening to all the problems of your clients?” The master looked at him, smiled, and spoke. “Who listens?”
    Yes, the practical aspect, under supervision, should be one of the most valuable experiences for the training of a psychotherapist. But, when the elder teacher gives a pat diagnosis that is a page from the dogma of a particular school or club of therapy, it makes you wonder if anyone is listening – or even cares to listen. Would you tolerate something like this in your own field of study and practice? Of course not, because no one could get away with it for very long.
    A therapist friend in training presented a case to the supervising therapist. The immediate comment from the supervisor was something like, “A borderline personality, with oral fixations, who has not resolved his Oedipal complex.” My friend who had not been indoctrinated with inflexible dogma said, “Maybe what we have here is simply a person who was terribly traumatized in childhood, and is now trying to deal with alcohol and drug addiction.” My friend’s observations were dismissed. This is what Breger was talking about as a waste of time. My friend finished the required hours of supervision and then found other teaching therapists who were from planet Earth.
    We will hear more from Breger about his own training and learning from his experiences over a long career as a psychotherapist.

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  8. Elatia Harris

    In my view, only people who have read Freud are welcome to hold him in contempt. Coming to conclusions about Freud on the basis of his worst exponents — or his most vicious detractors who have not read him — avails nothing. He was a towering genius who opened the door. What bothers me about many of his detractors is that they are simply not worthy to take the measure of the man. Dismissing Freud wholesale because of some aspect of him you don’t like is as stupid as boycotting Brahms because you don’t admire the German Requiem. If you want to read some highly intelligent people on the subject of why Freud was wrong, there are a handful and they are worth reading — names furnished on request.
    I don’t like “Aaron Green” either, nor did I 32 years ago when that article appeared. But at the time, orthodoxy was a refuge for a certain type of analyst. It looks more like a foxhole now. But ask Oliver Sacks — he’s been seeing the same orthodox Freudian for more than 40 years. We’ll never know if the way he lives — as a celibate with many associates but no intimates, as a person whose work consumes him — is a triumph over misery and terror, or a retreat to a bolt hole orchestrated by the wrong doctor. The trouble with any long term therapy is that it becomes its own business, and the longer it lasts the less likely the patient can do without it. Or even wants to do without it. Because there is no other relationship in life that can literally be all about the patient. Thus many lengthy therapies unfit the patient for the
    sort of life he/she once might have desired to live, and may even have sought treatment in order to live.
    Analytic therapies are guiltier than most. I disagree that Analysis and analysts posit the patient is too sick to be on the loose — all they have to do is provide an emotionally richer life than the patient has any other way to get. They are for that reason tremendously attractive and powerful tools for making “lifers” of Narcissists, to whom no relationship that doen’t center on themselves is adequate. All across the mental health services delivery system, but in analysis especially, you see the illness the patient ostensibly seeks delivery from delivered right back to him. “Trapped in the mirror,” as the saying goes. All this without the well-intentioned doctor meaning it, of course.
    But please don’t blame Freud — he thought analysis should take a few very intense months. If you read one of his most famous case histories, “The Wolf Man,” you will learn about the lengthiest treatment he ever conducted. When Freud died, Sergei Pavlovitch, the Wolf Man, was a pensioner who then signed on with Dr. Ruth Mack Brunswick as his analyst for the duration. But — the details of the case will convince you that Sergei Pavlovitch needed every session he ever had.

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  9. @ Elatia,
    As usual, you give us informed views and much food for thought. I hope you will follow the case stories when I do Parts 2 and 3. Of course, I can only give brief coverage to a few of the cases in Breger’s book. The story about Elizabeth is a good one. What she experienced with other therapists before Breger is what I have heard from a good number of people with recent dealings with therapists. The therapists are quick out of the gate with a diagnostic label [Borderline Personality Disorder seems to be a popular favorite,] and making the client feel like they are under a microscope.
    As I talked to more and more people who have been in therapy in the past few years there appear to be therapists who do not know how to manage a client in their sessions. For example, the therapist was great at getting the client to open up, recall, and discuss very difficult and painful experiences from childhood. The psychologist had no idea about titrating the experience during the session and ‘cooling down’ the client before the end of the session. The closing was usually abrupt with an encouraging, “You are doing great, and we will pick up at our next session.” The client, an alcoholic who was trying to stay sober, had to resort to drinking to subdue her emotional state following each therapy session.
    Speaking of Freud, Lou Breger asked me early this year if I would join him in doing a discussion or article on the movie, “A Dangerous Method,” which was about the relationship of Freud and Carl Jung, and Jung’s relationship with Sabina Spielrein, his patient, student, and mistress. For the benefit of other readers, Breger joined me in my third article on Freud at 3QuarksDaily.
    You can find the third article here [with links to the first two articles]: http://www.3quarksdaily.com/3quarksdaily/2010/05/psychological-science-sigmund-freud-a-dream-of-undying-fame.html
    Anyway, I got around to watching “A Dangerous Method” but thought the movie making, writing, and acting were not that good. Besides, I am not a scholar of Freud and Breger is. What I was more interested in was his new book. I liked it a lot. I am not the best person to do a review of the book, or any book on psychotherapy, but I bring a perspective as a consumer and observer of psychotherapy. The interview with the author seemed like a good way to focus on substantive content rather than broad praises or pans in a short review.
    Also, for the benefit of readers, I wrote a two-part non-fiction piece on a predator psychiatrist.
    Part 1 can be found here: http://www.3quarksdaily.com/3quarksdaily/2009/04/my-life-as-a-crime-fighter-the-case-of-the-predator-psychiatrist.html
    Part 2 can be found here: http://www.3quarksdaily.com/3quarksdaily/2009/05/my-life-as-a-crime-fighter-the-case-of-the-predator-psychiatrist-part-2.html

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  10. Excellent post. Prior to beginning the book, I had read a number of promising reviews, as well as heard positive feedback from colleagues. Thanks for sharing such a lovely interview. Perhaps the most interesting aspect of Costa’s analysis seems to be the feedback gathered from patients who did not have a positive experience with psychotherapy. While I see the usefulness of the practice, I too have witnessed a number of individuals in long-term therapy sessions that seem to have mixed feelings about the outcome. Certainly everyone could use a healthy dose of reflection and guided psycho-analysis, but I’m concerned that in many instances such sessions may digress into self-wallowing psychological expeditions. Nevertheless, the book is fascinating and fosters an ongoing dialogue that I’m certain may prove useful for further research. Again, thanks for sharing.

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