שיחה עם דונה אורנג'- לשמוע מטופלים - איפה אנחנו נכשלים ואיך ניתן לתקן ?
Introduction Welcome and Event Overview
- Host welcomes attendees from Tel Aviv for a conversation series on psychotherapy.
- Introduction of philosopher and psychoanalyst Donna Orange as the guest speaker.
- Upcoming events include discussions with Jane Abram, Bob Hinchelwood, Leslie Greenberg, and Ophra Eshel.
Focus on Plurality Embracing Diverse Voices in Psychotherapy
- The institute values diverse perspectives in psychotherapy beyond specific schools of thought.
- Encouragement for audience participation through chat comments during the event.
- Anar Vreen introduces himself and his research focus on psychoanalytic knowledge evolution.
Discussion on Silencing Exploring the Concept of Silencing
- The conversation will center around the theme of silencing in various contexts.
- Reference to Donna's book discussing experiences of silencing within individuals and organizations.
- Psychoanalysis historically has a legacy of silencing despite promoting open dialogue.
Critique of Psychoanalytic Legacy Freud's Influence on Silence
- Freud's silence towards patients' clinical material that conflicted with his theories is noted.
- Loyalty among analysts led to compliance with Freud’s ideas, contributing to a culture of silence.
Donna Orange's Perspective Broader Implications of Silence
- Donna Orange critiques psychological trends related to self-states and moral integrity.
- Concerns about indecisiveness stemming from multiple self-concepts affecting responses to suffering.
Spiritual Psychoanalysis Critique Threat to Humanism
- Criticism of spiritual psychologies that undermine humanistic voices in psychology.
Introducing Donna Orange Background and Contributions
- Donna Orange is introduced as a psychoanalyst and philosopher based in California.
- Overview of her recent works including topics like ethics, suffering, and climate crisis.
Introduction The Importance of Listening and Hearing
- The speaker expresses gratitude for the invitation to discuss contemporary psychoanalysis.
- Discussion begins on the impact of sudden deafness in one ear, leading to reflections on silence.
- The speaker shares insights from their new book, highlighting a photograph that symbolizes beauty.
Experiencing Deafness Challenges of Hearing Loss
- The speaker recounts losing the ability to locate sounds, creating humorous yet challenging situations.
- Describes the difficulties faced while navigating daily life without proper hearing.
- Emphasizes how masks exacerbate communication issues for those with hearing impairments.
Isolation and Communication Effects of Invisible Disabilities
- Discusses the emotional toll of living with single-sided deafness and feeling isolated in conversations.
- Highlights how this condition can lead to a sense of loneliness akin to victims of normalized violence.
- After cochlear implant surgery, learning to hear again becomes a significant challenge.
Learning to Hear Again Metaphors and Ethical Implications
- The integration of electronic input from the implant signifies a journey towards improved hearing.
- Learning to hear is framed as a metaphor for understanding voices and ethical responsibilities.
- Reflecting on privilege associated with cochlear implants raises questions about ethical listening.
Ethical Listening vs. Hearing Distinctions in Psychoanalytic Context
- Explores the difference between listening (trained skill in therapy programs) and genuine hearing.
- Questions whether ethical capacity can be lost or regained through experiences like hearing loss.
Understanding Emotional Availability
- Discussion on how hearing loss influenced understanding of patients and human suffering.
- Question raised about whether therapists must experience suffering to understand others' suffering.
- Introduction of the concept of emotional availability as crucial for therapy.
Impact of Parental Emotional Availability
- Research indicates parental emotional availability significantly affects child development.
- Therapists must strive to be emotionally available to understand patients' struggles.
- Deafness heightened awareness of emotional availability in therapeutic settings.
The Role of Personal Suffering in Therapy
- Life experiences, including personal suffering, contribute to clinical wisdom and maturity.
- Emphasis on becoming more emotionally available through personal experiences.
- Understanding patients through one's own trauma differs from classical psychoanalysis.
Evolution of Psychoanalytic Understanding
- Freud's approach aimed for a universally applicable theory but lacked personal experience integration.
- Recognition that analysts' life experiences enhance their psychoanalytic capacity is growing.
- Acknowledgment that learning from Freud's evolution as a therapist is important.
Self-Awareness in Therapy Practice
- Reflection on past judgments about Freud and recognizing his growth over time.
- Importance of acknowledging ways therapists may silence patients during sessions.
Challenges in Patient Communication
- Awareness of biases and prejudices is essential for effective therapy practice.
- Example shared about a patient’s experience with racial profiling and therapist's limitations in understanding it.
Understanding the Balance Between Theory and Patient Care
The Challenge of Theoretical Frameworks
- Focusing too much on specific theories can hinder understanding patients' concerns outside those frameworks.
- Rigid adherence to theories may prevent genuine connection with patients, emphasizing the need to hold theories lightly.
- Supervisors should also remain open to understanding struggles without imposing their theoretical beliefs.
Navigating Personal Biases
- Awareness of personal biases is crucial for effective patient engagement while maintaining emotional availability.
- Being sensitive to one's own history enhances receptivity to patients' needs and suffering.
- Ethical practice involves integrating personal experiences into service for others rather than disregarding them.
Embracing Complexity in Clinical Choices
- Acknowledging personal history enriches the therapeutic process and fosters a deeper connection with patients.
- Balancing personal insights with patient care requires embracing the messiness of individual histories.
- Learning from diverse histories increases capacity to empathize and support others effectively.
Reflecting on Clinical Decisions
- Every theoretical choice made during therapy silences other potential options, highlighting the importance of inclusivity in practice.
- Engaging in supervision helps clinicians navigate complex clinical choices and learn from past experiences.
- Reflection on clinical decisions reveals how previous ideas influence choices made during sessions.
The Nature of Choice in Therapy
- Clinical choices are often influenced by underlying theories or experiences, making them feel predetermined at times.
- Reflective practice allows therapists to assess whether decisions were conscious or automatic responses.
Silencing in Psychoanalysis
- Reflective and self-critical capacity is crucial for analysts' development.
- Dana shares experiences of being silenced in religious communities and during analytic training.
- A notable experience involved a prominent analyst dismissing questions about Freud, leading to silence in class.
Teaching Methods and Their Impact
- Teaching psychoanalysis can convey messages that certain thoughts are unacceptable, silencing students.
- Imposing viewpoints on students leads to learned behaviors of silence and conformity.
- Supervisors' treatment of candidates influences how they will treat their future patients.
The Challenge of Silence
- Theoretical biases from supervisors can be passed down to patients unless candidates leave the supervision.
- Quoting Levin, the importance of recognizing vulnerable silence is emphasized as a challenge in psychoanalysis.
Navigating Client Dynamics
- Discusses listening to clients with contrasting values, such as wealthy individuals versus those from marginalized backgrounds.
- The speaker reflects on personal biases when working with affluent clients who may not recognize their privilege.
Personal Background Influences
- Experiences with diverse patient backgrounds highlight challenges faced when dealing with wealthy clients.
- The speaker's upbringing influences perceptions of wealth and social justice issues in therapy sessions.
Ethical Considerations in Therapy
- Awareness of personal prejudices is essential for effective therapy, focusing on client suffering rather than wealth origins.
Understanding Patient Vulnerabilities
- Focus on specific troubles or fears that patients present, showing rather than telling ethical behavior.
- Avoid direct challenges to wealth or entitlement; instead, demonstrate humane behavior through actions.
- Wealth often comes with a sense of entitlement; explore what individuals feel entitled to regarding their suffering.
The Role of Shame in Therapy
- Aim to show humane behavior without verbal instruction; some patients may engage in humanitarian efforts as a result.
- Directly challenging narcissism is often unhelpful; understanding underlying shame can be more effective in therapy.
- Making patients socially engaged is not the primary goal but can be a beneficial side effect of therapy.
Shifts in Clinical Reality
- Patients are increasingly discussing social issues like racism and climate change during sessions.
- The pandemic has created shared vulnerabilities, altering the clinical landscape for both therapists and patients.
- The aim is to increase patient consciousness rather than impose any specific agenda.
Navigating Personal Biases in Therapy
- Therapists may have internal criticisms about clients' wealth but must focus on understanding their perspectives.
- Responses to clients’ material concerns communicate values; it's essential to express genuine interest in their motivations.
- Bracketing personal prejudices allows therapists to serve the needs of the client effectively while addressing relevant social issues.
Engagement Beyond Traditional Roles
Radical Hearing and Patient Connection
Understanding Radical Hearing
- Radical hearing is a developed sensitivity to the suffering of others, allowing one to prioritize their needs over personal suffering.
- The importance of being fully present with patients, regardless of personal experiences or assumptions.
- A case study illustrates the deep connection formed through shared rituals and support during a patient's illness.
Acceptance and Human Connection
- The patient expressed gratitude for helping her accept her illness, highlighting the significance of simply being present.
- Emphasizes that psychoanalytic training can complicate humane interactions; it's essential to focus on the patient's needs.
- Questions posed during supervision help clarify whether actions are for the patient’s benefit or the therapist's.
Philosophical Influences on Listening
- The speaker acknowledges influences from humanistic psychology figures like Carl Rogers while maintaining a psychoanalytic perspective.
- Psychoanalysis enriches understanding by exploring unconscious elements that affect interpersonal dynamics.
- Philosophers like Socrates emphasize self-awareness as crucial in understanding oneself and others.
Western Philosophy's Role
- Western philosophy traditionally values knowledge, with Socratic wisdom emphasizing knowing one's ignorance as key to understanding.
Understanding Dialogic Thinking
- Heidegger and Gadamer's influence on dialogic thinking emphasized the importance of bracketing assumptions in understanding experiences.
- Focus shifts from seeking absolute truth to understanding the patient's experience and sensitivity to their feelings.
- The approach changes from identifying what's wrong with a patient to exploring how to help them based on their perceptions.
Philosophical Influence on Clinical Work
- Emphasis on understanding the structures of a patient's experience rather than labeling their pathology.
- A shift in perspective encourages curiosity about patients' narratives instead of dismissing their beliefs as irrational.
- Engaging with patients' experiences, like George Atwood's approach, fosters deeper clinical insights.
The Role of Interpretation in Therapy
- Analysts must be sensitive and receptive to others' suffering rather than assuming they know what is wrong.
- Interpretation should acknowledge shared experiences without claiming absolute knowledge about a patient's issues.
- Recognizing moments of connection or disconnection between analyst and patient enhances therapeutic dialogue.
Expanding Interpretive Practices
- Advocating for an inclusive interpretation that considers both verbal and non-verbal cues in therapy sessions.
- Understanding unconscious elements through gentle questioning can reveal deeper layers of experience.
Hermeneutics: Trust vs. Suspicion
- Discussion on hermeneutics distinguishes between suspicion (doubtful interpretation) and faith (trusting interpretation).
Understanding the Hermeneutics of Suspicion
- The hermeneutics of suspicion suggests looking beyond surface meanings to uncover hidden motives, as taught by Nietzsche, Marx, and Freud.
- Gadamer's hermeneutics contrasts with suspicion by emphasizing that every statement is an answer to a question, focusing on understanding the underlying inquiry.
- The discussion includes the philosophical influences on phenomenology and how they relate to concepts of sameness and difference.
Comparing Buber and Levinas
- Both Buber and Levinas have overlapping ideas; both are valued for their contributions to radical ethics.
- Buber introduced the "I-Thou" relationship, emphasizing dialogue and equality in interpersonal connections.
- Levinas critiques Buber's view by asserting that ethical relationships are asymmetrical, prioritizing the needs of others over oneself.
Ethical Priorities in Relationships
- Levinas argues that ethical situations always place the other at a higher moral level than oneself.
- He emphasizes non-indifference towards others' precarious lives, advocating for small acts of kindness as ethical responsibilities.
- Developing a habit of prioritizing others prepares individuals for larger ethical demands when necessary.
Holiness and Ethical Actions
- Levinas describes moments of holiness as actions taken for others in need without clear justification or personal gain.
- In contrast to Buber’s focus on dialogue, Levinas highlights spontaneous acts of care as significant ethical expressions.
- Both philosophers critique modern life’s tendency to objectify individuals rather than recognizing their inherent value.
The Impact of Ethical Orientation
- Adopting an ethical orientation shifts focus from self-needs to addressing the needs of others effectively.
Understanding Acceptance in Psychoanalysis
The Role of Acceptance
- Discusses the importance of helping patients accept their conditions, emphasizing actions over words.
- Highlights a patient's struggle with self-perception and the impact of being treated as a valued individual.
Challenges in Psychoanalytic Service
- Questions why it's difficult to serve others in pain, suggesting cultural influences on individualism.
- Notes that psychoanalytic training often discourages simply being present for patients.
Shifts in Psychoanalytic Attitudes
- Describes a significant change in perspective towards patient care, moving from authority to companionship.
- Compares this shift to a religious conversion, altering how therapists view their roles.
Ethics and Decency During Crisis
Ethical Responsibilities
- References literature illustrating ethical behavior during crises, such as caring for dying patients.
- Discusses the relevance of ethics observed during the COVID pandemic and its implications for therapy.
Personal Reflections on Pandemic Impact
- Shares personal feelings about lockdown and reflections on American culture's selfishness.
- States that while not directly involved clinically anymore, philosophical views remain unchanged by the pandemic.
Communication Barriers in Therapy
Challenges with Non-Verbal Communication
- Introduces an example involving a deaf young man using sign language during therapy sessions.
Understanding the Role of Senses in Therapy
- We rely on hearing more than we realize; sensory deprivation complicates therapy.
- The ethical commitment to understanding a patient's suffering is crucial for therapists.
- Therapists face personal needs and conflicts, such as payment and self-care, impacting their practice.
Navigating Ethical Dilemmas in Therapy
- Balancing financial needs with patient care can be challenging for therapists.
- Therapists may adopt varied fee structures to accommodate different patients' financial situations.
- Open communication about boundaries is essential for developing a child's capacity for concern.
Relational Theory and Therapist Needs
- Some relational theorists emphasize the need for mutual recognition between therapist and patient.
- Maintaining respect is vital; mistreatment can hinder therapeutic work.
- Self-care must coexist with serving the patient, requiring careful management of both aspects.
The Importance of Mutual Recognition
- Recognizing each other as meaningful others enhances therapeutic relationships.
- Addressing feelings of insult or humiliation is necessary to maintain effective collaboration.
- The goal should be to facilitate working together while ensuring mutual respect.
Final Thoughts on Objective Identification
Relationship to Brahmberg's Work
- The speaker discusses their essay on relational psychoanalysis and Brahmberg's positive feedback.
- Brahmberg invited the speaker for dinner, expressing appreciation despite some disagreements.
Critique of Projective Identification
- The speaker critiques projective identification as an authoritarian concept in psychoanalysis.
- They argue it simplifies complex emotional processes into a formulaic idea.
Personal Experience with Projective Identification
- The speaker acknowledges clinical experiences that use the term but finds it reductive.
- They prefer describing personal experiences rather than relying on the term itself.
Conclusion and Gratitude
- The speaker thanks participants for a meaningful conversation and expresses a desire to connect more personally.
Community Reflection
- Acknowledges the global community of participants, emphasizing its significance.
Poetic Reflection: Sounds of Silence