Author Archive | admin

On the Usefulness of Psychotherapy Treatment When Dealing with Depression: Some More Thoughts on Charlie Rose Brain Series 2: Depression

As a psychotherapist, I very much appreciated that there was a focus in the Charlie Rose program on depression on the usefulness of psychotherapy when treating depression. I appreciated that the panelists emphasized that the latest research suggests that a combination of psychotherapy and medication management is the most effective strategy in the treatment of […]

Continue Reading

On Human Relationship and Loss

I only caught a few minutes of the Forum program with Louis Breger, a psychotherapist and author of a new memoir about his work. And what I heard I just have to comment on. A caller spoke of entering psychotherapy treatment with abandonment issues and how the psychotherapist said to her that it would only […]

Continue Reading

Frampton Comes Alive (in Psychotherapy)

“More specifically, the analytic task of helping the [patient] become more fully human involves facilitating the patient’s efforts … to experience a greater range (and play) of thoughts, feelings, and sensations that are felt to be his own and that are felt to have been generated in the context of his own present and past […]

Continue Reading

What We Talk About When We Talk Across Cyberspace: How We Relate in the Age of the Internet

There is perhaps nothing that can be said about modern life more true than observing the ubiquity of the internet. It is indeed everywhere. People now meet through the internet for purposes of casual acquaintance, sexual encounters, and potential long-lasting relationships. People plan their travel online (does anyone remember travel agents?). People bank. People read. […]

Continue Reading

Musings on the Mind at Play

The other day I heard the neuroscientist Stuart Firestein on Forum echoing the philosophy of Socrates. Mr. Firestein, the author of a new book called “Ignorance,’ argued that science is less about an accumulation of facts and more about embracing what we don’t know. He was talking about maintaining a view that the more one […]

Continue Reading

Corrective Emotional Experience, Plus

Writing in 1946, Franz Alexander coined the term “corrective emotional experience” to describe what he thought of as the key aspect of psychotherapy treatment. In his work, he expanded on Freud’s discoveries of half a century earlier. Freud maintained that people in a sense forget their traumatic experiences by repressing the memory of those experiences. […]

Continue Reading

The Relationship Crucible

There was a wonderful article recently in the New York Times, by a wonderful and favorite writer of mine, Diane Ackerman, that talks about how science has proved what psychotherapy has known for some time now: change takes place through relationship. Citing the new field of interpersonal neurobiology, Ms. Ackerman, in her piece called “The […]

Continue Reading

Flip Flopping Towards Health

Much can be known about the American psyche from even a casual glance at American politics. My focus here is to address the psyche and not the politics of the politicians. Take what happened yesterday. A spokesman for the Romney campaign said some things about hitting the “reset button” when the general election campaign begins […]

Continue Reading