
Psychotherapy, Counseling, Social Work
I'm a licensed professional.
Psychoanalytic - 000141
After training as a Psychotherapist I became more than a clinician. I also had to become a researcher. This means that I am always studying and learning from the people that I work with. As a researcher, I have found that most personal struggles are related to difficulties knowing and /or expressing what we think, feel and need. The process by which we learn to know and express our own unique voice, differentiated from the voices of our significant others, is referred to as the Separation/Individuation process. Individuation/Separation is an issue that is a fundamental part of human development. Over the years that I have worked as a psychotherapist, I have found that almost everyone who I have worked with has struggled with some aspect of this process. As a result, I have become increasingly attuned to this basic issue in the struggles of my patients and I have accumulated a great deal of experience and worked with a very wide range of problems related to this process. Everyone needs to develop their own unique self if they are to be separate functioning individuals in the world. The variety of conflicts that people encounter on their way to becoming individuals is astounding. Becoming a person requires saying yes to oneself: yes to what I like, yes to what I want, yes to what I feel, etc. In the process of saying yes to oneself, it is often necessary to say no to an other. This may mean the child saying “no I don’t want to eat that” the teen arguing, “no
Recently, George came to see me for a consultation. He had graduated college several years before, was working in finance and hated it and he couldn’t seem to make relationships with women work. He felt anxious and depressed and told me he had been considering coming to therapy for a long time but felt it would be proof that he was weak and couldn’t take care of himself. He worried that he might be a wimp and he added that he particularly didn’t want his father or his co-workers to find out. As George and I talked, I told him that I had such a different idea about what the choice of coming to therapy indicated about a person’s character. I told him that I believed the choice to seek therapy when you were unable to create the life you wanted for yourself was a sign of strength. It indicated to me that you had the capacity to assess your situation and decide a course of action to make things better. It meant you were not stuck going around in circles trying to make something work when it wasn’t working. In other words, knowing when to seek help vs. staying stuck in the same problems and issues is an assertive act. When you are in a family, social or work group that doesn’t appreciate the merits of therapy or doesn’t understand the courage it takes to address your problems and look at yourself and your life, it is even more impressive that you can seek help. I told George that I didn’t expect him to agree with my perspective about therapy. But I did sugg
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