Brief Therapy with Single Mothers: The Transformational Alchemy of Metaphor

Psychic Schemas and the Phenomenology of Being a Single Mother

There are over 9 million single mothers in the USA. Therapists working with these women hear stories of abandonment, disempowerment, loneliness, hopelessness, victimization, rage, and unrelenting stress.

Disturbing perceptions and emotions such as these, and the distorted interpretations that result, may, but more likely and typically, solidify into psychic schemas characterized by deeply embedded patterns of distorted thinking, dysfunctional reacting, and compromised coping.

Psychic schemas, themselves free of valence, can be understood as internal vehicles serving as repositories for what the individual notices, perceives, and catalogues — including feelings, thoughts, sensations, actions, experiences, and the ever-changing states of the Self. The way these phenomena of living are perceived — through thought, memory, imagination — and the linguistics of the internal narrative, provides the personal schema with its phenomenology, its valence, and its meanings.

As with any individual, what gets introduced and accepted into a single mother’s schema will affect how she thinks, what she feels, how she continues to live her life, and how she views herself. Her existing schema will influence content that continues to be incorporated. The phenomena that become absorbed will affirm or refute negative cognitions, support or refute distorted thinking, validate or dissipate painful emotions, increase or decrease stress, and affect choices of action, including decisions about the mother’s parenting — and about her sense of self.

Through listening to the single mother’s stories, and recognizing her interpretations about them, the therapist can become aware of and assess the possibilities for creatively crafting metaphors that can elicit cognitive shifts, emotional transformations, and behavioral change.

The Transformational Alchemy of Metaphor

The unconscious mind embodies a powerful potential to transform negatively charged schemas into more positive ones that embody uplifting themes and hopeful interpretations. The quiet mind, combined with the evocative and rhythmic language of hypnosis, can fuel a subconscious shift that can reduce stress, increase ego strength (including parenting skill), transform confusion into clarity, decrease stress, and increase a sense of strength and wellbeing.

Used in conjunction with trance, the mother’s personal metaphors become powerful tools that can reach beyond the didactic to tap the unconscious mind’s potential for reframing and restructuring the phenomenology of the single mother’s psychic schema. This potential to redirect focus, shift internal states and create change in the bio-psychosocial-emotional substance of the patient’s psychic schema constitutes the transformational power of metaphor.

Metaphors (and their cousins, simile, allegory and parable) contain rich sensual imagery that can gently and poetically focus attention to perceptions that can shift self-states and move patients toward changes they desire. When used with techniques of trance, such as tempo and attunement, metaphors drawn from patients’ stories constitute a power-filled therapeutic tool for anchoring change and growth in the body-mind with stability and durability that can successfully lead to increased resilience and coping strength.

Using brief, simple, and effective techniques, therapists can assist the single mother in imaging and identifying with new metaphors drawn from her own personal story. In trance, this “sympathetic identification” with new and transformed metaphors can lead to increased confidence, more solid self-esteem, greater ego strength, and a more integrated core of Self. When this positive enhancement becomes incorporated into the psychic schema, the psychosocial-emotional benefit to the mother can also benefit the health of her children.

In the following narrative, my work with “Queen Esta” demonstrates the way in which a carefully crafted metaphor has the power to shift the meaning of a personal and create a stronger sense of Self.

Queen Esta’s Story

“I just left my husband of 30 years!”

That was how Esta introduced herself, at the age of 83, knowing that she could have a future. Esta wanted to understand why she had spent thirty years with a second husband she did not love. To Esta’s credit, she had the wisdom to realize that at this critical turning point, it was important for her to understand the greater span of her life in order to accept her choice to leave her marriage.

As Esta’s story unfolded, it became clear to both of us that Esta’s acceptance of her current choices had everything to do with looking at a different piece of her story. Long before there were social supports and the stigma had faded, Esta had been a single mother. Esta soon came to realize that understanding the impact and meaning of her single motherhood would hold a key to the answers and comfort that she was seeking.

I discovered that Esta had married her first husband in the early 1940’s, shortly before he went into the service and, “when I was too young to know what love was.” The new husband had come home on leave and had left Esta again, pregnant. Esta’s husband was not pleased with the news. When he told her that he wanted her to have an abortion, she agreed it was a very good idea. “I did have one,” she enjoys saying triumphantly — “and it was him!”

After dismissing and divorcing her husband, Esta found herself a single mother of a very young son. In the mid 1940’s, widows, especially war widows, had some acceptance, but single motherhood was not as socially integrated as it is today. How had Esta coped? What had been her resources? Even so many years later, Esta did not fully comprehend how strong she must have been to grapple with the social context of the day and the great difficulties and isolation that single mothers faced.

As single mothers in every era must, Esta had to deal with her own fears and insecurities and raise her child at the same time. Esta had done both successfully, but she did not see the strengths she had drawn on or realize that they could add to her resilience in the present.

During her son’s early childhood, Esta had called upon her inner and outer resources. She had relied on her parents to take care of her little boy while she worked long hours, often traveling alone overnight. She remained mindful and grateful for the help she was getting from her family, feeling fortunate that she had this support. In this way, Esta did not see herself as a victim, but rather cultivated an attitude of acceptance that gave her strength to keep going.

“Esta,” I asked her, “Wasn’t it terribly hard to be a single mother in those days?”

“Yes, it was.” She assured me. “I did what I had to do, but there were others harder up than I was, with no families to help.

“What is the secret of this positive attitude you had?” (She still has it into her 90s!)

“I believe in God.” she said unhesitatingly. “This was the path he chose for me, and I had to accept that. I felt grateful to have my son. He was so precious, and my mother and father loved him as if he was their own. I accepted my decision to divorce and trusted that this was what God wanted for me. So, you see, I was lucky.”

As Esta continued to examine her life story, she came to realize that more than luck had been at work. She was able to see her courage and the intuitive wisdom that gave her the courage to banish husband number one. Finally, she could entertain the idea that there was also deep wisdom in her choice of husband number two. At a point where she no longer had family support, was weary from her grueling job, and had no financial base, Esta had married a man who could, and would, support her and her son.

Esta was now able to make sense of her past and present choices, comforted by knowing that they had been logical, born from a positive impetus. With this knowledge, she was able to accept the sadness of never having had the romantic union, but Esta was relieved of the stress caused by disappointment and regrets, and feelings of well-being replaced disappointment and regret.

Once again, Esta had “done what I had to do.” Realizing how strong she had been in the past helped Esta to see that her decision to leave her current husband was coming from an authentic core part of her Self which knew what was right for her now as it had in the past. As she achieved this wisdom, Esta’s feelings of sadness and self-doubt were replaced by a sense of well-being and an appreciation for her experience and her maturity.

In the throes of her single motherhood, Esta was too immersed in survival to see what she was accomplishing, and the era of self-help and therapeutic support had not yet dawned. Now, so many years later, ready to look back and see her success as a single mother, Esta embarked upon a review that allowed her to know how inner wisdom had directed her to cope and survive. Esta told me about the love of her life, a young man who had died before they were able to be married, almost 50 years ago.

Esta recounted the depth of that old grief, and how difficult life became then, and again when her parents, on whom she had so depended, died. Through all these losses, Esta had kept her sense of humor, her belief in God, and the persistent effort to give her son a good life. She maintained her dedication to him even to the day when this son, now a man, asked for her blessing to follow his destiny 3000 miles away. “My heart broke.” She told me. “But what could I say? This is what he wanted, and I wanted him to be happy.”

As she reviewed the events that required such pervasive and abiding courage, Esta was able to acknowledge that, indeed, life had been hard for her. She affirmed that trust in the will of her Higher Power had enabled her to embody the healthy attitude that had been with her into her 90s. When Esta started therapy, she was no longer the young mother with a little boy to bring up.

However, it meant the world to Esta to transform her doubts of having wasted her life into a view of herself that affirmed her strength, and the deep abiding soul Wisdom that guided her so many years ago, when she just “Did what I had to do.”

When asked how I should identify her in my book, Esta requested that she be called “Queen Esther.” Partly, she says, because Queen Esther in the Bible was a wise woman and a survivor; and partly because now Esta saw herself as “Esther,” a modern Queen, courageously having raised a boy into a good man.

Esther told me that she knows that the difficulties she faced as a single mother helped to make her into the Queen she is. She knows that she made choices from an inner truth that directed her to do the right thing.

Queen Esther was then, and will always be, truly a Soul Mother.

This story is excerpted and adapted from Soul Mothers’ Wisdom: Seven Insights for the Single Mother, by and with the permission of its author, Bette Jonas Freedson, and that of its publisher, Pearlsong Press.  

What I Know Now About the Clients Risks and Rewards of Reporting Sexual Assault

E. Jean Carroll stood on the courthouse steps to give her statement to the press following the jury's findings that former President Trump was liable for sexual abuse and defamation. She said, “This victory is not just for me, but for every woman who has suffered because she wasn't believed.”

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Within the hour, my phone buzzed notification after notification across my email and social platforms. People sent me screenshots of the headlines, celebratory emojis, and gifs. I've worked professionally in sexual assault victim advocacy in some capacity since 2010, first as an advocate and then as a psychotherapist.

Whenever a case like this happens, I become very popular for a few days. Being the go-to person for all things sexual assault in your social circles is, in a word, odd. It's amazing that anyone invites me to cocktail parties anymore. It's also amazing how many people will share their stories, bravely and candidly, when they have reason to think you'll believe them.

Why Sexual Assault Victims are Coming Forward Now

Amid the collection of celebratory emoticons, however, were a handful of skeptics using words like “convenient,” “opportunistic,” and “sketchy." They asked questions like, “Why now?”

In E. Jean Carroll's case, at least part of the answer to the question "Why now?" is that it was finally possible. In May 2022, the Governor of New York, Kathy Hochul, signed the Adult Survivors Act (S.66A/A.648A). The law went into effect in November of 2022, creating a one-year retrospective window for sexual assault survivors who were over the age of 18 at the time of their assaults the opportunity to come forward. A similar law for children was passed in 2019.

There are several ways to answer that question. Still, I am most struck by how surprised people are by the concept of delayed reporting — as if victims of sexual abuse should be clamoring to face the slut-shaming and character defamation.

That aside, why do people delay reporting?

In my clinical experience, I’ve learned that if they report at all, most of my clients delay doing so for some time, ranging from days to weeks to months, even years. Survivors offer several reasons for why they waited or simply refused to report their sexual assaults. The fear of not being believed is probably the most common. Victim blaming for the assault is a close second.

Another reason I've run into is that a victim may not understand that what they experienced was sexual assault. For years, we emphasized the trope of the male stranger in the alleyway, even though most assaults happen with a perpetrator who the victim knows. After all, it doesn't fit with the mythos they were taught. Even with DNA and forensic exams, consent remains essential to distinguishing rape and sexual assault from “just sex.” Personal accounts and statements are often key to a case — the infamous “he said/she said.”

The Impact of #MeToo

Although we've seen several high-profile people held accountable for sexual harassment, assault, and abuse more recently, the rate of successful prosecution (resulting in a felony conviction) remains abysmal at around 2.8%., according to RAINN, (Rape, Abuse, & Incest National Network)

That's part of what makes E. Jean Carroll's trial so remarkable. To many survivors, she did the impossible.

It's only been since 2017 when the #MeToo Movement — started By Tarana Burke in 2006 — gained national attention after Harvey Weinstein's sexual abuse allegations. Before then, men in positions of heavy influence and exceptional power seemed untouchable. But in 2017, suddenly, they were being held accountable for their actions. E. Jean Carroll's assault occurred in 1996. I'm sure that former President Trump seemed untouchable back then — and let's face it, he probably was. The inconvenient truth is, if you don't believe her now, you probably wouldn't have believed her then, either.

Victim Credibility: Who's On Trial?

Anyone who has sat in the courtroom for a sexual assault case will tell you that it is brutal. Court testimony is public record, so the most horrible and terrifying events of a victim's life are not only on display but are quite literally up for debate. I've watched defense attorneys smirk as they prepare to create a spectacle, attempting to dismantle a victim's credibility piece by piece. Even though rape shield laws are designed to protect victims' sexual histories from being used against them in court, the most effective attorneys know how to leverage society's purity culture beliefs and bias against a person's sexuality to undermine a victim's reputation and credibility.

As one salty detective commented, “Juries like virgin victims, Ms. Smith. And even then, it probably won't be enough.” I've learned over the years that, sadly, he was right. What a victim was wearing, drinking, saying, or doing during their assault was added to determine the degree to which a victim was “asking for it.” Of course, they never are. I've worked with hundreds of survivors, and not one person was asking for it.

Repeatedly Traumatized: The Second Worst Thing is Reporting

The few times I've had the opportunity to work with survivors whose cases were prosecuted, the damage caused by the experience of the trial, in many ways, was more challenging to address than the actual assault itself. A former client remarked, “I never thought anything could be more horrible than that night, but then came the trial. My assault is the second worst thing to ever happen to me.” Sexual assault is dehumanizing, and reporting is often described as being sexually assaulted repeatedly.

And those who chant that nothing will change unless victims come forward, I offer the following: if anyone has to do anything, I believe it is the rapists who need to stop raping, the perpetrators who need to stop perpetrating, and the rest of us who need to start believing. You can't tell people they have to report and not believe them when they do just because they've accused someone whom you esteem or can relate to.

It's easy to get caught up in the court system not working as it is supposed to and a culture that doesn't believe survivors. Even as a therapist and former victim advocate, short of it being a mandatory reporting case, I struggle with encouraging survivors to report their assaults.

I let them know that different reporting options exist and offer to assist in facilitating that process when they ask. However, I am careful not to frame reporting as the gateway to healing but as a potential component of their overall healing journey.

If a survivor wants to report because the action itself aids in restoring their sense of power, autonomy, or closure, it can be wildly helpful. It can also help support or corroborate testimony should other victims make reports about the person in the future. But fostering the hope of holding someone accountable legally feels risky. Healing from sexual assault cannot be contingent on a 2.8% chance. I try to remind them that they deserve to heal regardless of our system's ability to accomplish that task.

***

Sexual assault is a heavy topic to address in therapy. Early in my career, however, my mentor gave me a phrase that completely shifted my mindset around working with survivors. I believe it is the key to staying enthusiastic 11 years later about this work and avoiding burnout:

“Never desecrate someone's story by offering them pity. If you're feeling pity, you're not focusing on the absolute miracle that they survived to be sitting in front of you.”

Post-Script: As I am sitting here finishing my edits for this blog post, I received a message from a former client I worked with at the beginning of my career. She found me to let me know that she is reporting her assault after more than a decade.

Questions for Thought and Discussion

What was your personal and professional reaction to the verdict in the E. Jean Carroll case?

What have been your experiences working with sexual assault victims?

How have you addressed client resistance to reporting sexual assault in your practice?

Trauma Survivors React to Overturning Roe

At the start of every day, I check the news – not because I’m a responsible citizen, but because doing so helps me prepare for my work as a psychotherapist who specializes in working with complex trauma. George Floyd’s murder, the COVID outbreak, the war in Ukraine: in the wake of these each of these events, I had to take deep breaths before seeing my clients. On the morning of 6/24/22, I read that Roe v. Wade had been overturned, and deep breathing was no longer enough. Instead, I held back tears as several of my clients bravely unpacked the ramifications of this historic decision for their safety, autonomy, and sense of self-worth.

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“When Will I Matter?”

Ruth is 72-year-old black heterosexual cis woman and complex trauma survivor who suffered from years of childhood sexual abuse as she was continually raped by her father. She participated in talk therapy for years with little progress and began seeing me in order to try EMDR, Internal Family Systems Therapy, and Somatic Experiencing. This combination of theoretical perspectives and interventions appeared to be successful, as Ruth reported feeling safer, an improved sense of self-worth, and the courage to begin exploring her sexuality (which had been developmentally delayed for most of her life). The day following the Supreme Court’s ruling on Roe v. Wade, Ruth arrived at our session appearing irritable and stated, “Don’t ask me how I’m doing, you don’t want to know.”

Even though she often presented herself to others as “the nice old lady” (which is a response to complex trauma that many mental health professionals refer to as “fawning” or “people- pleasing''), fortunately Ruth and I had developed a relationship in which she was comfortable feeling and expressing her emotions.

“What if I had gotten pregnant by my father?” she asked. “Some of these states would have forced me to give birth like it was my fault. It’s taken me most of my life to realize that it wasn’t my fault and that it was my father’s illness, but now it feels like there are people who believe that I would have been to blame and that I should have suffered the consequences.” Ruth’s voice began to quiver as her anger morphed into grief. “It’s like my father mattered more than me, my mother mattered more than me, and if I had gotten pregnant now, that fetus would have mattered more than me. When will I matter?”

Complex trauma creates and fuels low self-worth. Ruth was treated like a second-class citizen for most of her life: as a child, as a woman, and particularly as a black woman. The overturning of Roe v. Wade re-awakened and exacerbated past experiences that had nearly destroyed her self-worth. It’s difficult to sustain a healthy sense of self-worth when you are constantly barraged with messages – perpetuated by systemic racism and misogyny – that you are not, in fact, inherently worthy of life, liberty, happiness, or respect; that your life is disposable or only, at best, peripherally or instrumentally considerable. Under such circumstances, how can I help Ruth sustain the self-worth that she has fought so hard to obtain ?

“I’m Next, They’re Coming For Me!”

Leigh is a 32-year-old white married gay man and complex trauma survivor who experienced childhood neglect, abandonment, and emotional abuse. At 14, he was outed by a sibling and subsequently kicked out of his home. He lived on the streets and eventually found his chosen family. After Roe was overturned, he arrived at session making no eye contact, which wasn’t like him. He began the session stating, “I have to start by reading you one of my favorite poems.” I encouraged him to read the poem, which was written by Martin Niemöller.

“First, they came for the Communists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a Communist
Then they came for the Socialists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a Socialist
Then they came for the trade unionists
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a trade unionist
Then they came for the Jews
And I did not speak out
Because I was not a Jew
Then they came for me
And there was no one left
To speak out for me”

We sat in silence as his eyes darted around the room, desperately trying to find the words to express what he was thinking and feeling. “I’m next, they’re coming for me,” he whispered. Some therapists might categorize this thought as paranoia, but I didn’t. There are now rumblings to suggest that overturning Roe v. Wade will become a precedent for overturning same-sex marriage and legal consensual gay sex. Clarence Thomas has even explicitly suggested this.

Leigh arrived to therapy 2 years ago experiencing severe anxiety in social situations, sexual situations, and intimate relationships. He worked hard to address his trauma with attachment-based therapy, EMDR, and Animal Assisted Therapy in order to feel safe and secure in his relationships, sexuality, and social interactions. Now, once again, his safety is threatened. Every therapist knows that if your client doesn’t feel safe, they can only make so much progress. The client’s mind and body are focused on reestablishing safety, leaving little energy to focus on recovering from trauma or coping with the demands of their daily lives. Trauma survivors need to feel safe in order to heal, and now Leigh no longer feels safe.

“I’m Just a Vessel For Others To Use”

April is a 24-year-old nonbinary heterosexual Latina who survived multiple sexual assaults. At age 9, they were raped by an uncle, at age they were molested by a baby sitter, and at 15, gang raped at a college party. As a child, April was taught that they had no agency over their body. They were forced to hug and kiss their relatives on command, and thus they learned that adults get to decide what happens to their body – an experience that is all too common in many cultures. Unfortunately, these experiences caused April to internalize a lack of autonomy that made them unable to report their sexual assaults.

“Déjà vu,” April said, smiling wryly.
“Déjà vu?” I asked.
“My body isn’t mine, remember?”
“Yes, I do. Does this feel like before?
“Exactly like before.”

Due to a greater awareness of child sexual abuse and the importance of bodily autonomy, there is a movement in the psychology community that urges adults to ask children for their consent to acts of physical intimacy (e.g., hugs, kisses, snuggles, etc.) rather than command or coerce them to engage. There is a hope that these children will experience and internalize the value of bodily autonomy, practice establishing physical boundaries with adults, and be able to report violations of their boundaries. April never experienced bodily autonomy, and each sexual assault reinforced this lack of autonomy.

Over the past year, April addressed their trauma with Somatic Experiencing, EMDR, and Art Therapy. Slowly, they began to feel safer with others and in their body and were better able to establish boundaries in their relationships. I remember the first time they were able to say “no” on a date. They arrived at the session stating, “I didn’t want to go to his place and I didn’t care if he got angry.” Yet, after the overturning of Roe v. Wade, April experienced intense triggers that made them feel as if they were back at the beginning.

“I’m just a vessel for others to use,” April said as if it were a fact.

Once a trauma survivor is denied bodily autonomy, they are deprived of safey. The overturning of Roe v. Wade undercut April’s sense of autonomy, thus interfering in her trauma recovery. Will Ruth reclaim her self-worth? Will Leigh feel safe again? Will April reclaim her sense of bodily autonomy? I believe they will, but now they’ll have to struggle to do so more than anyone ever ought to have to. They have all made gains in their treatment that are still present at a deep level, and none of them are giving up.

As April proudly proclaimed at the end of their session, “ You know what? Fuck that, I’m not going back.”

Attending to Attachment in the Treatment of Incarcerated Women

It was a sunny August day when I took a brisk walk across campus to get to the part of the facility that housed the incarcerated women with whom I would soon be working. I remember feeling fully ready for this new endeavor and eager to have a new clinical experience. As I entered the facility, waiting to be buzzed in through the double locked and heavily-reinforced doors, I immediately noticed how bustling the unit was. Looking around, I saw women hustling to their textile-industry jobs, rushing to their various group rooms, meeting for education classes, and heading outdoors to play volleyball. Taking in all of these varied activities, I became poignantly aware of one of the obvious similarities among the residents—most of these incarcerated women were of child-bearing age.

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In my clinical experience with incarcerated men, I have worked with some invested fathers, but the theme around children has tended to be less pronounced than it has been when working with their female counterparts. With the women, I conducted more grief and loss groups than I ever had before, with waitlists that never seemed to get any shorter. In those groups, I became immersed in the nuances of the lives that lead women to lose their parental rights. My heart broke for these women who found themselves in the position where they were perpetuating family traumas despite their best efforts not to.

Jillian, I will call her, was a woman similar in age to myself, whom I worked with up until her release. She and her child’s father both struggled with substance use, having been consumed by the nation’s opioid epidemic. Jillian came from an impoverished family in a rural area that was severely under-resourced, often having to make the decision between paying the electric bill or being able to afford prescription medications. Jillian was very candid that she used illicit drugs, but that she was drawn to selling them because doing so was a direct road to fast money, which in turn allowed her to provide for her daughter in a way that she had not been provided for herself. Jillian and I would meet weekly in sessions that almost always focused on her daughter. She was fortunate enough to have her daughter reside with a family member rather than lose custody of her, but in essence, she was one fragile relationship away from losing that precious custody, and that weighed on her like a boulder. I remember one conversation in which Jillian shared, “I’m so worried about my mother. She doesn’t have enough money for gas, her prescriptions, and the heating bill. If she doesn’t get her prescriptions, she will get sick and could end up not being able to take care of my daughter. If she goes to get the prescriptions, she won’t have money for both that and the gas to get there.”

Jillian is but one representation of the near-constant fear that incarcerated mothers experience. If they have a sentence longer than 15 months, it is completely likely their parental rights will be terminated, and most sentences for drug offenses, which are often non-violent crimes, typically carry more than 15 months. Pair this with the glacially slow legal system which leaves women like Jillian in limbo, waiting for their sentences to be assigned all the while knowing the custody of their children is at risk.

If you are both a therapist and parent, the following is likely not difficult to appreciate. In my clinical experience, mothers who lose custody of their children are at risk to reoffend because they lose what is very often their entire sense of purpose. Oftentimes, although women such as Jillian use and sell drugs—which is obviously an unsafe atmosphere in which to raise children—they engage in far less risky behavior than if they were childless. Not uncommonly, the women with whom I have worked in correctional custody have been victims of human trafficking, sometimes even prostituted by their own family members while adolescents. Many of them grew up in poverty, having experienced horrific abuse, multiple pregnancies, school dropout, addiction, and the absence of their own parents, who were often imprisoned.

To highlight the dark hues of this already bleak picture, I remember a client I will call Mary-Beth, who took a five-year sentence rather than accepting probation so that she would have a chance of being able to spend some quantum of time with her mother, who was also incarcerated and would be released within nine months. Mary-Beth had her own daughter at home, but this did not waive her choice to take a prison bid over probation, because she was that entrenched in trying to have an interaction with her mother.

It has been relatively easy for me to see how the patterns of familial and often multigenerational trauma have played out in Mary-Beth’s life, and the lives of other women who have desperately tried to salvage their parental identities and bonds while behind bars. Had Mary-Beth not spent her childhood chasing her mother out of bars, waiting in cars in the dark while her mother turned tricks, or watching her use substances in between prison bids, Mary-Beth might have been able to develop an identity grounded in secure attachment that could have protected her from imprisonment and resulted in a tangible, rather than ephemeral, relationship with her own child. Now as a young woman, she is perpetuating the same scenario she experienced in the past with her own daughter, which inescapably manifests in pathology around abandonment and paves a direct route to addiction high-risk relationships and self-destruction in seemingly futile attempts to fill the void left by disrupted attachments.

***

I learned more than I ever would have thought possible from this clinical work with incarcerated women and mothers. Whenever possible, I work on parenting skills and psychoeducation around attachment theory with these clients so that together, we prioritize maternal and self-care skills they can utilize upon release. The additional work of helping promote mother-child bonds, even from behind bars, is critical in helping them break the vicious cycles that will inevitably undermine the attachment security of future generations. The last I heard, Jillian had completed her probation, maintained a job in the community, and was upholding her parenting responsibilities. She seems to be one of the lucky ones, and the implications for her daughter will hopefully be tenfold. The next chapter in Mary-Beth’s story is yet to be written.

Tokophobia: Recognizing the Multifaceted Fear of Pregnancy and Childbirth

“The pregnancy test was negative,” Gretchen recounted through tears. Her tears were not a straightforward reflection of disappointment and longing, as one might assume. They accounted for a complex stew of relief, guilt, and shame about the relief and fear of this ongoing cycle that was proving to be torturous and emotionally exhausting due to Gretchen’s unmanageable anxiety.

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Gretchen and her partner had been trying to get pregnant for several months. Having a biological child was something they both very much wanted. Each month, in the weeks leading up to a possible positive pregnancy test, Gretchen would be excited about the prospect in theory, but utterly terrified about the reality. She often had panic attacks, was inundated with worries about the ways pregnancy and childbirth can go wrong, and was physically repulsed by the idea of a human life growing inside her. The idea of pregnancy made her feel trapped—the state being inescapable and the thought of that, unbearable.

Even before trying to get pregnant, Gretchen had struggled for years with tokophobia, an intense fear of pregnancy. Her extreme difficulty with managing even the process of trying to conceive reinforced Gretchen’s belief that she certainly couldn’t handle an actual pregnancy.

Another client, Octavia, had also been struggling with tokophobia, although hers looked quite different. In our most recent session, she was also in tears. After hooking up with a man she’d gone on a few dates with, Octavia had “spiraled” for days after. “I just couldn’t stop thinking that I’d somehow gotten pregnant,” the notion of this outcome intolerable to her. She was consumed with fear, despite the fact that they hadn’t had sex, let alone gotten fully undressed in their encounter.

Octavia recounted to me the hours she’d spent researching obscure ways of getting pregnant and the repeated phone calls to friends and family seeking reassurance. She knew logically, somewhere in her brain, that it was impossible and felt embarrassed, but Octavia couldn't shake the fear. In the end, she cut things off with the guy.

***

Pregnancy understandably creates a certain amount of anxiety (with a whole extra layer heaped on top given current pandemic circumstances), but for some, the concept itself prompts excessive fear, strong physical responses of anxiety and repulsion, and behavioral avoidance that is debilitating and outside the norm.

Tokophobia wrecks a person’s ability to move forward with their life goals or get close to people—or allows them to do so only under extreme and unrelenting distress. Both Gretchen and Octavia exist in a state tinged with deep pain and impairment—a life not quite lived.

Unfortunately, although this phenomenon is widely experienced, it is not thoroughly researched. There are some, but not enough, comprehensive studies and little in the way of specific treatment guidelines. People are suffering and likely not getting much help—or even realizing that what they are experiencing has a name.

In the literature, tokophobia is broken down into two main types: primary (fear of pregnancy/childbirth without having direct experience) and secondary (fear following a traumatic pregnancy or childbirth experience). In doing more reading and reflecting on my clinical observations of clients like Gretchen and Octavia, I came up with the following distinctions, or subtypes, with the idea that each requires a tailored therapeutic approach, and therefore it’s important to make the distinction.

  • Reluctant: A person with tokophobia who wants to get pregnant
  • Avoidant: A person with tokophobia who avidly does not want to get pregnant and experiences obsessive and extreme worry as well as significant OCD-like avoidance and compulsions.
  • Ambivalent: A person with tokophobia who is uncertain about whether to pursue pregnancy.

For an avoidant tokophobic like Octavia, it wouldn’t make sense to delve into the meaning and source of each of her thoughts or try to dispute each specific worry, when an approach like Exposure and Response Prevention (ERP)—the most effective treatment for OCD—is more likely to ultimately bring some relief. And while it is tempting to treat Gretchen’s reluctance as ambivalence, helping her explore alternative options for growing her family, she is clear in her conviction, but unequipped to manage her physical and psychological anxiety.

Most importantly, I think our job as therapists when working with a client with tokophobia is to 1) take it seriously and 2) conceptualize and treat it appropriately.

My sense is that those struggling with phobic fear of pregnancy and/or childbirth typically feel dismissed, confused, and ashamed (related either to the fact that they feel such fear and aversion to something they expect “should” come naturally to them or to their avoidance and rituals that they recognize as embarrassing/extreme/out of touch with reality).

So when I encounter a client with tokophobia, I often say something like, “Yes, this is a real thing, you are not alone, and furthermore, we can take steps to reduce the shame and nudge you towards the life you want.”

I can offer legitimacy to their experience and compassion to their suffering, while paying attention to the distinct ways tokophobia can manifest person to person. Clients like Gretchen and Octavia don’t have to feel so isolated or hopeless.

Afflicted with Affect

*Janelle sits on the edge of the loveseat in my office. Her knees form perfect ninety degree angles. She pulls her head up, her shoulders back and down, and looks me square in the eye with a set jaw.

The word “formidable” pops in my mind.

But immediately her shoulders curl forward, her head sags. “I want him to tell me how proud he is of me.”

The formidable woman suddenly sounds like a child.

“I raised over ten thousand dollars for pediatric cancer research last week.” She pulls herself up again. “He told me ten thousand dollars wouldn’t cover the cost of a single research assistant. He called it ‘trivial.’”

I work in a town with a large university and teaching hospital. A good portion of my clientele is comprised of the partners of physicians and professors. For a small subgroup of my clients, a common story has started to emerge.

“I was in grad school. I saw him at a party standing in a corner by himself. He looked so lost.”

The story goes like this: girl meets genius. A great guy. Well, truth be told, maybe a little less amorous than she would have liked, but a really great guy. She could tell he needed her: other people didn’t seem to be able to see past his awkwardness.

“I felt sorry for him. He just seemed so uncomfortable. Except when he was talking about his research. Then he’d get really animated.”

Girl marries genius: She manages her growing family, and more. She works on boards, does amazing fundraising, and volunteers for various charities.

As the family grows and thrives her husband pulls farther and farther away. At first she chalks it up to his demanding career. Then it becomes apparent that he really doesn’t like being at home.

At some point, the husband begins to criticize her emotionality, solicitousness, and superficiality. He blames her for being overbearing and boring.

These women are intelligent, well educated, and energetic. They all have very high social and emotional intelligence, which makes them highly attuned mothers, and the center of a large network of people and activities. All of which their husbands seem to resent.

Julie brings up a psychiatric referral. “Last week I tried to talk to my husband about our son. He won’t bring any friends around. He says his dad is too weird. Chip told me that he doesn’t want any more kids around the house, and besides, it’s probably because I’m so bossy.” Her eyes well. “I got angry. I yelled.” Her chin drops to her chest. “He told me that he can’t stand my histrionics. He asked me if my therapist knows how over-emotional I am. He said maybe I need some meds.”

It happens almost imperceptibly. Confident women begin to doubt themselves. They have been repeatedly told that what makes them inferior to their brilliant husbands is that they are afflicted with affect. If they could be rational, perhaps they wouldn’t be so intolerable. By the time they see me they believe that their emotional intelligence is a sign of weakness, or worse. They want me to cure them from having feelings.

It took me quite a while to figure out that a significant subset of my clients were married to men who were very high functioning on the Autistic Spectrum. It seems that the way these men cope with their relational limitations is to frame them as a sign of superiority. They convince themselves, then their wives, that social intelligence is a disorder, and emotional matters are mundane.

Once I figured out that my client’s husbands were on the spectrum (which in many cases was confirmed by independent evaluation), I began to wonder what took me so long to figure it out. Why was I ready to believe that clear signs of high social and emotional intelligence were signs of dysfunction? My head was full of theories and symptom clusters and stereotypes. “Helicopter Moms,” “labile emotions,” “undifferentiated,” skewed my perception.

Affect is not pathological. Nor is being highly attuned. It is pathogenic to convince someone that having emotions is bad. Now when a client tells me her partner thinks she’s overbearing, I ask myself where the pathology actually lies.

Helping our clients who are married to people who are very high functioning on the spectrum means taking several steps. Helping them recognize and come to terms with their partners’ limitations is vital.

Helping them value their own social and emotional intelligence is essential. Of course, we, their therapists, must value these virtues if we are to help these clients to thrive.

“Janelle,” I lean forward. “The grad student who’s getting a research assistantship because of your fundraising does not think ten thousand dollars is trivial. Congratulations. Well done.”

* The people in this piece are not actual clients. They are composite characters.

Infertility on Both Sides of the Couch

Family Planning

"When are we going to start a family?" asked my husband.

I felt a boa constrictor wrapping around my throat. For months now, the topic of children had evoked tension, leaving us powerless and detached from each other. The argument had become a tradition on Saturday mornings. We would sit in the living room in an awkward silence, avoiding eye contact, until my husband pierced the hush with what he deemed a simple question about our future.

My husband was comforted by having a plan. Three years into our marriage—my second—we were in our mid-thirties, established in our careers, and financially stable. For him the next step in our lives was to start a family, but his need for a plan set off a vicious cycle. I felt ignored and disrespected in our relationship and couldn't justify bringing a child into a fractured marriage. I craved connection and love and was not willing to commit to having a child until we resolved our relationship problems. My resistance made him more insecure and unsure of his focus, and he would ask me about starting a family as a way to relieve his anxiety. Unfortunately, his persistence pushed me away, leaving me feeling trapped and controlled and leaving him stranded without resolution.

“I felt immense pressure both from him and from society to conform and have children. Gradually, I isolated myself from my husband and emotionally shut down, as my sense of self and my voice vanished.” Feeling alone with no one caring about my thoughts and feelings, I believed I was not enough for my husband and that he had married me solely for procreation. Meanwhile, I was inundated with inquiries from our family and friends about when we would be parents.

My mother-in-law often phoned my husband's siblings to convey that her children were failing her since she did not have grandchildren. While growing up, my husband's mother talked a great deal about heirlooms—each piece of jewelry or china was a link between past and future generations. Grandchildren were an essential part of keeping the family traditions alive and to not have them meant the family had failed. She made it clear that my husband was not enough, just as I felt I was not enough as his wife. My resistance to the "plan" was a clear message to him and his mother that I would not conform.

His side of the family was not the only problem. My stepfather had the impression that all couples wanted children. He frequently dropped hints about what a joy they are, pointing to his grandson and saying things like, "See, aren't these fun and not so bad?" For him, family represented connection and closeness. Initially this was endearing but it soon became annoying.

While at a party, I declined an alcoholic beverage, which ignited rumors that I might be pregnant. When I heard the gossip, a wave of heat washed through my body. How dare my friends speculate? It was as if I were starring in the reality show, "When Will Wendy Pop One Out?"

The Family System

In 2005, I started therapy with a psychotherapist who practiced from a Family Systems model, the premise of which is that the family is an emotional unit—systems of interconnected and interdependent individuals, none of whom can be understood in isolation from the system. Over the course of my therapy, I came to understand that my symptoms of sadness, loneliness, and detachment were a consequence of the recurring patterns and interactions within my family. The sense of powerlessness I experienced evolved from my marital dynamics, my family history, and the cultural expectations of a woman in her thirties.

My parents divorced when I was thirteen years old. I was an unplanned pregnancy and the reason my parents had married. It was bad enough that I was a mistake, but I resented my parents even more for their divorce, and the struggles that I encountered during my teens trying to navigate through the turmoil of their divorce played a role in my delaying the start of a family.

During my first marriage, I was enrolled in graduate school and wanted to wait until completing my program to start a family. We would have been in our early thirties by then and my ex-husband wanted to be a father sooner. He had an affair and decided to leave. This time around I wanted to make sure I was in a healthy relationship, that we were not introducing a child into a doomed family. I did not want to recreate my childhood trauma for my own children.

At Christmas in 2006, my stepsister announced over dinner that she was pregnant with her second child. I broke down sobbing at the table. A hush blanketed the room as everyone stared at me. Although embarrassed and humiliated, I could not stop crying.

Two weeks later, my stepbrother shared the news about his wife's first pregnancy. My sister-in-law had planned on not having children but had changed her mind. I was consumed with feelings of betrayal. I was my own childless island in a world that demanded parenthood. I dove deeper into despair.

Couples Therapy

My husband finally realized that our marriage was at stake and agreed to couples counseling, but I wondered whether it was too late, as by this time my rage had evolved into numbness. I recalled our minister's marriage sermon encouraging us never to throw in the towel when things were broken, but another part of me was tempted to do just that. “You don't need a man, you survived a divorce,” the voice said. "Trust me, you’ll be much happier single." I contacted therapists, but they either did not return my calls or have any openings for new patients. Was the universe telling me it was too late for my marriage? The battle inside me grew more crushing until finally after three months, I found us a therapist.

Couples therapy became our new Saturday tradition. My husband had never been to therapy, hated conflict, and had always made choices with tremendous caution, sometimes over the course of many years. Therapy for him was about finding ways to manage his stress. If he knew when we would have a baby, he could plan accordingly. Should we reserve a slot at the day care now, since there could be a waiting list for a couple of years? “Should we start putting money into a college fund? Or should we begin grieving about not having a child?”

For me, therapy was about maintaining autonomy and establishing a healthy marriage. I wanted the freedom to make choices within the marriage, but feared he would leave me if I did not have a baby. It felt like an ultimatum. And for my husband, despite his discomfort about the therapy, he began utilizing what he learned about me. He realized that asking questions about starting a family was torture to me, so he stopped asking. As a result the perceived threat of the ultimatum faded.

In my professional life, I had wanted to open a private practice. Should I be saving money for the grand opening of my business or for a divorce? The marriage had to be healed before the practice could be born.

During our treatment, I wrote my business plan. My husband was proud as a peacock and bragged to others that I was making my vision come alive. I opened my practice in mid-2007, feeling finally alive after an emotional coma. When I purchased the new office furniture, my husband questioned the size of the sofa, believing it should be larger. Prior to our therapy, this question would have offended me and I would have felt undermined in my judgment. Instead, I confidently explained that the sofa worked well in the room. Understanding his tendency to err on the side of caution, I did not personalize.

He went ahead and assembled the office desk and filing cabinet and moved the sofa into the suite. To this day, he tells others it was a good thing that I ignored his advice because the sofa barely fit into the space. This was the sexiest thing he had ever done. Life was wonderful. I was enough as a wife and my business was thriving. Without pressure to conform and have a child, I decided to go off the Pill.

For three years we did not get pregnant.

Mystery Solved

From the time I was a teenager, I had a history with difficult menses. Like clockwork I got my period every 18 days and bled for 10 days, uncertain what PMS symptoms I would experience. My blood flow would be heavy, dark and impossible to keep up with, changing my tampons and pads every four hours and during the night bleeding onto my bed sheets. At times to get through my school day, I took over-the-counter pain pills for heavy cramps, lower back pain, or headaches. For my peers and teachers I maintained a pleasant façade, but what I wanted was to retreat into a corner and savagely eat raw meat and growl or be in my bed weeping and eating salty chocolate. I applied copious amounts of zit cream to my face attempting to fight a hopeless battle with breakouts. My bra and pants would restrict my breathing because I was bloated. During my annual exams, a range of doctors had explained these symptoms were stress-induced by my parent’s divorce, my divorce, and graduate school, and had prescribed birth control pills.

Now while off the pill, my life was good and I had no stress on which to blame the problem. I was receiving holistic care and yet was still physically and mentally suffering. Why was I having the same problems I had as a teenager?

I made an appointment with an OB/GYN specialist with little faith that I would find answers, but for the first time, a medical doctor was eager to learn what was going on with my body. He believed my symptoms were pathological and not related to stress and ordered blood work and an ultrasound.

A month later, the OB/GYN nurse escorted my husband and me to the doctor's office for my consultation. He was perusing my test results with a look of concern on his face when we walked in. Gazing up at us, he said, “I am unsure where to begin.” The blood work was perfect. The ultrasound, however, revealed why I’d suffered for decades and had not become pregnant during the past three years. Both of my ovaries were smothered in various types of growths (some were thyroid tissue), my fallopian tubes had blood, my uterus had polyps and was malformed, and as a result I was unable to carry a pregnancy. The doctor recommended a full hysterectomy.

My symptoms were not stress related. They were not my fault. A sense of calm flowed over me; my eyes welled up with tears. My husband took my hand and asked questions while I continued to absorb the news.

Judging Claire

Meanwhile, my professional life was evolving beautifully. I had the satisfaction of seeing my vision coming to life, and I loved owning my own business. For several years I had been seeing Claire*, a married and successful professional in her mid-thirties with a significant history of depression and anxiety. She had a warm sense of humor and loved to learn about herself. During the first couple of years working together, she feared her future children would be genetically predisposed to suffer from similar aliments and struggled between the desire to feel a child growing inside of her and her desire to adopt.

During the course of our therapy, Claire forgave herself for having a diagnosable mental illness; she realized the illness did not define who she was. She began to consider that she had plentiful and warm offerings as a mother and decided to conceive naturally. After a year of not getting pregnant—this was around the same time I went off the pill—Claire was diagnosed with infertility.

By then I was secure in my marriage and waiting to see if I got pregnant, but I struggled to maintain my alliance with Claire. Still vulnerable with my own triggers, I had my own opinion about the infertility treatment process and our sessions evoked strong emotions for me.

One in ten couples struggle with infertility issues. According to the medical model, infertility is a disease of the reproductive organs, and usually the first option in treatment is a daily injection of medication to stimulate the ovaries to develop eggs in the follicles (the structure in the ovaries that contain developing eggs). The side effects can include bloating, weight gain, headaches, and nausea. If this is unsuccessful, IVF (in vitro fertilization) begins, in which eggs are surgically removed from the ovaries and combined with sperm. Weekly ultrasounds and estrogen blood levels drawn twice a week assist the doctors in determining the best time to retrieve the eggs. The last resort for infertility treatment is the egg donor cycle, where an embryo formed from another woman's egg is transferred to the uterus of the woman trying to conceive. More coordination and time is involved since two women are being monitored for transfer.

As I witnessed Claire’s physical and emotional agony and the suffering in her marriage it caused, I began to judge her harshly. “How could she brutalize her body from treatments and spend so much money to conceive and carry?” I hated her for choosing to participate in the infertility treatment process and holding faith in the medical model. I felt lonely and betrayed that she conformed to society's pressure to attempt pregnancy at all costs. I wanted her to join me in rejecting this awful and debilitating process and to redirect her energies toward adopting a child.

Though I had every intention of becoming a mother, once I realized I was infertile, I never considered infertility treatment or adoption. Both seemed too unpredictable and a setup for repetitive grief and loss. It was disturbing to have such an intensely negative reaction to a client, so I began to repress these feelings and thoughts in an attempt to protect both of us. In the process, however, I became increasingly disconnected from Claire.

What was happening between us put strains on my belief in the humanistic approach, which emphasizes that we are in control of our destiny, our choices, and the discovery of meaning for our life’s narrative, and makes use of the relationship created between the therapist and patient as a catalyst for exploration and change. A safe arena was vital for Claire to share her narrative and to discover the meaning of her experiences—the energy in the room could then provide an atmosphere conducive for healing. Regardless of my opinions and beliefs, I wanted to support her in her destiny and choices. But did I have the freedom to accomplish this?

As a therapist, I participate in a weekly supervision group. While disclosing the pain of my challenges with Claire, I shared about my sensitivity to the fertility topic and my beliefs about the infertility treatment process. My peers validated me and understood why I felt threatened, but also challenged me about my countertransference and helped me to work through it. Other colleagues were offended by the infertility treatment process and called my patient "greedy." A few of them had been adopted, and were exasperated that it wasn't Claire's first choice. Others were sympathetic with her plight and could relate to her need to biologically conceive a child. Through the group process, I was able to witness all the different parts of myself being voiced through my peers, and I felt safe enough and free enough to get to some of my own core fears and doubts about infertility. Ultimately this freed me up to be much more present with Claire in the coming months.

Working Through and Joining With

During a subsequent session, Claire tearfully shared how painful it was to have no control during the infertility treatment process. My inner voice whispered, Ask her if she feels she has the choice to stop the infertility process. Before working through countertransference with my supervision group, I would have suppressed this voice, believing it was my own “stuff" and would not be helpful to Claire. Now my heart pounded; I couldn't help but speak up: “Who says you need to continue to fail with the pregnancy attempts?” Something in the room shifted. After a pause, Claire affirmed, "I could stop." I exhaled. We had finally found a moment of empowerment and connection.

Claire continued to participate in the infertility treatment process, and I joined the emotional roller coaster with her. This freed up much more space to explore her process and mine.

Therapy is not immune to the disruption of the infertility treatment process. “The scheduling of appointments revolved around Claire's menstrual cycle and she cancelled appointments due to the side effects of medications and clinic appointments.” We had lapses between appointments while waiting for the doctors to contact her for the next treatment cycle. All of this meant that I needed to figure out what would take care of me during her infertility series. That involved answering questions such as: How do I cope with my anger? How do I keep from getting stuck in her holding pattern of waiting? Do I charge for missed appointments?

With the ongoing support of my supervision group, I continued to explore my emotional reactions. Claire and I collaborated about payment for missed appointments—she willingly paid and the joint conversation made her an active participant in an otherwise helpless period. The medical doctors had no clear diagnosis about why she didn't get pregnant for three years and she suffered continuously from a sense of loss. She had always dreamed of being a mom and having a family and now she had to face the fact that it might not happen.

Claire tried to detach from her emotional turmoil and did her best to function at work, but the clock ruled her while she anticipated lab results. Her job performance began to suffer and the cost was guilt, shame, and embarrassment. Work became heavy and dreadful. Her depression ignited, leaving her brooding in isolation and sleeping for 17 hours or more every day. Her “should” cognitions were in overdrive and kept her paralyzed.

The Breakthrough

"I'm afraid you're mad at me for the last minute cancellation last week," she said. "I'm failing at everything." In fact I was angry about the appointment. Missed appointments touch on my vulnerability around not being recognized as valuable. But our agreement for her to pay for missed sessions, combined with my own awareness of the reasons behind my countertransference, made it possible for me to process my response outside of session and bring my full attention to figuring out what she was enacting and what it meant for her. I responded, "You think you should be able to manage life better. But things are dropping all around you: your relationship with your husband, your work, your friendships, and especially not getting pregnant. You're feeling so alone." I watched her reach for a tissue, look down at her lap, and wipe her tears. "What are the tears saying right now?”

In her soft voice, Claire answered, “I'm afraid my husband will be angry at me for not controlling my emotions. My anxiety is through the roof. I want to be in my bedroom with the covers over my head. It's unfair to expect my colleagues to do my work. I want to be with my friends but it hurts too much because they have babies or are pregnant.” She believed she needed to be perfect and worried about disappointing everyone around her, including me.

But this conversation about failure and disappointment positioned Claire to begin healing her marriage and bring her husband, family, and friends back into her life. Through addressing her loneliness, Claire articulated her envy about her friends being pregnant or having newborns. “She felt conflicted about whether to maintain her connections or isolate herself because it was too painful to be subjected to swollen bellies and to the innocent scent of newborns.” She also acknowledged she pushed her husband away because she did not want to be perceived as a "burden." He had a demanding job that made him unhappy, but it provided them with medical insurance to pay for the infertility treatment. She secretly fantasized about him attending medical appointments with her and being readily available to abruptly leave work to provide comfort when she received bad news. I encouraged her to share her emotional burdens with her husband, to let him feel her burden, as that is part of what it means to be intimate with another person. She began to feel less guilty and apologetic about her struggles and to share the craziness of the process with him. They became closer and her sex life began to thrive again.

Over the two-year period of her IVF treatments, Claire's visits to the reproductive health center would evoke a sense of helplessness and lack of emotional safety. She often felt rushed because she didn't get satisfactory information to her questions, and the clinic became increasingly more uncomfortable and sterile. As our work progressed, she was more assertive and less apologetic about demanding the attention of the nurses and doctors until she was satisfied with the gathered information. To increase her comfort at appointments, she brought her own pillow and blankets.

Unfortunately, Claire was given a lot of unhelpful advice from her own support system of family and friends, even medical doctors. She was told, for example, to "just relax" because her stress could be interfering with the infertility process. In the therapy sessions, we worked on how to handle unwanted and sometime hurtful advice and not absorb the harmful implications. When she deemed it appropriate, she informed people about what would be helpful or harmful.

Different Kinds of Pregnant

When the IVF failed, Claire opted for the final remaining option: an egg donor. Our sessions were spent with her describing how a donor was selected and the various reasons they donated their eggs. It was a surprisingly fun process for both of us.

After her second cycle with the egg donor, she curled up on the sofa in my office, hugging a pillow with a distant look in her eyes. Her lip trembling, she said, "For four days, I was pregnant. Now, I am pissed off.” Her rage demonstrated no guilt. She did everything right but was unable to carry her first pregnancy.

The following month, her third attempt was successful.

One day, well into her second trimester and beaming with life, Claire effused, “My boobs are huge!” She shared her ultrasound pictures of her healthy son and we talked through her stress about finances with the arrival of her baby. In her desire to save money and prepare for the baby's arrival, she requested a break from therapy. I encouraged her to go and create a loving home for her son. Tearing up, she said, “I can’t believe I can hear ‘my son’ after all of this.” Claire would soon be a mother.

Through quite a journey, Claire and I mirrored each other for a couple of years. My marriage and business were at last breathing life. I scheduled my hysterectomy, knowing my body would be cured. I learned a valuable lesson: Psychotherapy is a fertile process.

* Claire's name had been changed to respect confidentiality.

Our Hungry Selves: Women, Eating and Identity

The Tyranny of Slenderness

In the early eighties I wrote several books about eating disorders; one of them became a national best seller. In the first book: The Obsession, Reflections on the Tyranny of Slenderness, I researched the way our culture's fear of women was directed against women's bodies and, in particular, against a large woman's body. I felt that the cultural preference for very slender women revealed a wish to see women reduce themselves as women and relinquish their power.

Here’s how I reasoned back then: “The body holds meaning. A woman obsessed with the size of her body, wishing to make her breasts and thighs and hips and belly smaller and less apparent, may be expressing the fact that she feels uncomfortable being female in this culture. A woman obsessed with the size of her appetite, wishing to control her hungers and urges, may be expressing the fact that she has been taught to regard her emotional life, her passions and 'appetites,' as dangerous, requiring control and careful monitoring. “A woman obsessed with the reduction of her flesh may be revealing the fact that she is alienated from a natural source of female power and has not been allowed to develop a reverential feeling for her body.””

The second book, The Hungry Self: Women, Eating and Identity, studied the way a woman's hunger for self-development, creative expression and liberation might express itself if it was not recognized as a hunger for food. I was curious about the emotion and conflict and turbulence that might be disguised as a craving for food, and especially “forbidden” foods like carbohydrates and sweets. “In [this] book I extend [my] analysis to include the mother/daughter bond and the issue of failed female development….We cannot heal ourselves until we understand the hidden struggle for self-development that eating disorders bring to expression in a covert way. We cannot indeed even begin to think of self-healing until we stop using the words “eating disorders” to hide from ourselves the formidable struggle for a self in which every woman suffering in her relationship to food is secretly engaged.”

In the third book, Reinventing Eve: Modern Woman in Search of a Self, I issued a call to women to step up and re-invent ourselves, freeing ourselves from the pressures and constraints of a society that feared women. I saw Eve as a radical, the first woman who was forbidden to eat food and who broke the taboo. “Women speaking intimately about their lives are usually, whether they know it or name it, on the far side of outworn ideas…We [have had] to start with the assumption that we knew little, had been lied to a great deal, that secrets had been kept from us, we were setting out as pioneers together, groping to find a suitable language for our experience….”

The Tyranny of Obesity

Thirty years later these ideas are still meaningful to me but my vision of possibility has been checked. “Fat is Beautiful,” a movement I greatly admired, has now become, thirty years later, a group of aging, obese women with serious health problems. I used to refer women who wanted to lose weight to other clinicians; I explained that my work offered them a chance to make peace with their body, not to change it. I now look back and think that I was rather close-minded, as if I knew what should matter to every woman who came to me for help.

Over these thirty years I've counseled countless women, discussed these issues with them, found them open to these ideas, yet progressively we have realized that it was no easy task to overcome the predominant dislike for big, fat or obese women. This overcoming of cultural dictates is a task suitable for some of us, not for everyone, and why should it be? Many women would rather work towards the body our culture admires than analyze the reasons they dislike their body as it is.

When I began to speak these ideas publicly, women who had read my earlier books were shocked; they felt that I had abandoned them in their quest to accept their body and their appetites. This new orientation seemed a betrayal, a renunciation of my earlier thinking with its cultural and psychological understandings. But I myself had begun to feel that my earlier ideas were hardening into an absolute, as if what was right for some women had to be right for all women, another once-size-fits-all approach to women and food.

I’ve had to explain that these days more and more women have to lose weight for the sake of their health, and that my clients and I had found a way to transform dieting from a self-defeating, frustrating, futile exercise into a useful therapeutic tool. A diet is—or can be—a way of becoming conscious of why one eats or feels driven to eat. Paradoxically, limiting what we eat is often the most direct way to uncover the feelings that drive us into self-destructive eating. Earlier, I had been opposed to the very idea of dieting, now I was willing to offer women help if they chose to diet. I left the decision to them, offering them both possibilities of work—towards body acceptance, weight loss, or sometimes the two together.

But there is more. There are other changes during the last thirty years that I have come to take very seriously. Following Michael Pollan, I began to study the food we are given to eat, so much of which has been degraded. The additives in it actively cause weight gain, and it is offered up in mega portions we tend to accept because there they are on the plate in front of us. As Michael Pollan writes: "Researchers have found that people (and animals) presented with large portions will eat up to 30 percent more than they would otherwise." Some of the weight we unhappily carry around with us is not really ours, it isn't natural, we haven't chosen it. Much of it has come upon us in surreptitious ways, through mysteriously named presences in our food, like high fructose corn syrup and its near-relations—aspartamine, glucose, dextrose, maltodextrin, maltose—which most people do not recognize as sweeteners. Even when reading a label and consciously hoping to avoid sugar, we end up with sweetening agents we don't want.

The Tyranny of American Culture

Thirty years ago I was asked to help people suffering from anorexia, bulimia and compulsive eating; these days women are calling me because, over the years, they have gained so much weight their doctors are alarmed for them. It was short-sighted to send them to someone else when I was a person who had dieted on and off for most of my life, at times winning, at times losing, the battle against our culture’s standards. And wasn’t I now, just as then, responding to a cry for help from our culture? After all, three of every five Americans are overweight. Obesity is an epidemic.

And so too is a woman's unhappy preoccupation with the size and shape of her body, or some part of her body, or some new diet that promises to change her body. I know this, not only from my clients, but far more intimately from myself. “I am a feminist, I care about women's self-development and the cultural and psychological obstacles that inhibit it, yet I have struggled, since the age of seventeen, to be at home in a body that has never been overweight but still has not been acceptable to me.” In spite of my three books about women and food, and all the lectures I have given, and the deep conversations in which I've been engaged; even in spite of the fact that I never any longer eat compulsively, a preoccupation with food and body size is still hanging around in my life. As a result, I can no longer underestimate the power of this conflict, as I observe it listing towards a feminist understanding about a woman's right to make decisions about her body, free of cultural pressures, and then spinning off in the opposite direction towards the next miracle diet that comes along, promising a body that conforms to our culture's punishing ideals. Weight and body size present us with a problem for which we don’t have an adequate solution.

Taken together, these are good reasons to change one’s point of view. I have changed mine in an effort to supplement—not replace—my earlier work. I intend to help people find the right diet and support them while they are losing weight, an emotionally demanding task whatever the nature of the diet. But losing weight is only part of it; we have to learn to eat in a way that often contradicts everything we’ve been taught about healthy nutrition. Not three meals a day but a small meal every couple of hours; not avoiding water because it may produce weight gain but drinking quarts of it; eating at night, before bed, because the body even in sleep requires 500 calories to keep itself going. Eating fat because we feel nourished by it, learning what are desirable portions, eating local produce because the food contains more of what food should contain and will therefore nourish us in smaller amounts. There is no one diet that is suitable for everyone—creating the right diet has elements of a quest for identity, a coming to know and be able to choose what is good for one. If this isn’t meaningful therapeutic work I don’t know what is.

Catherine's Story

A client of many years returned to work with me. Her doctor had just told her she had to lose between 25 and 40 pounds because her medical condition was severe. She came full of despair, wondering how we could approach this assignment since we had always discussed body-acceptance and appreciation for big and voluptuous women, which she was. Beautiful, certainly; but perhaps not healthy?

I began to work with Catherine in 1995. She was 26 at the time, a graduate from an Ivy League school, a women’s studies major who sought me out because she had read my books. She came from a small town on the East Coast, from a family active in their Episcopal church. For her to leave home, move to the West Coast, live with a man to whom she was not married, give up all religious affiliation and develop an interest in feminism while her two sisters and one brother remained close to home, was daring. She had graduated with honors and gone out into the world eager to make the most of herself. But this promising development had stalled. She was working as a secretary at a job she hated, was preoccupied with compulsive eating and her body’s size, found life meaningless and disappointing, described herself as depressed and despairing and at times suicidal. I was then in training with Otto Will, who had trained with Harry Stack Sullivan, who had worked with Freda Fromm Reichman. I was following their interpersonal approach with a dose of object relations mixed in, supplemented by an analytic interest in childhood memories.

Catherine found it almost impossible to cook for herself, although she had no trouble cooking on the night assigned to her by her collective. She didn’t plan for her meals but grazed throughout the day, almost entirely on cookies, candies and anything sweet. She ate in secret, disliked herself for doing so, was afraid that I was judging her, and suffered from guilt and remorse. Together, we observed the nuances of our relationship as it developed over many years, curious about the fact that she always stopped for food before her session and immediately went out afterwards for a piece of cake. She suggested that she was filling herself up so as not to bring a ferocious desire to eat into the room with me, evidently afraid that she would gobble me up. The cake that came after the session was to restore the energy that she felt had been depleted in thinking about these issues. She discovered that she refused to cook for herself because she wanted her mother to cook for her and would rather not eat than have to provide food for herself. Although she had voluntarily left the family for a larger life, she missed the closeness and safety of the small town, their church and especially her mother’s devotion to feeding the family. She was brilliant and analytic and good at interpreting symptoms; her childhood memories grew richer and more plentiful over the years, as did her ability to piece together a plausible narrative of her childhood. “Catherine ate in secret, disliked herself for doing so, was afraid that I was judging her, and suffered from guilt and remorse.”

She was the youngest in her family, and by the time she arrived her mother was exhausted and depleted. She hadn’t wanted another child, her milk dried up when Catherine was a few weeks old, and the care of the infant was largely handed over to her elder sister. Nevertheless, on the surface they were a happy, close-knit family, admired in their church and appreciated for their good works. Mother spent the day cooking for them, trying out new menus and culinary ideas, seemingly satisfied with her life but with an undercurrent of bitterness only Catherine seemed to recognize. Although well fed by her mother as she was growing up, Catherine began to wonder if she’d ever been nourished. Even her desire to have mother cook for her now that she was an adult began to seem a poignant wish that mother’s care and even her cooking had contained more authentic nourishment. The family dinners, which she’d always remembered as happy occasions, began to reveal their seams of stress—her older sister resenting her for the care she’d given her, her brother, two years older, in fierce competition for attention, her father absent, the second sister gentle and meek, as if she’d early decided that life was not going to offer her much, mother tyrannical when it came to the family’s enjoyment of her cooking. Dinner table conversation was lively but largely restricted to comments and conversation about food.

Catherine’s life changed dramatically through our work. She left her job, started a not-for-profit organization that became very successful, developed a strong interest in psychology, got an M.A. in counseling, worked out an honest and passionate relationship with her boyfriend, bought a house with several friends and lived collectively. When she got pregnant she decided to stop her work with me, owing both to financial concerns and to a general feeling that we had accomplished much and that she wasn’t capable at that time of going further. She still ate compulsively, giving us both the impression there was a lot more to understand.

I present this story in order to muse about the fact that excellent psychological work can be done that nevertheless does not reach a troubling emotional core. This did not surprise me. In my decades of work with eating disorders I have found that the underlying reasons a person eats compulsively, or eats more than they want, or far less than they ought, are hard to experience as direct, unmediated emotional events. The symptoms of a troubled relationship to food are so powerful and so deeply ingrained in the way one soothes and rewards oneself, hides from loneliness, expresses outrage and sorrow and in general shuts off consciousness, that it is hard to get beneath symptom into the raw emotion that is giving rise to it. She sensed that there was more to her emotional life than we'd yet explored; nevertheless, that is where we left it until, six years later, she came to speak with me about her doctor’s insistence that she lose weight.

Catherine's Diary

I have permission to quote from the diary she kept during the first three weeks of the diet. My comments follow her diary entries. This is not a description of the way Catherine and I worked together but an account of her process of uncovering meaning in what earlier had been unconscious, compulsive acts.

Catherine: I have a strange sensation—I am not really that hungry, though I can feel an underlying pull in my stomach now that's it's been a few hours since my breakfast. I am sad and irritable. My mind brightly goes to "treat" several times an hour, for myself, and socially ("like, oh I should take the girls out for burritos for lunch!" "I want a latte and a scone!"). Then I am disappointed in some deep way when I remember, but it's not exactly about being hungry. Fascinating. What is it about?

I am interested in the fact that from the first day of dieting hunger is put under suspicion. It can’t be taken at face value. This is an insight Catherine has not had before.

Catherine: Today, the glutton, the sensualist in me rebels. I can feel a sense of victimization mounting. "I hate restriction, I don't want to do this."

Here, as we can see, the issue has now become one of dislike for restriction. Insight is developing: this is a character trait, not an eating behavior. Catherine has not previously named in herself this rebellion against limitation. Indeed, it would be hard to recognize when there is a lifetime pattern of instant self-gratification.

Catherine: “OK, this is bearable, I am OK. But the sense of comfort I am missing—I am working so hard, I am so tired and worn out from childcare. How will I replace food as comfort? How? How? So far there is no replacement and I’m not sure there ever could be one. I am working so hard.

An additional meaning has been attributed to food. It is now recognized not only as a comfort but also as a reward for having had a hard time. This is a steady growth in the capacity to think symbolically. Hunger is no longer simply hunger and food is no longer simply food.

Catherine: It’s not hunger that’s hard. What I have to know about myself is what’s hard. I’d rather not know.

The progression of self-awareness has moved on into the striking discovery that the struggle with food has been a drama about self-knowledge. Or rather, about refusing self-knowledge. This is a lot of insight to achieve in a week.

Catherine: Last night at the party someone said I seemed like a happy person and I felt so embarrassed I almost cried. "I am having a terrible time, I'm filled with jealousy and poison," I thought. "Why does she think I'm happy?

Catherine has always had the capacity to seem happy, well-adjusted and cheerful, traits that were required by her family. They’ve been a second skin and only now are being viewed as alien. Although these traits have served as a protective covering, they have also been misleading as to who she really is. As she comes to know herself authentically, a wish to be authentically known begins to emerge.

Catherine: The depressive, dark, roiling, murky, angry, resentful, revengeful part of me is so present now when I am alone and I never show it in public—Who is this? I can see why she’s been out of sight. I don’t want her. I feel suffocated by these feelings and their bare truth. I can't push this part of me away and "think positive." I must integrate, integrate, integrate. I wish I could cry, but I feel so bottled up. Maybe I will cry today. Would crying be more satisfying than a burrito?

I thought of this as an important breakthrough. A subterranean world of feeling, now present in her awareness, has brought in the crucial thought that an ability to feel, to cry, or even to want to feel might be more satisfying than eating.

Catherine: It's very hard for me. These feelings are hard for me. I didn’t know I was filled with so much poison. Feeling these feelings is what’s hard for me. I don’t like who I am. But I do like myself for knowing all this.

The capacity to know and name herself is making the emergence of difficult self-knowledge bearable. We know how crucial this particular exchange is in psychological work. Not liking who one is but liking oneself for the ability to know it. The supposed safety of not-knowing is falling away before the power of insight.

Catherine: Last night I dreamed I was trying to warn a school full of small children (preschool) and teachers that a huge tidal wave was coming. Everyone was very busy and distracted and could not focus. Then I was in a meeting where someone was presenting us with his new beautiful chocolate bar. I raised my hand and asked, "What was your aesthetic inspiration for making this chocolate?"

I often dream about tidal waves: massive, blind destruction. But I never thought they were about what I was feeling. Or not feeling.

I think they represent my dread and fear and the sense of overwhelm I have about things. And the chocolate is so funny! That’s what I’ve found in my life, a chocolate bar to keep me safe against a tidal wave.

This is a curious insight because in fact the chocolate bar and its sister-sweets have served to protect her from the tidal wave of feelings that she fears. They’ve worked; they’ve captured her consciousness and shut it off. That’s why chocolate and muffins and brownies have been so hard to give up. Nevertheless, they are now seen for what they are and have become ludicrous.

Catherine: Any choice about my size, about losing weight, is astonishing to me. It lifts a lifetime of discouragement. How do I comfort and reward myself if not with food? (I want to replace compulsive eating with compulsive writing!) My shoulders ache, my eyes are heavy with un-slept sleep. I want to lie down right now in this library and cry.

Wonderful, this wish to replace compulsive eating with compulsive writing. She is in fact a very good writer and will, in a few months, discover that when she sits down to write, the inner turbulence she feels will subside. Not every time, not completely, but often enough to make her aware she has a choice between chocolate and self-expression.

Catherine: It's getting somewhat easier for me. Still many fantasies of treats, but it is balanced out by feelings of excitement and accomplishment. After all, it wasn’t hunger that was the problem. But all this poison inside me. So, now that I know it’s here? Now what? Can I just live with it? I don’t think so. But that’s what I’ve been doing, isn’t it?

The sense that these feelings are unbearable has not gone away, but there is the simultaneous discovery that after all they have been borne. The unbearable has become bearable. If this happens once, it can happen again: “I can’t live with it, but paradoxically I’ve just discovered that I have been living with it.”

Catherine: Clothes that were a bit too tight feel good and are fitting. Joy. Joy. JOY. Having these intense, florid cravings a few times a day. They stop me in my tracks. Today it was my childhood birthday cakes—"bakery cakes" we called them—white cake and frosting with clusters of pink frosting roses, they were even better slightly stale. Everyone wanted a rose on their slice—a mouthful of pure frosting. I practically moaned aloud as I pictured this. Bizarre. I could eat a truckload of that soft, fragrant, sweet white cake and frosting. Yesterday had a craving about thick ice cream shakes full of candy. Amazing that this is there, so deeply. Much much more than a memory. I can right now taste that pink frosting. Like those frosting roses were going to make up for everything that wasn’t so great in our childhood?

I still find it extraordinary that this transformational journey is taking place simply because Catherine isn’t eating in the way she ordinarily would. Through this precise memory, this sensually present image of the pink frosting roses, she has understood the full power of the emotions that she is engaging.

Catherine: I am starkly alone with all these bad feelings. I am hungry and I want to eat. I am sad and I want a treat and a reward. The only thing I can think of is going to bed, not so much as a reward but as a way to live through this. I am going to live through this. I have to live through this.

I admire this knowledge, this clear seeing of these very difficult feelings and the search for something other than food to see her through. Above all I am taken with this resolution: “I am going to live through this. I have to live through this.” It has some of the quality of a hero’s, or more precisely, a heroine’s journey.

Catherine: It gets easier. I am living with medium to mild cravings and longings; not much hunger; and a mounting pleasure in what I have done. It has been so hard and it’s not about hunger. I have been wrestling with an angel and trying to find my meaning in it all. The feelings are so intense: jealousy, grief, rage, cruelty, indifference, helplessness, mad cravings and feeling crushed. It's like living through a hurricane at times. I’m thinking again this is the hardest thing I’ve ever done in my life. But somehow I’m doing it.

I take this testimony seriously; this probably is the hardest thing she’s ever done in her life, harder than giving birth or separating from her family. The newly discovered feelings write the emotional narrative that had been driven out of awareness but was always lurking, lurking, driving the compulsion to eat.

Catherine: I am at my desired weight. I am really pleased. It's amazing. On the feelings front, I am in lots of turmoil. My temper is short, I am touchy and sad. This is the perfect moment to "assault eat." And I will not. I want to be able to handle my feelings and not use food to soothe them, but will I be able to do that for the rest of my life? Maybe if I ever am told I have 3 months to live I promise myself I will eat only ice cream.

I love the way she can simply say, after a lifetime of struggle with eating: I will not. She has acquired choice where she previously experienced compulsion. This transformation of compulsion into choice may be the single most crucial accomplishment in anyone’s therapeutic work.

Catherine: I want support from you and from my man but I feel vulnerable and raw when I think about sharing all this. But maybe it will be better if I talk to him? Maybe I will feel more recognized for how hard this is for me? I am not sure.

Food has so many purposes, meanings and uses; no wonder it’s so hard to work them all out. You give up food as comfort then it shows up as reward; you recognize it as a consolation, then it appears as an interpersonal shield.

Catherine: I spoke to you on the phone about how I'm feeling today. I'm noticing this kind or foundational feeling (that's the word I keep finding)—as if I have more of a right to be here. I think it has to do with feeling proud of myself for doing the hardest thing I can do. Working on my relationship to food is the oldest, toughest, most entrenched part of me. As we said today—it's not likely for me to find something harder. With my clients, I feel a new sense of balance, of rootedness. If I can deal with this for myself, I can ask them to do the hard things they need to do for themselves too. I can support them to do those things. This makes me feel transparent, more authentic. Like I am not a fraud.

This is a beautiful piece of psychological work. Catherine has discovered that experiences and moods she took at face value are actually the expression of emotions and conflicts. I love to recall that resounding phase: “I will not.” She has been able to substitute choice for compulsion. She has gained a great deal of self-respect by succeeding at something she found really difficult. She feels more confident in the work she does with her clients. She understands the meaning of her dreams, she sees life-patterns emerging, she has achieved much more self-knowledge than she’s had before. I like to think of this as the deconstruction of eating in favor of meaning. To this day, after some thirty years of work with these issues, I’m still astonished that something as seemingly mundane, concrete and literal as eating and food can have this crucial importance. Maybe it’s not surprising if we remind ourselves that our first act after birth and taking our first breath is a reaching out for food.

The Journey Continues

Successfully losing weight is not the end of the story, far from it.

Weight-loss faces anyone who has accomplished it with a number of immediate dilemmas. The body has changed but intimacy is still frightening; being dressed in size 8 clothes doesn’t necessarily secure a job; if one was shy before very likely one is still shy. A lot more social attention may be directed towards a woman who has changed her body’s size but cat calls, whistles, crude remarks, are not necessarily the attention she desires. The magic that weight-loss was supposed to produce as it solved all of life’s problems gets tarnished very fast. And there we still are, the same self in a different body, unless the dieting has helped us to change that self.

There’s still a long, hard road ahead. Learning to eat properly, sticking to the new habits one has acquired, shifting from the food of immediate gratification to food that supports health, these are going to present an ongoing struggle.

Catherine’s is not a typical story. Most people who lose weight on any kind of diet do not make a transformational journey. Nevertheless, many do. My intention in writing this article is to suggest that, as clinicians, we are going to be faced increasingly with the problem of obesity and its effect on health. If we learn to use dieting as a therapeutic tool, as a way of uncovering unconscious impulses and compulsions, weight-loss may be easier to accomplish, and certainly will be more rewarding, as knowledge of the self is acquired at the same time.

In closing, I would like to point out that I am not just speaking about dieting here. Any close examination of one’s eating habits and behaviors can yield the same consciousness of deep feelings, memories and life-patterns. As clinicians, I have the impression that we tend to be overly interested in people’s sexual experience and fantasy, and far less concerned than we ought to be in what food and eating have meant to them. In that sense, there is no contradiction between my work of thirty years ago and my work now: whether an individual chooses to diet or to become conscious of the ways she eats, the shared goal can be self-knowledge. Eating behaviors, as I wrote many years ago, can be the royal road to the unconscious as much as, or maybe even more than dreams, Freud’s favorite candidates for that distinction.

Through the Anger Looking Glass

On this past Sunday’s broadcast of “Weekend Edition” on National Public Radio, the focus was on the 50th anniversary of Betty Freidan’s The Feminine Mystique. In this book Friedan raged against the status of women in the 1960s. Although millions of people have read this feminist manifesto, it seems very few presently understand how anger in general and Friedan’s anger in particular could be a source of insight, motivation, and personal and social transformation.

Anger is an emotional state that has a bad rap. There’s far more written about anger control than about how anger, when nurtured and examined, can transform. As most mental health professionals already know, anger is an emotion, not a behavior. And emotions are acceptable and desirable. When anger fuels aggressive or destructive behavior is when it becomes problematic.

But since everyone knows about and talks about the destructive capability of anger—let’s talk about the constructive side of this emotion instead. Hardly anyone articulates anger’s positive qualities as clearly as the feminists. Feminist therapists consider “encouraging anger expression” as a meaningful process goal in psychotherapy for at least five reasons:

  1. Girls and women are typically discouraged from expressing anger directly. Experiencing and expressing anger without repressive cultural consequences can be an exhilarating freedom for females. Similarly, experiencing anger, but not letting it become aggression is a new and productive process for males.
  2. Anger illuminates. There’s nothing quite like the rush of anger as a signal that something is not quite right. Examined anger can stimulate insight.
  3. Alfred Adler suggested that the purpose of insight in psychotherapy was to enhance motivation. Anger is helpful for both identifying psychotherapy goals AND for mobilizing client motivation.
  4. During psychotherapy anger may occur in-session towards the psychotherapist. Skillful therapists accept this anger without defensiveness and then collaboratively explore the meaning of their in-session anger.
  5. Anger is a natural emotional response to oppression and abuse. If clients consistently suppress anger, it inhibits them from experiencing their full range of humanity.
For feminists, one goal of nurturing and exploring client anger is to facilitate feminist consciousness. Feminist consciousness involves females (and males) developing greater awareness of equality and balance in relationships. However, using anger to stimulate insight and motivation is useful in all forms of therapy, not just feminist therapy.

But working with (and not against) anger in psychotherapy is complex. The problem is that anger pulls so strongly for a behavioral response. Reactive anger is destructive. Clients want to let it out. Experiencing and expressing anger feels so intoxicatingly right. Clients want to punch walls. They want to formulate piercing insults. They want to counterattack. Unexamined anger is reactive and vengeful.

Imagine a male client. He’s uncomfortable with how his romantic partner has been treating him. You help him explore these feelings and identify the source; he recognizes that his partner has been treating him disrespectfully. But good psychotherapy doesn’t settle for simple answers. His new insight without further exploration could stimulate retaliatory impulses. Good psychotherapy stays with the process and examines aggressive outcomes. It helps clients explore alternatives. Could he be overreacting? Perhaps the anger is triggering an old wound and it’s not just the partner’s behavior that’s triggering the anger?

Relationships are nearly always a complex mix of past, present, and future impulses and transactions. When anger is respected as a signal and clients take ownership of their anger, good things can happen. It can be used to help clients become more skilled at identifying and articulating their underlying sadness, hurt, and disappointment. Clients can emerge from psychotherapy with not only new insights, but increased responsibility for their behavior and more refined skills for communicating feelings and thoughts without blaming anger, but in a way that serves as an invitation for greater intimacy and deeper partnership.

None of this would be possible without the clarifying stimulation of anger and a collaborative psychotherapist who’s able to help clients face, embrace, and understand the many layers of meaning underneath your anger. And it’s about time we learned a lesson from the feminists and started giving anger the respect it deserves.

Robin Rosenberg on Treating Eating Disorders

Rebecca Aponte: When you think about eating disorders, do you think of both anorexia and bulimia? Is there a lot of overlap in people who engage in these behaviors?
Robin Rosenberg: There are people who engage in both types of behaviors. In DSM-IV, individuals who exhibit all the criteria for anorexia but who also binge and purge would be diagnosed as anorexia nervosa binge/purge type. So diagnostically, anorexia trumps bulimia, if you will. But that is just the DSM-IV; who knows what will happen in DSM-V?
RA: Are they related?
RR: They appear to be, at least for a significant subset of people. So in terms of the research, when you look at people who have bulimia versus people who have anorexia, that is not necessarily a helpful distinction. Anorexia has, in DSM-IV, two subtypes. There is the traditional restricting type, which is the people who eat minimally, and then there is the form of anorexia where people are significantly underweight and may be amenorrheic [they have stopped menstruating], but they may also binge or eat without restricting, but then purge in some way, or use other compensatory behaviors. Those people are classified as anorexia binge/purge type, but in studies, those people have more in common with people who have bulimia than they do with anorexia restrictive type. Some of this is a bit of a diagnostic artifact, because it’s the way that it has been defined in DSM-IV.The most interesting thing about eating disorders in terms of classification issues is that it is not uncommon for people to move from one eating disorder to another over time.

Chicken or Egg: Looking at Causes of Eating Disorders

RA: What do you think are the causes of anorexia and bulimia? Is there a general consensus on what causes them?
RR: One of the things that is clear is the influence of culture, in that our culture is pretty screwed up about body ideal, especially for women. And it is hard to be a young woman or an older woman in our society and have a positive relationship with your body because of the cultural messages about how women should look, which is basically unattainable unless it is a full-time job or you have a lot of plastic surgery.There was a fascinating study by Anne Becker and her colleague. She went to Fiji and happened to be there right as they were getting Western television. Fiji is a Polynesian culture in which typically the ideal body type was the voluptuous large woman, and they were seeing Western TV with our ideal body types—very thin. So she had a chance to study girls and young women, and what was fascinating but sad is that over the time that television was there, the girls basically stopped liking their voluptuous bodies. They started dieting, talking about dieting; there was a lot of peer stuff about food and weight and appearance, consciousness which hadn’t been there before.

It is not a true experimental design, but it is pretty compelling. These young women were from a culture that had historically had an ideal of a heavyset look for women—yet some of them started spontaneously throwing up because they felt they had eaten too much, which could be a symptom of bulimia. Very sad. So culture is clearly part of the equation for both anorexia and bulimia.

RA: There are images surrounding us constantly of unrealistically thin or fit men and women, but it seems that not everyone is as susceptible to negative self-comparisons.
RR: That’s exactly right. Because this is a multi-determined category of disorders, there is no one factor that stands out, but people with eating disorders often report having been teased about their appearance or body size or shape. At least, these experiences are on their minds in such a way that they tend to report them. So that is another cultural piece, if you will.Personality factors or being perfectionistic—that is particularly true for people who have a restrictive type of anorexia. The thought is they will diet and then they keep dieting. It is a very slippery slope of weight loss.

People who binge and purge or have a binge/purge-type anorexia may have some issue around impulsivity or emotional regulation. Sometimes they will have more substance abuse issues, alcohol in particular. There is sometimes a cycle where they become disinhibited by drinking, and then they overeat, and then they feel bad, and then they throw up or purge and whatever they do with the eating. Frequently, they exercise the next day.

RA: Is it as if they are using these behaviors as external tools to try and help deal with their emotions?
RR: Exactly. In fact, people who binge talk about using it to zone out, to get away from themselves, but then they just feel really bad afterwards, so it doesn’t really work. It works in the moment, but not later.
RA: Are there common family dynamics in eating-disordered people? You mentioned some personality issues of being perfectionistic, but are there any relational patterns that stand out?
RR: The biggest one is a family preoccupation with weight, food and appearance, or being teased in other ways, their body shape being an issue—which makes sense, right?If your family is really attuned to how you look or how they look, that is what you learn and what you internalize. There appear to be some causal biology issues as well, but that is also very hard; it is sort of a chicken-and-egg thing, because people often don’t come to the attention of research studies until they have an eating disorder. And once your eating is disordered, you are changing your biology.

So there are lots of associations, but it is just not clear. Sometimes eating disorders run in families. Is that genetic coding? If a parent had eating issues, the odds are that there will be a family dynamic around food. So is that genetic or is that biological? They are trying to tease this part out. Is the eating disorder co-morbid with a mood issue, which could explain why antidepressants might work for people with bulimia? I think the biology part maybe a bit oversold. People have different temperaments that make them vulnerable to different sets of disorders if environmental circumstances trigger them. But I don’t think it is the case where someone has the gene and therefore he or she gets it.

RA: It certainly seems like you are leaning much more towards a social explanation.
RR: Right. It’s not as if eating disorders typically arise across like multiple generations in the same family.
RA: That is what I was going to ask, too. Are the rates of anorexia and views around eating disorders different in different parts of the world?
RR: There have been people with anorexia in recorded history going back quite a while, but they were mostly young women or older girls, and it was religiously motivated—a sort of asceticism. There weren’t issues about body image per se. And in current times in Asia, at least 10 years ago when they did some of these cross-cultural studies, some of the young women with anorexia didn’t say that they felt fat, but they complained that the reason they didn’t eat much was because they didn’t like the way that they felt. They did not express the same fear of weight issues that Western girls or adults with anorexia have.The other thing is that 30 years ago anorexia was a kind of white upper-middle-class disorder; now it is an equal opportunity disorder.

Dissatisfied or Delusional?: Body Dysmorphia and Pro-Ana Culture

RA: What is the role of body dysmorphia—a disturbed image of someone’s own body? Is that causative, or is that more like a symptom?
RR: It is hard to figure out what is normal eating for a woman in our society. It is hard to sort out where the line is between normal and abnormal size. When guys are hungry, they eat; it’s fuel. But it is really hard for women to view food as fuel that they need and not use it in other ways, and listen to their body about when they are hungry and full and not be externally regulated—”This is the amount I should eat, and this much is too much,” or that kind of thing.So many women feel fat, or feel fatter than they actually are. Is that body dysmorphia, or is that just part of what women think it means to be a woman? Is that what our culture tells us women are supposed to do? Women say, “How do I look? Do I look fat in this?” That is part of the culture.

Real dysmorphia is preoccupying—it is almost delusional. They have done some studies on women with anorexia: they have an Adobe Photoshop morphing program where there is a photo of them and they can turn a dial to make themselves thinner or heavier. So you ask them to adjust the image to what they think is their actual body size. Some of the studies show they are actually pretty accurate—it is not that they necessarily see themselves as heavier than they are—but some studies don’t show that. It is a little hard to say.

The dysmorphia isn’t about being unhappy with your body; it is really thinking that your body is different than it is. And I think it is not uncommon for people who were heavy when they were younger—no matter how thin they are, they may feel like they are heavy. It is not a dysmorphia—it is just how they encoded their body image, and it is really, really hard to update it accurately. It is like people who grew up poor: no matter how much money they have, they often feel poor. It’s not like they are delusional. They know that they have this money, but it’s hard to fully accept the new circumstances in a deep way.

RA: Do you find that restrictive eating is often a way to get attention, or is it really primarily an attempt to fix a perceived flaw in oneself?
RR: I think people come to it for really different reasons. It’s sort of like substance abuse. There are many different reasons why people start this slippery slope of using or abusing a substance. But once they are dependent on the substance, it takes on a life of its own, and ultimately they all look similar at that end of the process. Some people start out trying to lose some weight. It feels really good. They get a lot of positive feedback about it. They say, “Okay, I will just lose a little bit more, a little bit more.” And then, before you know it, they are underweight and their self-esteem has gotten tied up with it. They have gotten this reinforcement from, who knows, their boyfriend.And then it is really hard to come out of it, because depending on how underweight you are, you start having some cognitive impairment issues, and then it is hard to make good decisions. Bulimia or binging and purging is a similar thing: it may start out where someone ate so much that she felt either physically uncomfortable or emotionally uncomfortable with how much she had “pigged out,” so to speak. So she may have made herself throw up, and then in that moment she felt better—there was immediate positive reinforcement for the behavior. So the next time she feels uncomfortable she thinks, “Oh, well, this worked last time. I will do it this time.” And then she does it again and she start to think, “Well, it’s okay if I overeat, because if I do, I can just throw up, or I can take laxatives, or I will just do another half hour on the Stairmaster,” or something.

Then it becomes a slippery slope. It is not necessarily for attention, but once they do it, it becomes a coping strategy that it is hard to switch off. And it often becomes the primary coping strategy.

RA: Has there been a shift in anorexic culture with the rise of pro-ana websites? (These are websites that act to support groups for eating disordered women, to encourage each other in extreme weight loss.)
RR: Yeah, it’s really sad. It is one of the downsides of the Internet. It is ubiquitous—if you want that kind of support, it’s there for you. And I think it is really hard for families and caregivers, because you can’t forbid someone to use the Internet, so it is much harder to control the environment in a way that is positive.
RA: Is that the main difference since the rise of these kinds of websites—that it is more difficult to create a healing environment and to control that space?
RR: I think that is one of the differences. I think there is also a “me, too” copycat issue. In psychotherapy, there is a certain competitiveness that happens. It is not just advice. If you have a therapy group of women with anorexia, you have to have a skilled group therapist to make sure that the group doesn’t end up being de facto pro-ana. You don’t want people to get into this competitive “I’m thinner than she is, I eat less” dynamic.

The Importance of Teamwork: Treating Eating-Disordered Patients

RA: What kinds of events precipitate eating disordered individuals seeking treatment?
RR: Sometimes the individuals recognize they have a problem—either they saw something on television or a film or online. Or they vomited up some blood or they passed out. Sometimes people just feel like it is taking over their lives and they haven’t quite realized it until they were late for some event because they were engaging in these behaviors. Or a friend was using the toilet, the bathroom was left disgusting, and they had a fight.Sometimes it is family members being concerned. Sometimes if they are under 18 or even if they are college age, parents may say, “You have to do this,” or, “We won’t pay for college if you don’t do this.” So there may be a certain level of coercion.

RA: Do eating disordered clients usually minimize their problem?
RR: I think it depends on why they are there. If they are not there because they want to be, then they may be tempted to minimize it. I think it is like substance abuse in that way. If people are really there because they feel totally committed and want to be there, they are likely to be more honest than people who are ambivalently there.
RA: Are there pitfalls to getting in the role of monitoring their eating or bulimic episodes? How do you balance concern for their physical well being with the need to give nonjudgmental support?
RR: Great question. One of the things that is really important for psychotherapists treating eating disorder patients is to work with either an internist or a pediatrician who has experience and knowledge about medically treating eating disorders. This is super important, because as the psychotherapist you don’t want to get into that dilemma of having to be the bad cop, or any cop. You just don’t want to have to be monitoring their medical status. And frankly, most mental health clinicians don’t have the training. Even psychiatrists shouldn’t be in that role because that is really a medical role.And not all internists and pediatricians really know how to monitor patients with eating disorders. They don’t necessarily know what to look for, and they don’t know how patients might try to game the medical exam. For example, a good practice for any kind of eating disorder, and patients who have anorexia in particular, is that they should be weighed every time they come in. And they should be weighed with only a gown, because sometimes anorexic patients will put weights into their clothes to make themselves heavier on a scale so it looks like they have gained weight.

If you have them wear a gown, or even if you don’t, you really need to palpitate their bladder, because sometimes patients will water-load before they come in as a way of being heavier on the scale. Water-loading is very dangerous because it can make their electrolytes go all out of whack. So there are all these things that you wouldn’t necessarily think to do.

For eating disordered patients, the internist should explain that they have to be weighed every time. If they don’t want to know the numbers on the scale, the internist is happy to weigh them backwards, or have the nurse or the physician’s assistant weigh the patient backwards. Sometimes patients freak out by the numbers on the scale every time they come in, if it is up or down or that kind of thing. It can be devastating for patients to see the numbers on the scale show they are gaining weight, even if they know that they are and they should.

RA: Other than working with internists, are there other things that therapists should know about working with anorexic or severely bulimic clients?
RR: It’s really good to have a dietician who knows about treating people with eating disorders. Sometimes a dietician who doesn’t have specific training in eating disorders can do more harm than good. It is really about specializing. They are a valuable part of the program because they can look at a patient’s food chart and see, “Gee, maybe you are having cravings for ice cream because you are not getting enough fat earlier in the day. So what happens is by dinner time you are not being sustained by the food that you are eating because you need fats to give a sense of satiety.”So if they are basically having a low-fat diet, they will be much more likely to be at risk to binge later in the day. It is little things like that, where even a nutritional consult can be helpful.

RA: What do you think about residential eating disorder programs? Are they worth the cost? Is it possible to get that kind of care as an outpatient?
RR: I leave the medical decision to have someone do residential treatment to the person’s pediatrician, doctor, or internist. We consult with part of a team, but at some point it is a medical decision, which means it is really not safe for the person to be doing what they are doing on an outpatient basis.There are various steps of care for eating disorders. You can have a 24-hour inpatient experience. You can have residential, which means that is where they sleep. They have a dinner meal and they sleep there, but during the day they are doing other things. You can have a day treatment, which is their 9 to 5, but then they sleep somewhere else. You can have intensive outpatient treatment, where the person comes three to five times a week for a psychotherapy session, or more regular once- or twice-a-week outpatient psychotherapy.

There is a range of different options available depending on the severity, the patient’s motivation, insurance issues, or practical issues. Sometimes residential is really the best course of action because the eating is so out of control that they need an environment that is totally structured for them 24 hours a day.

The main problem with residential is that when people leave, they typically go back to the same environment that they came from, and they have all the situational cues. It’s like putting an alcoholic in detox—if afterwards you put them back with their friends who are going to bars, or they have all of the alcohol in the house, or they haven’t learned new coping strategies adequately, then they are kind of back to square one.

RA: Because they are surrounded by enablers?
RR: Right, depending on the situation. And honestly, unlike alcohol, someone can not drink, but you can’t not eat. And I think that is one of the hardest things about recovering from an eating disorder—it is really having to figure out how to do it in a different way. It is not an all-or-none thing. And it is really hard, I think, to figure out how much food is enough. When should I get up from the table? How hungry should I be before I start a meal? How hungry should I be to have a snack?
RA: With regards to psychotherapy, in your experience, what kind of treatment works best?
RR: The kind for which the patient is most motivated. The track record in research studies is for cognitive behavioral therapy; that is the gold standard and the treatment of choice for bulimia. For young people with anorexia, if a family is willing to do it, there is what is called the Maudsley Approach, named after Maudsley Hospital in England, which is where the treatment originated. The idea for this treatment is that the therapist’s role is to support the parents and the parents’ wisdom and authority in getting their child to eat. So the child lives at home, and one of the parents is home 24 hours a day, and they alternate. The idea is that the kid can’t do anything until she eats, and as parents it is their right to get their kid to eat. But you don’t want to literally force it down her throat, so the therapist is a consultant helping the parents use their knowledge of their child and their authority to help the person eat. There is a great book for the Maudsley Treatment called Treatment Manual for Anorexia Nervosa.
RA: That sounds pretty intense for a family.
RR: It is incredible intensive. It is a huge family investment in time and energy, and it has a very good track record. But obviously, you are not going to use this with a 30-year-old.For people with anorexia who are older or for whom Maudsley doesn’t make sense, if they are medically stable, so they don’t need to be in an inpatient unit, cognitive behavioral therapy can be very helpful. But the main problem with cognitive behavioral therapy for people with anorexia is if they are underweight enough, their cognitive functioning is compromised; it is subtle, so patients don’t always realize that their cognitive functioning is compromised.

So what happens is that you can’t really do the cognitive work, because they can’t do it. They can pretend to do it, but they believe that their thoughts about food are actually rational.

RA: What do you do at that point?
RR: If this is because they are underweight, you may actually want to do a brief inpatient or day treatment stay to get their weight into a healthier range so that the cognitive functioning is better.Sometimes depending on how old they are, their living circumstances, they are having family therapy or even couples therapy, if they are older. And they are trying all different kinds of things. Interpersonal therapy (IPT) is being used for bulimia. It has actually got a pretty good track record. Most people don’t have training in IPT, so it is not as widespread. Another thing that can be helpful is dialectic behavioral therapy for people with intense bulimia, because it is really an emotional regulation problem, so DBT aimed at helping with emotional regulation can be very helpful. Researchers are beginning to apply DBT as a way of treating bulimia, and results are encouraging.

Tips for the Novice

RA: If a client reveals to his psychotherapist that he has some form of disordered eating but he is not drastically underweight, at what point should he be referred out to someone who specializes in these kinds of issues?
RR: What might make sense before clients are referred out is if therapists are willing to have a consult with someone who has this expertise in eating disorders, because it can’t hurt.If the psychotherapist doesn’t have an expertise in eating disorders, even in a one-shot consultation they will learn something that will help them for other patients in their practice. They themselves will get to ask that question—”What is the cutoff? What are the questions I should be asking patients when they mention eating that seems a little odd to me?”

Therapists who are at all wondering if a consult is a good way to go should do what therapists naturally do when a flag goes up with something a patient mentions, which is to ask more about it. Try to get a little bit of a history of the problem. Does the patient see it as a problem? Do family members or friends mention it? What does the patient think the function is? What function does it serve? What are the drawbacks? What are ways in which it seems the patient thinks it is working for him or her to have that disordered system? So collect information.

When there is any doubt, a consultation is a really good idea. Or, if it is really clear that the person has a problem that is enough out of the therapist’s expertise, he makes a referral and explain to the patient, “You know, it’s not necessarily an ‘eating disorder,’ but it sounds like it is enough of a problem in your life that it is worth just getting some advice from someone who has an expertise about this.”

Again I wouldn’t frame it as the person should enter lifelong eating disorder treatment. If the therapist doesn’t think she needs a consult herself, let the patient have a consult.

RA: What is the biggest challenge of working with these kinds of clients?
RR: One of the things about the process of becoming a better therapist is figuring out the kinds of clients that aren’t a good fit for you. And patients with eating disorders are definitely not a good fit for some therapists. One of the things is just to realize that and there is no shame in that. It’s really not an issue. We all have kinds of patients who we work better with and kinds of patients that we work less well with.So if you as a therapist feel like, “Ugh, I don’t really want to get into this. This is just not my thing,” that’s really useful information and it may make sense to refer the person to someone else.

Again, I think the best thing to do when that happens is to have a consultation. I am a big believer in either peer consultation, groups with people who have an expertise in eating disorder or paying for a consult, but if you feel like you are not being as helpful as you can, if it feels like the treatment is standing still, it is always good to get another take on the case. That is where we have case conferences and things like that.

The easy cases, where the work gets done very quickly, usually happen when it is a newly diagnosed eating disorder or new onset, and the person is really motivated. But I think more and more there are the chronic cases where people have been doing it for a long time and it is one of the main coping strategies that they have. And if they got the eating disorder at a young age, they never really developed themselves as people outside of the eating disorder, so they don’t actually know who they are. There is no baseline they can return to.

And it can be very slow-going work. The patient may be ambivalent about getting better, so it may feel like it is two steps forward, one step back, or just sometimes like you are standing still.

RA: What is the hardest thing for you personally in working with it?
RR: I think it is my own impatience to want to help them get better sooner.
RA: Having more motivation than they have sometimes?
RR: Yeah, exactly.
RA: You mentioned it is important for therapists to figure out what kinds of clients are a good fit for them. Have you noticed personality characteristics that make really good therapists for working with eating disorders?
RR: Yes. One of them is people who aren’t squeamish about talking about vomit, about loose stool, about bodily functions in great detail. If someone is uncomfortable about that, then it is definitely not a good fit. Some people may feel like they are being too intrusive to ask the kinds of questions that should be asked: “How often are you throwing up? How do you throw up? What does it feel like when you throw up?”The other part is there is a lot of work about body image. The actual eating disorder symptoms sometimes, with appropriate treatment, can get better remarkably quickly. But what happens is residual body image issues remain; the person may be eating in a normal way but he or she doesn’t like their body, they may be cutting—not parasuicidal cutting, but they make little marks with a razor on their thighs, that kind of body hatred. That is a different level of work that then has to get done.

RA: When you are at that piece of the work, is cognitive behavioral therapy still the best modality for that?
RR: If people are having that kind of self-harming behavior, probably DBT, dialectical behavior therapy, or some of those techniques can be very useful because, again, it is about emotional regulation. If you hate your body so much that you hurt yourself like that, then I would say DBT is a good way to go.Often, there are psychodynamic issues as well. And there is a fantastic workbook by a man named Tom Cash called The Body Image Workbook, and it is just a fantastic book—well researched, very effective treatment for body image issues. The main problem is that people don’t necessarily want to do the work that is in the workbook. They have to be really motivated to do it. It is a lot of record keeping and exercise, not physical exercise but things like “stand naked, look in the mirror”—Mirror Exposure, it’s called. And that can be really hard for people. So therapy can actually be helpful in getting people over the hump to do that work.

RA: Have you learned anything in specializing in eating disorders that has informed your general practice?
RR: Absolutely. I have a deep respect for people’s ambivalence about getting better, and about how the longer symptoms persist, the harder it is to turn them around because people forget who they were before. The saddest part about eating disorders developed early is there was no “before.”But that’s generalizing. The other thing is just the awesome human spirit and the general capacity to try valiantly to cope. Human beings are amazing, and to a certain extent we are very resilient. Eating disorders, in some sense, are a type of resilience that just went awry, that became pathological.

RA: Say more about that.
RR: If you are having a hard time, if your boyfriend broke up with you and you are sad, it’s not uncommon in our culture to go have some ice cream to console yourself. People are just trying to do the best they can, and I think that is true for eating disorders. People who are depressed who struggle valiantly to get out of bed in the morning when they just want to curl up—the fact that they get out of bed is amazing. That is what I mean about the human spirit to keep going, despite all of the things that people are juggling and the mental and physical handicaps, being exhausted, feeling like they are going to faint, just not being able to function well, being preoccupied with lots of food.

Most people, most of the time, are able to put one foot in front of the other and keep going in trying to get better.

RA: What have you found most enjoyable in this work?

RR: I think it is about the essential human contact of really hearing someone in the fullness of who they are—the good, the bad, the ugly—and their profound relief at being accepted for who they are. And then the sense of being able to help them. The amazing thing is, when therapy works, the idea that you helped make someone’s life better.