Elizabeth Wurtzel, poster girl for the therapy culture, is
getting married. We all wish her all the best… we seriously do.
Like her or not, she’s an excellent writer. For me, that
counts a lot. Besides, when someone has suffered so much by following the
ministrations of the therapy culture-- and has shared far too much of-- she
does deserve a happy ending.
Wurtzel has accumulated a considerable amount of wisdom
living a therapeutically correct life. Most therapists would not cop to
promoting it, but she has been in full touch with her feelings; she has
expressed them openly and honestly; she has overcome shame, decorum and
civility; she has downed God knows how much psychotropic medication.
The wisdom she earned is hers to do with as she pleases.
One wishes that it had taken her a bit less time to figure
it all out, but, as the saying goes, better late than never.
Now, she has written a swan song to therapeutically correct
singlehood for The New York Times.
Looking back, with some regret, but no anger, she writes:
I would
love to say that I don’t know why I never got around to this [to marriage] until
now, but that would be a big fat lie. I never got married because who would
want to? I was the worst girlfriend ever. And yes, I am the crazy ex-girlfriend
you hear about. I had no regard for time of day or time of year or time at all.
Perhaps I just had no regard. It’s not like I called boyfriends at 2 a.m.
because something was wrong: I did it because I liked to talk in the dark when
there was nothing good to watch on TV anymore.
I also
called when something was wrong, and something was always wrong, because I
could work my way into serious bother about something said in passing between
the appetizer and the entree the night before, and that would turn into
obsessive thoughts and long, intense conversations that would stretch across
business hours and interrupt meetings all the next day. I needed — always
absolutely needed — to get things resolved when it was not at all convenient. I
called so repeatedly that I was impossible to ignore.
When
technology enabled me to be demanding in many formats, my long voice mail
messages became longer text messages and the longest emails. I was often
hysterically upset or ragingly angry about nothing at all, and entire
relationships became about failed communication and no more. I would swallow
half a bottle of tranquilizers over a misunderstanding. And I would do this on
New Year’s Eve.
I did
this to everybody: I held rooms full of people hostage to my foul moods. I was
an emotional wreck, and I did not know how not to be. I made men I loved scared
of me.
A perfectly independent and autonomous individual, Wurtzel
showed no regard for other people, for their time, for their space, for their
sensitivities. The therapy culture does not put it quite that way but it
touts the virtues of open, honest and shameless self-expression and promotes self-actualization ahead of tact and consideration. If you take
its nostrums seriously you act as Wurtzel used to act.
Wurtzel’s relationships contained far more drama than most
bad relationships, but she was using them as material for her books and
articles. Boring and tedious bad relationships don’t sell. Nevertheless, she
was hardly alone.
Ours is not merely an era of bad relationships, but it’s an era
of obsessing about bad relationships.
She notes, sagely:
If
television, movies, novels, songs, blogs and all other available media are to
be believed, my behavior was not unusual and my love life not untypical. Our
culture is animated by bad relationships and the conversations women have about
them while drinking vodka cocktails flavored with lychee and pomegranate. The
brainpower necessary to solve the troubles in Iraq and Palestine is instead
deployed in the tender analysis of destructive dating behavior. It does not
matter that it is obvious we are wasting our time.
It is well worth underscoring. Wurtzel explains that getting
married is easy. Nearly everyone does it. So, why do we have generations of
people who are obsessed with bad relationships, who spend far too much of their
time and brain power deconstructing their failed relationships, and who imagine
that knowing why it went wrong will teach them how to get it right?
For my part I would say that these people have overdosed on
therapy. What else do most people do in therapy but deconstruct failed
relationships. Which is one of the things that’s wrong with therapy.
Presumably, therapists know how the mind works. Thus they ignore reality and hone in on feelings. It may not
be true in all cases, but it happens far too often.
And yet, what do most people talk about in therapy? Do they
talk about the marketplace? Do they talk about managing businesses? Do they talk about career management? Do they
talk about whether to buy or sell real estate?
I suspect that good therapists, therapists who have
considerable experience know enough to discuss these topics. Most therapists, I
believe, spend most of their session time discussing feelings and
relationships.
It’s a serious mistake.
If you spend all your time talking about relationships and
if your therapist believes in constructing narratives, you will need a constant
flow of material to make your sessions interesting. You might not make a career
out of writing about them, but the obsessive interest in self, the intense
focus on what is going on inside, the need to produce more dramatic material
will produce, if you follow it to its logical terminus, Elizabeth Wurtzel’s
previous life.
Wurtzel explains that her problem was her own bad behavior
and the bad choices she was making:
I cried
profuse tears when my relationships failed, which was all the time. I wanted to
love and be loved, but I behaved badly, and I had terrible taste. All the
people who say they want to be married, but are not, are doing the same thing.
All the statistics about how hard it is to find someone to love in this world —
in this world of seven billion — do not account for the choices we make. We are
the sum of our decisions: It’s not that luck has nothing to do with it, but
rather, there is no such thing.
Reality hath slugged her well with its cluebat. Oddly enough, she paid attention after lo, these many (I am presuming) years.
ReplyDeleteHad I been an acquaintance, I would have blocked her phone calls and put her in my spam filter.
I wish her well.
Reasonable expectations. Enjoy the moments of wedded bliss.
ReplyDeleteShe say: "When I was ready to fall in love for real, I stopped behaving badly, and I met someone great, and great for me. I got better and my taste got better. My fiancé is smart and handsome and talented and decent. Everything about him is my favorite thing about him. He proposed this past May, just seven months after we met. I knew I was going to marry Jim the night I encountered him, at a reading in Chelsea in autumn, so it did not seem too soon."
ReplyDeleteThis is scary to me. After a long description of how dependent, self-absorbed, and bad behaved she was, she changed, because she was ready to fall in love.
If I were her lucky fiancé, knowing her unstable history, I would wonder what ie expected of me as her husband. That is, if she "starts acting badly" again, am I supposed to be her keeper, and tell her when she's slipping? Or maybe she'll tell him what he can do to support her, without ending up as her new therapist.
I don't know. Marriage is a funny thing, and they fail for different reasons, and stay together for different reasons.
her assumption that all it takes is brain power to solve the worlds problems is typical of over educated, under experienced liberals ...
ReplyDeleteshe is in the honeymoon period ... wait til she or Jim gets fired or there are some real world stress on their partnership ... we'll see if she has the brain power to not revert to her bad side ... I doubt it ... it was her coping mechanism for too many years ... no way she has retired it ...
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