You may have seen the work of actor Laurence Fox. He played
the role of Hathaway on the Masterpiece Mystery production of “Lewis.” That’s
Detective Lewis, to you. Formerly he was the sidekick of Endeavour Morse in an earlier Masterpiece Mystery show.
Fox was married to a British actress, by name of Billie
Piper. You may also have seen her work. She starred in a television show called “The Secret Diary of a Call
Girl.” Fox and Piper are now divorced and the divorce seems to have hit Fox especially
badly.
Since this blog is about therapy, I report on Fox’s efforts
to overcome his trauma.
In a recent newspaper story, he explains that aerobic exercise helps with his
panic attacks. As it happened, his brother offered to pay for his trainer, as a
post-divorce gift.
Fox explained:
The
physical symptoms of trauma and suffering are profound panic attacks for an
extended period of time, and I'd never had a panic attack in my life
before last year.
It's
like being plugged into an electric socket where you go mental.
I've
learnt to put on my running shoes and sprint as fast as I can until I can't
move any more, then there's something else distracting me and the endorphins
kick in and you start to feel better.
Fair enough, and thoroughly to be expected.
Fox continues, explaining that he has been suffering from chronic insomnia:
I
haven't slept for six months, even with sleeping pills. I go to bed the same
time, same bed as the kids and just lie awake, sleeping two or three hours. My
mind's whirring round.
Now, you will be thinking that perhaps he should be seeing a
therapist. In truth, he has a therapist.
As he says:
I'm
seeing an amazing therapist, I love her.
Let’s see. He hasn’t slept in six months, even while he is taking sleeping medication. And yet, he finds his therapist to be “amazing.” How do
you think he would be feeling and how well do you think he would be sleeping if his
therapist were not quite so amazing? And besides, the only instance of clear benefit comes by way of his trainer, not his therapist.
In principle you judge a therapist’s work on how well or how
poorly her patient is doing. In Fox’s case, the treatment failure doesn’t really matter, because
he loves his therapist. He has a good transference relationship, as the analysts would
put it, but it is not enough to get him, after six months, a good night’s
sleep. It almost makes you think that the transference is simply a way to keep people in treatment when its results are unsatisfactory.
Piper was an actress in Doctor Who. I looked up their divorce:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.itv.com/news/2016-05-12/actress-billie-piper-and-actor-laurence-fox-divorce/
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Billie Piper and Laurence Fox have divorced after more than eight years of marriage.
Actress Piper was granted a "decree nisi" from actor Fox at a brief hearing on Thursday at the Central Family Court in High Holborn, London.
It was granted on the ground of Fox's "unreasonable behaviour".
Lewis star Fox, 37, and former pop singer Piper, 33, married in December 2007 and have two sons together.
In a statement on Fox's official Facebook page in March, they said that "no third parties" were involved and appealed for "space and privacy".
The statement read: "Laurence Fox and Billie Piper have separated. No third parties are involved. For the sake of our family we request and appeal for space and privacy at this time."
No details of the "unreasonable behaviour" were revealed in divorce documents made public on Thursday.
---
That was last May. Perhaps the gossip world knows more now? At least we can guess his unreasonable behavior wasn't intended to provoke a divorce.
Now poor Brad Pitt has the same problem as Jolie tries to explain to the world was a bad person her soon-to-be ex is.
And maybe they both will have their own amazing therapists who will validate their own mutual perspectives, at least for 6 months.