Given the nature of the
relationship it’s nearly impossible to know what really goes on in most therapy
sessions. A shroud of confidentiality prevents therapists from talking about
what they really do. Most patients prefer not to discuss what happens in
therapy, either. At times they are embarrassed. At times, they would rather not
admit that they wasted a lot of money on mental drool.
Therapists also have a vested
interest in making themselves look good. It’s good for business.
But, now we have a way of knowing
what really goes on in therapy. We discover, via New York Magazine, that Dr.
Amanda Reisman, therapist to Celeste and Perry Wright on HBO’s Big Little Lies represents their idea of
the perfect therapist. Many therapists see themselves in the person of Dr.
Reisman, so we will take them at their word and assume that this is at the
least what therapists aspire to become.
One notes in passing that Celeste
and Perry are the Wrights. One imagines that this is supposed to tell us that
they represent the right wing. I doubt that it is meant to suggest that Perry
is a descendant of the Wright brothers.
I note, in passing, that BLL is a
very good television show. I understand that it’s all a matter of taste, but
the show is compelling and very well acted. I have some doubt about presenting a
murder mystery where the murder does not occur until the last episode—coming up
on Sunday—but David Kelley is very talented, so he draws us along and into the
story. The show revolves around four women, played by four great actresses. Somehow
or other, it works. The combination of acting talent and great writing brings
it off.
On the other side, the show often
feels like a soap opera. The characters and situations are occasionally too clichéd
and too stark. This applies most especially to the marriage of Celeste and
Perry. While some of the other characters in the show manifest shades of gray,
Perry is presented as raw, unadulterated evil—a perpetrator of constant spousal
abuse. As drawn, Perry Wright is unreal, almost cartoonish. Any comments about how their therapist
handles their problems ought to be seen in that context.
Since anyone can deal effectively
with a caricature, especially one where the morality is presented in
black-and-white terms, you can count me as less than impressed. Since their
marriage is presented through the lens of a simple-minded moralistic therapist,
one suspects it is being played for the melodrama, not the technique.
The therapists interviewed by New
York Magazine believe that the therapy is perfectly realistic. Perhaps it is.
Perhaps many therapists, especially woman therapists, see human life as a
battle between female goodness and male evil. If so, they are not acting as
professionals, but are inculcating an ideology. They do not want to
resolve the conflict, to negotiate the differences and to set the marriage on a
better footing. They look to sharpen the conflict, to the point where only the
most drastic solutions present themselves.
Dr. Reisman and her fans seem to
be incapable of dealing with subtlety. It makes for better drama, but it is not
a sign of being professional. Surely, there is something wrong with seeing
therapy as not wanting to try to save a marriage, to put it back together. In
truth, Dr. Reisman does nothing more than try to destroy the marriage. True
enough, some marriages do best to be destroyed, but that should certainly not
be the default position. And it should not appear to a coterie of therapists to
be the right way to conduct a practice.
One notes that the therapist
writes the marriage into a narrative, a cosmic battle between good and evil. The
therapists marvel at Dr. Reisman’s ability to get both Celeste and Perry to
admit that their marriage—or better, their sex life—is based on violence, what
some would call very rough sex. Celeste
has the bruises to prove it. At this time one might mention the extraordinary
popularity (among women) of a series of books about shades of grey… but perhaps I do not need
to do so.
Given the ideology at
play, Celeste comes to one session explaining that she wants to go back to
work. She had floated the idea to her husband and he rejected it, sadistically.
Another blow against women’s liberation. One notes, because one manages to come
across every sort of gossip that the David Kelley’s wife, Michelle Pfeiffer,
recently explained that when her children were young she placed their interests
ahead of her career ambitions. Now that they are older she wants to return to
acting more regularly.
The therapist spins a narrative.
She does not consider how Celeste might negotiate her responsibilities to young
children and her wish to work… with her husband. Or how the therapist might
help to teach her how to do so.
At some level the couple’s sexual
activities must have been consensual, but Dr. Reisman wants Celeste to believe
that she is the innocent victim while her husband is the evil rapist. In the 5th episode Dr. Reisman
loses control—not a good sign in a therapist—and harangues her patient about
how her husband is going to kill her, how she must immediately leave him and
find her own apartment. Celeste responds that Dr. Reisman is being anything but
professional, but the good therapist is so absolutely, utterly and totally
persuaded that Celeste’s life is in danger that she loses it. One suspects that many therapists hold to the same dream. Even though some therapists question this, in the end they still find Dr. Reisman to be a great therapist.
The therapist lacks subtlety and
finesse. She does not try to solve problems. She wants to rescue her patient
from impending doom. She does not consider how and whether Celeste should
explain her departure to her husband. Since
he is evil, any effort at conciliation will lead to her doom.
Since she is emotionally
overwrought and righteously moralistic, Dr. Reisman does not consider that
abandoning Perry might not bring out his best. And that it might put Celeste in
even more danger.
One notes that after Perry
confesses to being violent in his first session with Dr. Reisman, he never
returns. If Perry has a problem, Dr. Reisman is not the therapist he needs. She
got him to admit to his violent behaviors but at the cost of losing him as a
patient. One understands that a profession that has increasingly become
feminized will not be able to deal with very many male patients—most especially
those with a more sadistic bent.
From Dr. Reisman’s perspective
Perry is evil. Period. End of story. He is irredeemable and untreatable.
Perhaps he is untreatable by her, but is he really untreatable by any
therapist? The possibility does not seem to cross her mind.
In truth, the good therapist is
playing out a rescue narrative. Perhaps it’s a narrative of her own making.
Perhaps it’s a narrative she learned in grad school. But she sees her role as
rescuing abused women from evil men. Thus, of breaking up marriages and homes.
She is trapped in the narrative
and cannot see reality. As one of the therapists noted in the New York
Magazine article, Dr. Reisman shows no concern for Celeste and Perry’s two
children. It’s nice to think that Celeste must save herself from the evil
within her home, but don’t you think that Celeste would consider what was best
for her children? Is it conceivable that Celeste would abandon her children to such a man in order to
hide in a new apartment by herself? If she takes them along, it will be impossible for him not to find out where they are.
Of course, men like Perry do
exist. Some men are so abusive that a woman has no other choice but to pack up
and leave. Mercifully the number is extremely small, but, to be fair, any woman
who is dealing with such a man should seek legal counsel, an order
of protection and even personal security. And, why not try to have him indicted
for assault?
Admittedly, that sounds naïve, but
if Perry is really that bad the best place to deal with the problem is with the
police and the court system, not with a therapist. One understands that they are woefully inadequate
in dealing with such problems, but still it is better than to run off and hide.
Dr. Reisman is telling Celeste to play it for the drama, to pack up and leave,
the better to save her life.
If a therapist were dealing with
Perry directly—evidently Dr. Reisman is too afraid to do so— he might tell this
domestic abuser that if his little secret gets out, his professional reputation
will be destroyed… as well it should be. Not so much because Celeste should do
so, but because this is an option. It might very well cause him to come to his
senses. Since Perry is presumably a successful businessman, one suspects that
he values his reputation. Of course, a lawyer might tell him the same thing. Given
that a lawyer can file charges or request an order of protection, his words
might have some weight.
The drama tells us that the good
therapist sees herself as fighting the good fight for innocent women against evil
men. Presumably she sees many men as irredeemably evil, unworthy of the least
effort to try to help them to overcome their sadistic sides.
When she insists that Celeste
leave her husband immediately, she seems to come into her own… as emotionally
overwrought and out of control.
We do not know the outcome yet,
but we suspect that this is not going to end well. We happily counsel
therapists to be more objective in evaluating the fictional therapist.
3 comments:
Stuart: In truth, the good therapist is playing out a rescue narrative. Perhaps it’s a narrative of her own making. Perhaps it’s a narrative she learned in grad school. But she sees her role as rescuing abused women from evil men. Thus, of breaking up marriages and homes.
I can't tell if such speculations are accurate or not, but as best I can tell 99% of relationship advice you get anywhere is to push people to divorce, or not just marriage but any relationship that isn't working.
The war between good and evil, maybe not, but the modern language talks of "toxic relationships" and "toxic people", and if the toxicity is always assumed to be in the person not present, you can be sure there's some projection involved. People rarekly ask "Am I evil?" or "Am I a toxic person?" It's only useful label if you need rationalization blame the other whether a parent, a sibling, a boss, a friend, a coworker, or a husband. In all cases people may be looking for a way out, and if you can help them believe the grass is always greener on the other side, they can have fun burning bridges as they finally defend themselves against a controlling, manipulative, evil, mean, selfish person, who is holding you back.
Transactional Analysis has its Drama Triangle with Victim, Rescuer, and Perpetrator, so it does seem useful if therapists have some understanding of these things. And you'd think they would, but perhaps we're all naïve in may ways, and perhaps many therapists fail to see their own motives. I can't guess if Life Coaches are any better, but maybe at least they promise faster results?
It's easy to be offended. If being offended is toxicity, then you as the offended person are intoxicated and total control. This is extremely dangerous, as it rewards the least courageous and/or emotionally stable among us. And let's be honest: these are the kinds of persons who rule the roost in our supposedly intellectual environments today. It's not intellectual. It's indoctrination. It's programming. That's what our universities are today: preparing for The Matrix.
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