Just when you thought we could stop offering wild diagnoses
of Donald Trumpism a New York psychoanalyst named Joel Whitebook explains that
Trump is leading the nation into a mass psychosis. And he does it in the New
York Times, which should know better than to publish such silliness.
Whitebook is not just your everyday garden variety
psychoanalyst. He runs the Psychoanalytic Studies Program at Columbia
University. So, he does not just embarrass himself. He embarrasses Columbia,
too. Since he suggests that the Trump administration has been producing a mass
psychosis in the nation, he will suffer no adverse consequences.
I do not need to mention it, but Trump’s detractors seem to
have been competing to see who is more emotionally overwrought, who is more
unhinged, who can present more conspiracy theories. One might say that those
who oppose Trump have taken leave of their rational faculties and have descended
into the fever swamps of mass hysteria. After all, they think that it’s World
War II in France and that they are part of the Resistance. Who’s detached from
reality now?
Anyway, Whitebook opens with this apercu into his clinical
practice:
Sometimes,
when psychoanalysts begin treatment with a new patient, they quickly find
themselves feeling that they can’t make sense of what is going on. The
patient’s statements and behavior simply don’t add up, and the flurry of
dissociated statements and actions can quickly begin to produce something like
a disorienting fog.
Most
seasoned clinicians will have learned that they shouldn’t attribute this
confusion, which is typically accompanied by a distinct form of anxiety, to
their lack of skill. Instead, adept clinicians take the experience itself and
the accompanying anxiety as significant data, indicating that they are dealing
with, if not psychosis in the strict diagnostic sense, at the very least
something in the vicinity of psychotic-like phenomena.
Aside from the salient fact that psychoanalysts insist that
their patients free associate, and thus produce a series of disconnected
fragments that are supposed to give access to the unconscious mind, why has it
never crossed this psychoanalyst's mind to step in, to ask some questions,
to engage in a conversation, to try to make sense of it all? What was it about
his training that made him so inert?
For all of the proposed advances that psychoanalysts have made,
apparently they have not gotten to the point of engaging with their patients.
Whitebook keeps his distance and thinks to himself that the word salad he is
hearing is clinically significant, a sign of anxiety if not psychosis.
One cannot fail to note that, according to Whitebook, some
analysts think that the dissociational flurry is a sign of their own
incompetence. Freud might have said that they are in denial, or better
denegation, and that their mute status as dummy has perhaps contributed to what
they are hearing.
Does it all spell psychosis? I have no idea. I do know that
psychosis is a serious psychiatric condition, one that most contemporary
psychiatrists believe to be a brain disease. Surely, Whitebook knows better
than to offer up a diagnosis based on some dissociated ramblings. I trust that
the average psychiatrist would want to much more about the patient before concluding
that his condition was so dire.
A competent psychiatrist would not do as Whitebook does, and
imagine that Sigmund Freud offered the last word, or even the first word, about
psychosis. After all, Freud was not a psychiatrist, and his views about
psychosis and neurosis are no longer taken seriously by any serious psychiatrist.
Thus, Whitebook offers up one side of Freud’s theory of
psychosis, ignoring the possibility of a neurological condition. He ignores the
last century’s work on this illness, illness that responds to some medical
treatments but that does not respond to psychotherapy and psychoanalysis.
Back in the day—the mid 1970s-- when I was working at a
psychiatric clinic in France, a clinic that was directed by students of Jacques
Lacan, the clinic did not allow anyone to psychoanalyze a psychotic. Medication
and group activities were considered to be the best approach. Of course, Lacan
et al. did theorize about psychosis, but they did not cry out about mass psychosis.
To imagine that Freudian analysis would tell us something
cogent or interesting about psychosis is… dare I say… crazy. Of course, Whitebook,
like Freud was involved in storytelling, not in scientific diagnosis.
In Whitebook’s words:
In
contrast, because psychotic individuals tend to find reality as a whole too
painful to bear, they break with it globally, and construct an alternative,
delusional, “magical” reality of their own. This alternate relation to reality,
manifesting itself in the initial meetings with the patient, is at the root of
the clinician’s confusion.
Feel some pity for poor Joel Whitebook. He feels anxiety
over the election of Donald Trump:
Now
many of us throughout American society at large, after an interminable
electoral campaign and transitional phase into the presidency of Donald J.
Trump, have experienced a form of disorientation and anxiety that bears a
striking resemblance to the clinical situation I have described. And recent
events indicate that this feeling is not going to abate any time soon.
Disorientation and anxiety… it suggests that they are off
their meds, or that some of the meds are not quite as effective as they think.
Being unable or unwilling to accept that you lost, that the world as you knew
it was a bubble having little to do with the real world… these are not
psychiatric conditions. They are not signs of psychosis or even neurosis. Aside
from the fact that Whitebook, like nearly every therapist who writes about
these topics, is trying to gin up his business… it makes no real sense to tell
people that their feelings, such as they are, constitute a grave mental
illness. You do not have to be a psychiatrist to know that psychosis—as in
schizophrenia and paranoia—is not to be taken lightly.
Anyway Whitebook jumps the shark here:
Just as
disorientation and bewilderment tell analysts something significant about what
they are experiencing in the clinical setting, so too our confusion and anxiety
in the face of Trumpism can tell us something important about ours. I am
suggesting, in other words, that Trumpism as a social experience can be
understood as a psychotic-like phenomenon.
One understands that it’s trendy for psychoanalysts to
consult their emotions to learn about their patients. It’s a genuinely bad idea,
suggesting a very high level of self-absorption. Perhaps they ought to do a
serious interview and try to converse with their patients. Perhaps they ought
to attune themselves to the reality of the patient’s life situation before
drawing very serious conclusions. Without having probed sufficiently to know
what is going on in a patient’s life you really do not know very much about the
patient’s emotional state.
As for “our” confusion and anxiety, perhaps this derives
from the fact that psychoanalysts like Whitebook know so little about what is
going on in the real world. Perhaps it signals their lack of knowledge of the
facts of the situation on the ground. Perhaps it means that they are living in
their own fantasies and have been blindsided by reality. It’s a possibility,
don’t you think?
Now, Whitebook suggests that Trump is conspiring to detach
him and his buddies from reality, thus to render them all psychotic. In truth, Whitebook has demonstrated nothing more than his own ignorance of what is going on. Many psychoanalysts, when
they do not know what is happening, retreat into storytelling.
Whitebook continues:
The
point is, rather, that Trumpism as a social-psychological phenomenon has
aspects reminiscent of psychosis, in that it entails a systematic — and it
seems likely intentional — attack on our relation to reality.
Which reality would that be, Joel? He says that this new attack is not the same as the criticism of the sacred dogma of
climate change, dogma that Whitebook accepts as a scientific fact.
I will not repeat that distinguished climate scientists like Richard Lindzen of
MIT have seriously disputed the science behind the climate change… hysteria.
Note that I did not say climate change psychosis.
What has Whitebook most agitated is the word of that famous “witch”
Kellyanne Conway about alternative facts. Freudian analysis has a great affinity
with witch hunts, but I have already discussed it and will leave it for another
day. Whitebook is saying that a woman’s off-hand and somewhat ironic remark is like a witch casting a spell.
In his words:
Armed
with the weaponized resources of social media, Trump has radicalized this
strategy in a way that aims to subvert our relation to reality in general. To
assert that there are “alternative facts,” as his adviser Kellyanne Conway did,
is to assert that there is an alternative, delusional, reality in which those
“facts” and opinions most convenient in supporting Trump’s policies and
worldview hold sway. Whether we accept the reality that Trump and his
supporters seek to impose on us, or reject it, it is an important and
ever-present source of the specific confusion and anxiety that Trumpism evokes.
Lest we forget, alternative realities might also be
fictional worlds. After all, the Obama administration, like most other
administrations cherry picked facts that support its narrative. In the Obama
world you could keep your doctor and your plan… remember that, Joel? And in the
alternative universe concocted by the fans of the presidential messiah he never
did anything wrong, never made a mistake, never erred. One of the reasons that
the intelligentsia cannot grasp the Trump phenomena is that their sense of
reality was so totally distorted by their mania about defending Obama that they
lost touch with reality and with facts.
While we are talking about Freud and facts, it’s a good time
to recall what philosopher Karl Popper said about the famed Viennese
neurologist. Popper said, some seven or so decades ago, that Freudian theory
had nothing to do with science… because it refused to accept that any facts
could refute its theoretical premises. It lacked falsifiability. Whitbook’s use
of Freud’s tarnished authority and widely discredited storytelling to dismiss
anyone’s use of facts is risible, on its face. After all Freudian theory
resides on literary characters who exist in literary fictions: Oedipus and
Narcissus.
If you want to get in touch with reality, forget
psychoanalysis. If you want to show that you care about reality do not pretend
that the primary evidence for a diagnosis is your own emotion.
The only person Trump can personally drive crazy is himself, and he isn't doing that. I see a lot of people driving themselves crazy over him, and the media are beating the drums for that. ("Those DRUMS. They're driving me mad, MAD, do you hear? Mad.")
ReplyDeleteJoel Whitebook: ...The patient’s statements and behavior simply don’t add up, and the flurry of dissociated statements and actions can quickly begin to produce something like a disorienting fog.
ReplyDeleteI saw another article recently using the metaphor of fog, interestingly arguing that idealogies for all their excesses are preferrable to the "fog" conspiracy theory.
https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/16/opinion/the-rise-of-the-paranoid-citizen.html
My own experience with mental confusion comes in part from my sister who has had different mental illness diagnoses over the years, and been hospitalized dozens of times.
I recall one fantasy she had for a while was that there was camera behind our bathroom wall. And it makes sense after being in a mental hospital that really has one-way mirrors and people behind it, that such things are possible.
I tried to reason with her, most of all pointing out that we're simply not important enough to have people bugging our house with cameras, and secondly that she had no evidence for a camera, although she thought she heard noises in the wall I guess. Of course the ultimate "proof" would be to take down the mirror and show there was nothing behind it.
But some wise part of myself realized if I took down the mirror, the rationalizing part of her mind would come up with some excuse how the camera must have been moved, and so literal proof is insufficient to the paranoid mind. But my brother wasn't so smart, and removed the mirror, and she said exactly that.
So it makes a lot of sense to me that there are various levels of "mass psychosis" going on in the world, and that is slightly different than individual psychosis. So the "objective evidence" for a belief is not contained within a single mind, but the fact that other minds believe the same thing.
A friend on FB shared this video recently. My dad listened to Coast to Coast years past, and I listened at least to confirm the interviewer wasn't interested what is true, but in helping to draw out the "theory" of each of his guest, and to make sure its interesting.
Anyway, here's the interview on FB, and I listened enough to see it is nonsense. And the man used some real astronomical terms like perihelion, and he sounded completely sane in the sense of earnest attention to something he considered dangerous and imminent. And it contains a prediction of catastrophe this fall, and so we can all wait until it is disproven, but its no different than my sister's mirror camera, some new rationalization will take over.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tVGf6mZIZak
http://www.coasttocoastam.com/guest/masters-marshall/6157
It's easy enough to dismiss people who talk about things like this, but I think they are illustrative how vulnerable we all are to fantasy and how susceptible we are to any "true believers" who tell us things we already want to believe.
And ipartisan politics plays right into this. We're vulnerable to narratives that identify scapegoats, even if the left seems more vulnerable in many ways.
Skeptic Michael Shermer wrote a book 20 years ago "Why people believe weird things". Overall my guess is that paranoia isn't simple wrong, or its correct to see a problem, but just simplistic in explanations.
The scapegoat explanations always say what other people are doing wrong, because if its what you're doing, then you might actually have to do something different.
So intuitively I recognize this mental fog exists, and I can have my own form of it, and we're all gathering in our own personalized fog fields hoping what we don't want to look at really isn't the problem.
We're all vunerable, and individuals with delusional narratives and no connection to objective reality now have mass platforms to sell them.
People can't make you do anything.
ReplyDeleteHonest to god. They can't even make you have an emotion.
Yes, they can inflict physical pain. But they can't make you do anything. This is why civil disobedience (with and accepting the consequences) and-or a stand in the face of torture are such powerful testimonies to truth.
Liberals don't take a stand for truth. They don't put themselves on the line. They don't really sacrifice, they just whine. They just complain and pat themselves on the back for creating awareness of something we're all at least tangentially aware of.
What people call protesting or demonstrating against is nothing more than a show, and the more absurd it gets it becomes a circus act. What's the endgame?
But the idea that another person's concepts or values or ideas can make you crazy is........ CRAZY. And the crazier people get about Trump, the more I think he's on to something.
People may say they want change, but no few actually want a change agent. They're disruptive. They upset the apple cart. And I noticed my spellch checker just corrected and capitalized apple. Case in point. At least Apple was under Steve Jobs before the great homosexual climate warlock took over.