So, a woman who is alone and
isolated writes to Carolyn Hax, Washington Post advice columnist. You would
imagine that this woman would do well to take it up with a therapist, but, alas,
she already has.
Does it not strike you, as it
strikes me, that therapy is not helping this woman? Oughtn’t we to be asking
about the value of therapy? Unfortunately, we do not. Hax is not at fault for
offering yet another piece of mental gymnastics to help her out, but, for
someone who is lost in her mind and isolated from the world, she does not need
more introspection.
Anyway, here is the letter, in
its entirety:
I liked your answer about finding one's purpose
in life, but what you said about it being something to hang on to when life is
overwhelming is the problem. I have nothing to hang on to in those situations,
which are too frequent. I have absolutely not found a job/career that works
well for me, at which I am good and which I also enjoy. I am not a parent, I am
no one's best friend or spouse, I don't have a truly meaningful hobby or
volunteer work. So, when life becomes difficult, I go to a dark place — why the
hell am I even here?
Yes, I am in therapy and on meds, but those only
go so far.
In truth, it is good for life to
have a purpose. In fact, a megaselling book, called The Purpose Driven Life has
already set down the message. We note that Pastor Rick Warren’s book does not
come to us from the therapy world. It comes from religion.
The letter writer paints herself
as alone and bereft, lost and floudering. We do not know whether she has family or friends. We do
not want to say that she needs to have a best friend, but her glass-half-empty
thinking has merely isolated her more. The issue is: does she have friends? At
all.
We do not know how old she is,
what job she has, whether or not her relationships with her colleagues are
interesting or not. We do not know. Because therapy has taught her to think
like an isolated human monad, someone who can solve it all with a mental
exercise or two. She would do better to get a pet, a cat or a dog. As the old
saying goes, if you want a friend in Washington, get a dog. Anything to extract her from her self-pity.
As Ludwig Mies van der Rohe once
said: “God is in the details.” Without knowing the details, without knowing anything more about her, without her being able to see her life in terms of
details, there is no way she is going to get to God. And there is no way out of a morass of
her own and her therapist’s making. True enough, therapy and medication can
only do so much, but they have set this woman up for calamity. It’s not good
news.
So, if she and Hax and company
like Pastor Warren’s advice, the conclusion will be that she should start attending
religious services. The psycho professions know that attending such
services is beneficial to one’s mental health. Belonging to a community,
engaging in community activities, participating in rituals and ceremonies,
making new friends… all of these are clearly antidotal for someone who feels
like she has no purpose in life.
We also do not know how old she is, nor whether she's had a romance with someone, her parents are alive or dead, or she has any siblings.
ReplyDeleteNow that you mention Rick Warren, we can thank him for Obama. Warren wanted to suck up to Obama, Hillary, and McCain so that in the event one of them became President, it might help him inherit the mantle of “pastor to the Presidents” as Billy Graham was considered to be at one time. Obama, thusly, at his inauguration on January 20, 2009, called upon Rick Warren to give the prayer. No evangelical Christian in his right mind should have had anything to do with Obama, yet here comes Rick Warren bestowing honor and legitimacy on Obama by inviting him to his pulpit. Many evangelicals were conned into thinking, "Well, maybe Obama isn't so bad after all if he is up there rubbing elbows with Rick Warren."
ReplyDeleteRick, I'm surprised by that. What I've seen of the Dems is disdain for religion, especially Christian religion, if not all-out hatred.
ReplyDeleteReminds me of the clever observation, "No God, no peace. Know God, know peace."
ReplyDelete