Wednesday 27 February 2019

Thinking Beyond Stone


March 2019
 by Dr Elizabeth McCardell, M.Couns., PhD
     Many years ago, sometime in the mid 1970s I was in Zurich, Switzerland sitting in an interview with the head of the Jung Institute talking about things. I was querying a fundamental doctrine of Jungian psychotherapy and the man said my question showed the emergence of the shadow of my father. I thought to myself, “bull,” but politely smiled and stayed silent. This one instance ultimately gathered enough steam for me not to stay a Jungian. They were not open to examination and questions.

     Last week, in a peer group gathering after hearing a lecture on an aspect of Freudian psychoanalysis, I once again piped up expressing my doubt about something said as an apparently irrefutable fact by the lecturer. I said then that I’m still thinking about the matter at hand and that I’m unwilling to accept the explanation given, unexamined. Interestingly, the guy running the group told me, in a roundabout way, that my question demonstrated some developmental anomaly in my psyche. Again, I thought to myself, “bull,” but didn’t saying anything in reply. I did say, I sense there is more to be thought about here, that we need to examine this thing further and maybe it’ll take twenty or so years to do that, but let’s do it. The idea that there is only ever one answer, a thing set in stone, is just lazy and not terribly useful.  It’s sort of like saying, as it used to be thought, that fire obviously has a substance called phlogiston and everybody who is anybody knows this. Phlogiston, they said, is contained within combustible bodies and released during combustion. For a very long time, this was the “scientific” explanation of what fire is, and people accepted it, and many people stopped thinking about it. In the late 18th century, freer thinkers came to understand fire very differently. Fire is the rapid oxidation of a material in the exothermic chemical process of combustion, release heat, light, and various reaction products. There is no phlogiston.

    A teacher of mine once said of me, I have a bull dog personality and won’t let go, unless I am satisfied.  No amount of persuasion, no amount of appeal to a “higher” authority will move me, as I am more interested in the fluidity of possibilities than apparent certainty. This is all very nice, but too often I find myself on the outer because of this, acquiring “diagnoses” along the way!

     The laziness in  accepting something because a person in authority has said so is giving up one’s personal agency as a thinker and that means getting stuck in stone, in my view.

     Fritz Perls, a founder of Gestalt Therapy, coined the term “introjection” to describe the unexamined, undigested, swallowed whole foreign bodies (ideas) taken in uncritically from the caretakers (mother, father, school teachers, church ministers, social media) of our lives. Quite often these introjects are consumed like this because of the pressure of fashion, tradition, shame and fear about being different, and direct coercion. Usually the introjects are contradictory and the person spends agonizing hours trying to reconcile the irreconcilable. The noise from introjects consist of “should should”, leaving little room for developing one’s own personality. Interestingly too, where a person is dominated by introjects they also have a lot of digestive issues. They literally cannot digest what has been fed them, everything sticks in the craw (nothing goes down, nothing nourishes). Quite often, as soon as introjects are identified and known as coming from elsewhere, their tummy troubles ease up. Identifying introjects is one very important function of counselling. In each counselling session we work together on identifying what is yours, what came from your parents and other caregivers,  whose ideas about this and that have you swallowed whole, and why, and getting to think beneath the stone to the soft earth and water below where all of us are free to examine whatever it is we wish without taking on board another person’s dogma and doctrine for our own creative life.

     Beyond the certainty of stone is a fluidity of being open to multiple ways of seeing and a freedom of being.