Are you fascinated by Psychotherapy? I mean beyond your own weekly visit to your therapist? Sherry Amatenstein’s anthology is a great way to satisfy that fascination.
In 1989, a prominent Psychiatrist named Irvin D. Yalom published a book called Love’s Executioner and Other Tales of Psychotherapy. It’s been one of my all time favorite books since that time. Yalom digs deeply into the therapeutic relationship from the therapist’s side of the couch. While I’m here, I highly recommend that book.
Amatenstein goes one step further than Yalom by collecting essays written from both sides of the couch, so to speak (Only Freudian Psychoanalysts actually use couches. They’re the practitioners portrayed in Woody Allen movies. Amatenstein uses the couch as a symbol for the therapist/client relationship). Amatenstein is a Psychotherapist and prominent author. Consequently, she chooses 34 therapists and authors (including herself) for inclusion in her anthology. These are the folks she knows, and these are the folks most likely to write entertaining and insightful essays.
And the essays are most definitely entertaining and insightful. As well as humorous, poignant, and surprising. There are some shocking revelations from both sides of the couch. Secrets are revealed, catharsis is experienced, epiphanies embraced, and maturity achieved. The message of Psychotherapy is that Life Happens but, even though no one lives happily ever after, emotional clarity cushions the pain.
If you are in, or have been in, therapy, you will not be able to look at your therapist the same way again. Personally, I am now more sympathetic to therapists as they try to untangle the troubled psyches of clients, who are adept at hiding their capricious feelings of ambivalence, fear, simmering anger, overt hostility, and sometimes love and gratitude. If you come into the book with preconceptions about Psychotherapy, some of them will be validated, not always in a good way, but always in an authentic way.
Dennis Palumbo, one of the essayists, ends his story with the famous Jerry Garcia lyric, “What a long, strange trip it’s been”. This is a metaphor for both the therapeutic experience and life itself. This book is a short, strange trip into the mysterious world of Psychotherapy. If you are open to it, the trip will be enlightening and gratifying.