Anne
asked
Lori Gottlieb:
Hi Lori! First - thanks for the lovely, heartbreaking, hilarious book. I finished it and immediately sent a copy to my mother in law and warned her she would SOB. My question is: to what extent does your clients' pain come home with you? Obviously you thought about 'Julie' a lot in particular, but do you find that to be the norm with your clients, or are you pretty adept at separating job empathy from real life?
Lori Gottlieb
Hi Anne, thanks for the kind words about Maybe You Should Talk to Someone. I'm so glad you enjoyed it! As to your question: Therapists care about their clients and do think about them, but we don't carry their struggles with us outside the office. Sometimes something a client said in the last session will be closely related to something I see/hear/read during the week, and then the client will pop into my head and I'll make a note to share the insight/thought I had when I see the client back in session. With Julie, of course, I thought about her more and more as her condition deteriorated, and I think all of our clients live inside of us in certain ways. Something that they say or experience might touch us and stay with us during the week. But that's different from carrying their pain for them.
More Answered Questions
Thomson
asked
Lori Gottlieb:
Hi Lori - I really loved the raw honesty displayed in your book. It's not often that we get such an intimate look at the humanity of the therapeutic relationship. Recently I also read Every Day Gets a Little Closer by Irvin Yalom and "Ginny Elkin". The format/premise and the course of therapy described within were quite striking to me. Just curious - what did you think of this book (if you've read it)?
Laura Spencer
asked
Lori Gottlieb:
I really enjoyed Maybe You Should Talk to Someone. I did wonder, however, about how you protected the identities of the patients in the book. They seemed so real. Are the patient sessions you described compilations of multiple patients or did you otherwise disguise their identities?
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