..."Tell it slant'... ~Emily Dickinson
"And the day came when the risk it took to remain tight in the bud was more painful than the risk it took to blossom."~Anais Nin
Now you know. The next time you go into the basement wear a helmet. ~Eve
"In extremity, states of mind become objective, metaphors tend to actualize, the word becomes flesh.(1977,205) -Terence Des Pres, 'The Survivor'
“I decided to go in search of the shaking woman.” Siri Hustvedt
A hundred times a day I remind myself that my inner and outer life are based on the labors of other men, living and dead, and that I must exert myself in order to give in the same measure as I have received and am still receiving. ~Albert Einstein
As Christians and Jews, following the example of the faith of Abraham, we are called to be a blessing to the world. (cf. Gen. 12:2ff). This is the common task awaiting us. It is therefore necessary for us Christians and Jews, to be first a blessing to one another. (L'Osservatore Romano, Aug. 17, 1993) ~John Paul II
"...there is need for acknowledgment of the common roots linking Christianity and the Jewish people, who are called by God to a covenant which remains irrevocable (cf. Rom.11:29) and has attained definitive fullness in Jesus Christ." ~John Paul II
...a consistent contempt for Nazism(condemning it as early as 1930...as 'demonic' and 'wedded to Satan') and Communism as virulent atheism...he referred to them as "Gog and Magog"... ~on Claudel

Today, it seems, most were born ‘left-handed.’ Every one I see walking is ‘hinged at the hips’, in-sync’ and glued to metallic boxes. ~Chelé
"A true opium of the people is a belief in nothingness after death - the huge[illusory] solace of thinking that for our betrayals, greed, cowardice, murders we are not going to be judged." - Czeslaw Milosz
*A writer is dear and necessary for us only in the measure of which he reveals to us the inner workings of his very soul*. Tolstoy
I will not let thee go except thou be blessed. Now wouldn’t it be a magnificent world if we all lived that way with each other or even with ourselves?
"I, Sister Faustina, by the order of God, have visited the abysses of hell so that I might tell souls about it and testify to its existence...But I noticed one thing: that most of the souls there are those who disbelieved that there is a hell." -Saint Faustina

Do you hear what I hear? A child, a child crying in the night.

"Every time you dance, what you do must be sprayed with your blood. ~Rudolf Nureyev
Why would someone who looked God in the face ever suppose that there could be something better? ~Matthew Likona

We cannot know what we would do in order to survive unless we are tested. For those of us tested to the extremes the answer is succinct: anything

…”The Stoics throned Fate, the Epicureans Chance, while the Skeptics left a vacant space where the gods had been –[nihilism]—but all agreed in the confession of despair;...and...Oriental schemes of thought contributed a share to the deepening gloom..." ~Gwatkin

"...notes to the committee...why do you invite cows to analyze the milk?" -Peter de Vries

"I run because it gives Him pleasure." ~Eric, Chariots of Fire

“God’s truth is life,” as Patrick Kavanagh says, “even the grotesque shapes of its foulest fire.” What is the difference between a cry of pain that is also a cry of praise and a cry of pain that is merely an articulation of despair? Faith? The cry of a believer, even if it is a cry against God, moves toward God, has its meaning in God, as in the cries of Job. ~Christian Wiman

"Insanity is relative. It depends on who has who locked in what cage." - Ray Bradbury

As for what concerns our relations with our fellow men, the anguish in our neighbor's soul must break all precept. All that we do is an end in itself, because God is Love. ~Edith Stein, St. Benedicta of the Cross.

“Lastly, and most of all. Who turns his back upon the fallen and disfigured of his kind; abandons them as vile…; does wrong to Heaven and man, to time and to eternity. And you have done that wrong!” ~Dickens, The Chimes, 1844

Dieu me pardonnera. C'est son métier . ~Heinrich Heine.

Remember the 'toe-pick' and you won't get swallowed by the whale or eaten by the polar bear.

Someone else needs to become the bad example in our group
But you wear shame so well ~James Goldman, Eve [Or, tired of being the scapegoat yet? ~Sue]

There is a point where the unfortunate and the infamous unite and are confounded in a single word, miserable; whose fault is this? And then should not the charity be all the more profound, in proportion as the fall is great? -[Jesus Christ said so.] -- Br. Humbert Kilanowski, O.P.

The lamps are going out all over Europe; we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime. -Sir Edward Grey

We are still fighting to use the tools we have to grapple with the unknown.

“We are well advised to keep on nodding terms with the people we used to be, whether we find them attractive company or not.” ~Joan Didion"

When I fall into the abyss, I go straight into it, head down and heels up, and I'm even pleased that I'm falling in just such a humiliating position, and for me I find it beautiful. And so in that very shame I suddenly begin a hymn.
—Fyodor Dostoevsky

" ...wie geht es zu, daß ich alles so anders sehe ...?"

“There is no greater agony than bearing an untold story inside you.”― Maya Angelou

'Have you ever noticed that the meanest, most misogynist, and dangerous people tend to be activists who claim to be for freedom and love?'

"For others of us, the most loving thing we can do for our abusers is to keep them from having opportunity to abuse ever again." (Dawn Eden) My Peace I Give You, Ch. 1)

No child is ever responsible for abuse perpetrated on them by ANYONE. I understand that others may not "get it" and that's fine. Blaming the victim is never right or just under any circumstances.

Stay In Touch -Have I not proven to you that I Am in the saving sinners business? -Jesus


HOPE: Hold on to the great truths of the Faith...Own your challenging affliction...Persevere...Expect God's providence and intervention... ~Johnette Benkovich, Woman of Grace
O my Jesus, forgive us our sins, save us from the fires of hell, lead all souls to heaven, help those especially in need of thy mercy. - OL of Fatima
Prescription #1: Give God the greatest possible glory and honor Him with your whole soul. If you have a sin on your conscience, remove it as soon as possible by means of a good Confession. ~St. John Bosco
Prescription #2: In thankful tenderness offer Reparation for the horrible mockery and blasphemies constantly uttered against the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob; against the Blessed Virgin Mary; the saints and angels; His Church; His priests and religious; His children; and His loving Heart by reciting the Golden Arrow which delightfully wounds Him:
'May the most holy, most sacred, most adorable and ineffable Name of God be forever praised, blessed, loved, and honored by all the creatures of God in heaven, on earth and in the hells through the Sacred Heart of Jesus in the most Blessed Sacrament of the altar. Amen.
Prescription #3: So, let us go out to Him outside the camp, bearing His reproach. ~Heb.13:13
Prescription #4: "Do whatever He tells you." ~John 2:5
Prescription #5: Sometimes when I am in such a state of spiritual dryness that not a single good thought occurs to me, I say very slowly the "Our Father" or the "Hail Mary"and these prayers suffice to take me out of myself. ~St. Therese of Lisieux
Prescription #6: Have confidence in God's Love, Justice, and Mercy: ...as for me, O my God, in my very confidence lies all my HOPE. For Thou, O Lord, singularly has settled me in hope." -St. Claude de la Colombiere SJ

Pages

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

Healing and the 'Ground of Being'



Dynamics
...“the fault … lies not in our stars, but in ourselves” (Julius Caesar, I, ii) in favor of that proto-narcissist Lear’s protestation that we are “more sinned against than sinning” (King Lear, III, ii). “
This conglomerate bipolar view suggests no more than two points at opposite ends of a long pole.  While some would construe a both/and position with a blatantly trite rendition of ‘ambiguity’ the actualities ARE different faces of the same coin.  Additionally these are not STATIC entities but are dynamics-in-flux.  It is also incumbent on us to realize there is a psychological continuum involved in the dynamics.  Just as our bodies constantly change so do our souls and psyches.
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  ...a fundamental primal corruption...
... “syndrome of the compromise of integrity”...    ~Self in Exile
   “ They asked Him: Who sinned this man or his parents?....”
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‘The Cart before the Horse’
I was reading about this issue when I ran across an essay:
    “Winnicott’s multi-faceted thinking that stresses “egorelatedness” and the self psychology that is so congruent with this) tended to downplay intrapsychic conflict among superego, ego and id in favor of an emphasis upon trauma, deprivation, abuse and neglect by caretakers—i.e., the ways in which we are more injured than injurious.
But the Freudian and Kleinian approaches that focused on such interior conflict, on issues of “crime and punishment,” have in some quarters been marginalized over the past thirty years or so. As Horowitz (2004) has recently reminded us: “… all patients (and each of us) have had private theories of pathogenesis of neurosis and for the most part these theories have been about trauma at the hands of parents. It is still difficult to demonstrate to patients or students the
role of conflict in neurosogenesis” (p. 2).
A major contributor to the de-moralizing trend in post-Freudian and post-Kleinian
psychoanalysis is Harry Guntrip. The guilt-evasion that characterizes certain trends within contemporary psychoanalytic thought and the contemporary culture to which they have adapted mirrors that of Guntrip himself who, despite his background as a Christian minister and his years of analysis with two of the most creative analysts in the field, managed by the end (in my hypothesis) only a paranoid understanding of himself as a victim of a murderous mother, rather than a man crippled by a need to punish himself for his disowned murderous wishes toward a brother who died and toward the mother he hated and blamed. [3]
In focusing upon the roots of the “schizoid problem” (Guntrip, 1971, chapter 6) or the “disordered self” (Kohut, 1977) in defective early object relations Guntrip obscures entirely the role of guilt and the need for punishment in these conditions
and promotes a cure based on reparative re-parenting rather than analysis and resolution of inner conflict.[4]
I expect it has always been difficult to consciously bear guilt and not evade it by attacking either the other or the self. In the former case, guilt is displaced or projected onto the scapegoat. In the latter, since our narcissism renders conscious moral suffering intolerable, the superego exacts its pound of flesh
through unconsciously constructed forms of self-torment.
A few months after his death, Guntrip’s (1975) “My experience of analysis with Fairbairn and Winnicott” appeared in the International Review of Psycho-Analysis. He describes how he sought analysis for “vague background experiences of schizoid isolation and unreality” (Guntrip, 1996, p.743) and a recurrent “exhaustion illness.” In the 19th century this would likely have been diagnosed as “neurasthenia”; today it might be seen as “chronic fatigue syndrome” or a type of depression. Guntrip sought analysis to overcome his amnesia for what he had decided was the traumatic cause of his illness. [5]
I fell mysteriously ill and was thought to be dying. Her doctor said: ‘He’s dying of grief for his brother’” (p. 746).
For the next year and a half, Guntrip suffered from “repeated petty psychosomatic ills, tummy aches, heat spots, loss of appetite, constipation and dramatic, sudden high temperatures” (p. 747)... my hypothesis is that they represent forms of hysterical and psychosomatic self- torment for the phantasy-crime of having killed his brother. Around age five Guntrip replaced self-directed aggression with outright rebellion... Guntrip’s internal world of sado-masochistic struggles with his mother...”  ~ Donald L. Carveth, Canadian Journal of Psychoanalysis
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This is all true, relevant and efficacious.  What concerns me is the primary, foundational need for a ‘beyond the descriptions’ view and a more profound knowledge and use of the guilt-punishment scenarios.  Additionally, the word petty could have been avoided.  A five year old cannot be harnessed with the same ‘responsibilities’ of an adult.  I have not experienced the needed ‘embracing’ of the fact that the ‘exiled, disordered, tortured’ self’s actual ‘ground of being’, the psyche, is fractured and damaged.
The self of the person continues to experience everything with the same matrix-mesh constructed from the beginnings of its life. There has to be dynamic cocoon-holding for the psychic structure in crisis to enable a safe healing ‘change-growth-dynamic’ to occur.
I am certain there are mental health and ‘spiritual’ professionals who have instinctively understood this and just do what is needed ‘to care for the hurting person’ and to lead them as much as possible back to health without all the ‘agendas’. In the different cities and states where I have resided this is not the norm.
Simply put if someone has a sword lodged in one’s chest doctor’s and nurses spring rapidly into action to save the person’s life.  All the ramifications of choice are irrelevant to the healing dynamics of the team whose goal is the same. 
I am troubled by an almost impervious disregard for the psychologically troubled person in the throes of crisis.  Assessments and judgments just don’t work because the foundational being structure CANNOT be judged and punished without further hurting.  One cannot be expected to ‘walk or run’ without legs.
Many use sublimation, adjustments and often stoic determination, to allow for some success in living and working in the world with a minimum of discomfort or crisis.
It is when the psychic foundations are no longer strong enough to sublimate or adjust or psychological boundaries are insufficient that a safe, healing place along with a competent, empathetic and caring therapist are necessary.  In an age of rampant disregard of ‘ethical and quality assurance’ in all fields, these ‘safe’ healing places are few and far between.  Even these are not only pummeled by attacks of ignorance from outside the mental health realms but more and more from within.  In both cases the bottom line seems to be a false community ‘prestige’ to be maintained along with insurance costs.
There can never be a one-size-fits-all diagnosis for human souls traumatized and neglected to the point where damage has occurred and psychological bones ‘reset’ in order to survive. Daily life is struggle enough for everyone but for those in terrible crisis whose struggle is with their own inner emotional and psychological ‘ground of being’ every moment is a war zone filled with pain and suffering.  It is not ‘inner demons’ those in crisis are dealing with but how the psychological-emotional being was put together to begin with.
Therapy involves breaking the ‘bones’ of being true but great tenderness and discernment is critical to avoid ‘killing’ the soul.  “Conviction is never condemnation.”  Those people who actually sustained the drive through the invisible mine fields of a hostile society to reach out for help in therapy are in desperate need of freedom from the damage of the stigmatization of self-righteousness and mob violence from those around them.
After a car accident a victim faces hospitalization with terrible pain often followed by even more pain in physical therapy.  This is true of those with mental illness.  They have been victimized, wounded and are handicapped in certain areas of human interaction.  There is no place for stigmatizing rash judgments in any sphere but most especially for the wounded of the ‘invisible war.’  Not only is therapy needed but a ‘safe’ support group is absolutely necessary.
Each person is unique.  Each meeting too is unique and must be cherished.  At best we can only brush against the beings of those with whom we have to do in this life.  It is hoped that especially as Christians or as moral human beings that all our ‘meetings’ with others can occur with humble respect, loving harmony, unbiased freedom and peaceful caring.  It is vital when caring for those whose inner being is painfully wounded no matter what the initial cause.
       In a life-or-death struggle, there is often no chance to "try again."

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