Podcasts about Anna Freud

Austrian-British psychoanalyst & essayist

  • 122PODCASTS
  • 170EPISODES
  • 53mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Jun 13, 2025LATEST
Anna Freud

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about Anna Freud

Latest podcast episodes about Anna Freud

Afrodite Podcast
✨ Como Anna Freud nos ajudou a entender a feminilidade.

Afrodite Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2025 9:23


Anna Freud revolucionou a psicanálise ao estudar como o ego se desenvolve e como lidamos com nossas emoções. Mas o que isso nos ensina sobre a feminilidade?Neste episódio do Afrodite Podcast, exploramos os ensinamentos de Anna Freud sobre os mecanismos de defesa, a infância e o desenvolvimento da identidade feminina.⭐ Siga o Afrodite Podcast para mais reflexões sobre o feminino!

NTVRadyo
Köşedeki Kitapçı - Ölümü Atlatmak & General Uçtu & Anna Freud'u Okumak

NTVRadyo

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2025 5:53


#KöşedekiKitapçı'da bugün

Programming Lions
Ep.87 Exploring Trump Derangement Syndrome w/ America's Psychiatrist, Dr. Lieberman

Programming Lions

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2025 32:21 Transcription Available


In this episode of the Programming Lions podcast, Dr. Carole Lieberman, a renowned forensic psychiatrist and bestselling author, joins the hosts to discuss her extensive background and controversial topics. Known as 'America's Psychiatrist,' Dr. Lieberman has been involved in high-profile cases and is an authority on psychological trauma, terrorism, and media politics. She shares her journey into psychiatry, influenced by Sigmund Freud and her time studying under Anna Freud. The conversation delves into her latest work on Trump Derangement Syndrome (TDS), its symptoms, and potential treatments, as well as the impact of wokeness in psychiatry and healthcare. Dr. Lieberman also touches on her book 'Lions and Tigers and Terrorists, Oh My!' which offers guidance for parents on discussing terrorism with children. Tune in for an engaging discussion filled with bold insights and clinical expertise.X: https://x.com/DrCaroleMDWebsite: www.drcarole.comLions and Tigers and Terrorists: https://www.amazon.com/s?k=lions+and+tigers+and+terrorists&crid=335JN98V0LIJD&sprefix=lions+tigers+and+terr%2Caps%2C181&ref=nb_sb_ss_p13n-pd-dpltr-2-ranker_1_21TIMELINE00:00 Introduction to Dr. Carole Lieberman00:56 Dr. Lieberman's Background and Career05:04 Discussing Social Issues and Psychoanalysis06:20 The Impact of Social Contagions12:18 Trump Derangement Syndrome Explained22:29 Challenges in Psychiatry and Higher Education30:20 Conclusion and Future Discussions

Red Medicine
D. W. Winnicott w/ Abby Kluchin and Patrick Blanchfield

Red Medicine

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2025 105:42


The hosts of Ordinary Unhappiness join the podcast to discuss D. W. Winnicott; one of the most influential figures in the history of psychoanalysis in Britain. They explain how Winnicott's work was shaped by the traumatizing effects of World War 2, debates between Anna Freud and Melanie Klein, and the place of mothers in the construction of the British welfare state. We also discuss how this history relates to contemporary struggles over social reproduction and care.Abby Kluchin is Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies at Ursinus College in Pennsylvania, where she coordinates the Gender, Women's, and Sexuality Studies program. Abby is a co-founder and Associate Director at Large of the Brooklyn Institute for Social Research. She co-hosts the podcast Ordinary Unhappiness with Patrick.Patrick Blanchfield is a writer, an Associate Faculty Member at the Brooklyn Institute for Social Research, and co-host of Ordinary Unhappiness, a podcast about psychoanalysis, politics, pop culture, and the ways we suffer now. He is also a contributing editor at Parapraxis magazine. SUPPORT: www.buymeacoffee.com/redmedicineSoundtrack by Mark PilkingtonTwitter: @red_medicine__www.redmedicine.substack.com/

An Unimaginable Life
Dead Talk: Anna Freud the Ego, Education and DNA

An Unimaginable Life

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 47:25


Anna Freud, the daughter of Sigmund Freud was also interested in psychoanalysis particularly in the areas of ego and child development. In this episode, Anna explains how she sees these subjects from her nonphysical perspective. She offers a new way of interacting with your ego, how formal education is unnecessary and is often a block in the way of childhood development. She also discusses how everything is contained in our DNA. For more info, click below: Gary Temple Bodley Christy Levy

La teoria de la mente
¿Por qué tu cerebro ansioso no se apaga nunca? La respuesta te sorprenderá

La teoria de la mente

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 69:33


Link Curso: https://escuelaansiedad.com/focus-2-0/ ✨ ¿Por qué nuestro cerebro ansioso parece rebelarse incluso en los momentos más tranquilos? En este episodio en directo de La Teoría de la Mente, exploramos a fondo el Trastorno de Ansiedad Generalizada (TAG) junto al neurocirujano y divulgador científico Osman Salazar. La ansiedad generalizada no es solo "preocuparse mucho". Es un sistema complejo, una trampa mental donde la anticipación constante se convierte en un mecanismo de defensa... que termina jugándonos en contra. Hablamos de cómo nuestro cerebro, diseñado para buscar patrones y predecir el futuro, puede quedar atrapado en un ciclo interminable de "¿y si...?": esos pensamientos intrusivos que no nos dejan descansar. Desde Newton durante la Gran Plaga hasta la idea de las "tres B" (baño, cama y bus) como escenarios de creatividad, exploramos cómo la mente humana divaga, crea y, a veces, se atormenta. ¿Puede la ansiedad tener un lado positivo? ¿Cómo podemos encontrar un equilibrio entre nuestra necesidad de anticipar y nuestra paz mental? No te pierdas esta conversación llena de neurociencia, anécdotas históricas y estrategias prácticas para entender y convivir con la ansiedad. ✨ No olvides visitar nuestros enlaces para seguir aprendiendo y encontrando apoyo: Nuestra escuela de ansiedad: www.escuelaansiedad.com Nuestro nuevo libro: www.elmapadelaansiedad.com Visita nuestra página web: www.amadag.com Facebook: Asociación AMADAG Instagram: @amadag.psico YouTube AMADAG TV: ¡Suscríbete aquí! 5 Títulos Alternativos con gancho: Deja de luchar contra tu ansiedad: Esto cambiará tu mente para siempre ✨ ¿Por qué tu cerebro ansioso no se apaga nunca? La respuesta te sorprenderá 5 cosas que nunca te dijeron sobre la ansiedad generalizada y cómo superarla Esta técnica puede transformar tu ansiedad en creatividad (y así funciona) ¿Por qué nos obsesiona tanto preocuparnos? La ciencia detrás de un cerebro ansioso Hashtags: #ansiedad #neurociencia #menteansiosa #saludmental #LaTeoriaDeLaMente #AMADAGTV Palabras clave: ansiedad,neurociencia,trastorno de ansiedad generalizada,Osman Salazar,mente ansiosa,preocupación crónica,Antonio Damasio,emociones y razón,rumiación mental,estrategias contra la ansiedad,meditación y ansiedad,neurotransmisores y ansiedad,Anna Freud,niños de la guerra,entorno familiar y ansiedad,Elliot caso clínico,divagación mental,creatividad y ansiedad,Newton y la peste,Shakespeare ansiedad,moshe bar divagando,ansiedad crónica,mente y cuerpo,terapias ansiedad

OBS
Är det rätt att ställa diagnos på en galning i Vita huset?

OBS

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2025 10:22


Behovet av psykologiska analyser av makthavare tycks outsinligt. Ulf Karl Olov Nilsson funderar i ljuset av en bortglömd psykobiografi. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. ESSÄ: Detta är en text där skribenten reflekterar över ett ämne eller ett verk. Åsikter som uttrycks är skribentens egna.Hur mycket kan egentligen en enskild individ påverka världens gång? Ja, kan en enda människa agera ut sina inre konflikter på världsscenen, kan jordens öde vila i två ynka nyckfulla händer?Frågan kan tyckas aktuell, ja rent av akut, med tanke på de märkliga personligheter som befinner sig i absoluta maktpositioner. En akut fråga kanske, men knappast ny.I mars 1920 började många tro att amerikanske presidenten Woodrow Wilson förlorat förståndet. Wilson hade varit en centralgestalt för fredsförhandlingarna efter första världskriget och lanserat de 14 punkter för fred i den så kallade Wilsondoktrinen. Men nu hade han börjat uppföra sig irrationellt; han höll missriktade bibliskt salvelsefulla tal i kongressen och verkade vilja undergräva den amerikanska uppslutningen kring det Versaille-fördrag som han tidigare slagits så hårt för; ja, han spelade sina kort så uselt att han tycktes önska ett misslyckande. Vad hade hänt? De flesta hänförde presidentens märkligheter till hans hjärnblödning hösten 1919. Wilson hade svävat mellan liv och död i veckor och under isoleringen odlade han ett yvigt skägg, förmodligen för att dölja en delvis vänstersidig förlamning.En man som arbetat nära Wilson under fredsförhandlingarna var stjärndiplomaten och senare USA:s förste ambassadör i Sovjetunionen, William Bullit. Han med många andra kom att hysa enorm besvikelse och ren aversion mot USA:s 28:e president. Några år in på 20-talet drabbades Bullit av en personlig kris och sökte upp en viss professor i Wien, närmare bestämt Sigmund Freud. Efter några månader på Freuds divan började de båda männen samtala på mer vänskaplig grund. Det visade det sig att de var rörande överens i sin frustration över Wilson. Freud skrev i ett brev: “om någon enskild individ kan hållas ansvarig för misären i denna del av världen så är det nog ändå han [Wilson]”. När Bullit berättade om sina planer att skriva en psykologisk biografi över den tidigare presidenten var Freud oväntat och obegripligt nog med på noterna.Eller kanske var det inte så obegripligt. Som statsvetaren Patrick Weils visar i sin bok “The Madman in the Whitehouse” så var Bullit var ingen vanlig klient; han hade suttit i förhandlingar med Lenin och Stalin, Churchill, de Gaulle, Chiang Kai-shek och Göring. Bullit är förlagan till en av karaktärerna, närmare bestämt djävulsfiguren, i Michael Bulgakovs ”Mästaren och Margarita”. Freud var smickrad, dessutom befann hans psykoanalytiska bokförlag sig på ruinens brant och en psykobiografi över en president kunde säkert komma till undsättning, inte minst när Bullits första och enda roman hade varit en veritabel kioskvältare, tryckt i häpnadsväckande 23 upplagor.Något år senare, när Wilson avlidit, gav Freud Bullit i uppdrag att forska i Wilsons bakgrund och intervjua vänner och personer som arbetat med honom. Efter några år började ett manus ta form där båda männen stod som upphovsmän. Men utgivningen kom att dröja; Bullit var rädd att en kritisk biografi av demokraten Wilson skulle förstöra hans vidare karriärmöjligheter inom partiet. Och åren gick, Freud avled 1939, andra världskriget bröt ut; och så började Wilsons eftermäle påtagligt resa sig ur askan med nya biografier, pjäser och en påkostad spelfilm om hans liv 1944.Bullit satt på det enda exemplaret av manuset vars status blev alltmer oklart. Psykoanalytiker som Ernest Jones reste till USA och läste texten men var måttligt imponerad. Anna Freud fick läsa och ogillade skarpt. Manuset var fullt av psykoanalytiska klichéer, tyckte man, och saknade Freuds förfining. Ve och fasa, hade verkligen Freud själv författat denna parodi på freudianskt mumbo-jumbo!Men Bullit menade att de båda männen visst hade skrivit manuset tillsammans; Freud skrev själv utkastet till förordet, Bullit resterande delar. ”Vi kämpade ibland om varenda rad”, menade Bullit, även om han själv mestadels hållit i pennan. Men sedan hade Freud gjort ändringar, och Bullit hade sedan själv, långt efter Freuds död, ändrat i ändringarna.Men 1966 var det – äntligen eller kanske snarare tyvärr – dags för publicering; president Wilsons änka hade precis dött och Bullit själv låg för döden och fick aldrig läsa de nedslående recensionerna. Biografin uppehåller sig mycket vid vad Bullit och Freud menar är presidentens faderskomplex. Fadern var präst och Wilson hade sett sig som guds son, menade författarna; hans politiska karriär var ett slags messiansk dröm. Boken visar också upp flagranta exempel på vad psykoanalytikern och framgångsrike psykobiografikern Erik Homburger Erikson kallade ”originology”, alltså att låta pyttesmå detaljer i studieföremålets barndom förklara betydelsefulla historiska händelser.Men ännu värre, var inte Freuds och Bullits projekt problematiskt redan till sin utgångspunkt: att skriva en psykobiografi över någon som man djupt ogillar.Risken är ju – vilket boken om Wilson dessvärre är ett exempel på – att en persons lidande framhålls som klandervärt, och att man olyckligt tolkar en människas neuroser eller vanföreställningar som vore de moraliska brister. Idag argumenterar psykologiska och psykiatriska institutioner, exempelvis American Psychiatric Association, för att yrkeskårens kodex bör vara att en psykolog eller psykiater aldrig ska sätta en diagnos på en levande offentlig person man aldrig träffat. Ändå görs övertramp dagligen och samtidens behov av psykologiska studier, inte minst förklenande, över politiska ledare tycks outsinligt.Nå, historien är givetvis inte endast en produkt av idéer, ideologi och materiella förutsättningar utan också enskilda individers val och handlingar. I tider av maktkoncentration, personfixering och tilltagande demokratiskt underskott finns det kanske ett större behov än någonsin att förstå makthavares drivkrafter och omedvetna konflikter. Ja, det är kanske en fråga för framtida psykobiografier: hur ska demokrati kunna försvaras när medborgarna själva väljer ledare som vill undergräva demokratin?Ulf Karl Olov NIlssonförfattare, psykoanalytiker och översättareLitteraturPatrick Weil: The madman in the White house – Sigmund Freud, ambassador Bullitt, and the lost psychobiography of Woodrow Wilson. Harvard University Press, 2023.

DEEP SHIT TALKS
[34] Gereizt, gestresst und down? Emotionsregulation in Krisenzeiten

DEEP SHIT TALKS

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2024 94:17


Warum reagieren wir in manchen Situationen extremer als in anderen? Warum unterscheiden wir uns darin Gefühle wahrzunehmen und auf sie zu reagieren? Wie wirken sich äußere Belastungen und besondere innere Bedingungen, wie ADHS oder Traumatisierung aus? In dieser Folge tauchen wir tief ein in die Welt der Gefühle und tragen zusammen, was helfen kann mit ihnen umzugehen. Von Gefühlsrädern, über Katzen streicheln bis zu "Horst dem Rentner", beleuchten wir verschiedenste Strategien.

4ème de couverture
212. Clémence Boulouque "Le sentiment des crépuscules" (Robert Laffont)

4ème de couverture

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2024 29:40


Clémence Boulouque "Le sentiment des crépuscules" (Robert Laffont)Londres, 1938. Zweig présente Dalí à Freud.Londres, 19 juillet 1938. Stefan Zweig et Salvador Dalí rendent visite à Sigmund Freud, tout juste exfiltré de l'Autriche nazie. Proche de l'analyste, et lui aussi réfugié, Zweig a organisé ce rendez-vous sur l'insistance de son ami peintre, qui idolâtre Freud et trépigne de lui montrer une de ses toiles. Accompagnés de Gala, l'épouse de Dalí, et de son agent, ils sont accueillis par Anna Freud.Leurs échanges sont ponctués par les extravagances et facéties de Salvador qui mystifient l'assemblée. Puis, à mesure, tous se dévoilent : la rencontre autour de Freud agit comme un révélateur, confrontant chacun à ses démons et à ceux de l'époque.Mêlant biographie intime de figures d'exception et chronique de la fin d'un monde, Clémence Boulouque saisit ce moment suspendu, unique et méconnu, en un roman drôle et grave.Musique : Richard Strauss "La femme sans ombre"Hébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Timesuck with Dan Cummins
430 - Sigmund Freud: The Sex Crazed Father of Psychoanalysis

Timesuck with Dan Cummins

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2024 172:01


Does not having a penis make you feel inferior due to a bad case of penis envy? Do you or have you ever wanted to have sex with your mother? Or your father? When most people think of Freud they think of his more extreme notions and theories, stuff like his Oedipus and Electra complexes. But he also really helped us understand our unconscious mind and how it interacts with our conscious mind. How the id, ego, and superego shape our personalities and desires. A fascinating blend of important science and insanity today as we explore the life and ideas of Sigmund Freud! Merch and more: www.badmagicproductions.com Timesuck Discord! https://discord.gg/tqzH89vWant to join the Cult of the Curious PrivateFacebook Group? Go directly to Facebook and search for "Cult of the Curious" to locate whatever happens to be our most current page :)For all merch-related questions/problems: store@badmagicproductions.com (copy and paste)Please rate and subscribe on Apple Podcasts and elsewhere and follow the suck on social media!! @timesuckpodcast on IG and http://www.facebook.com/timesuckpodcastWanna become a Space Lizard? Click here: https://www.patreon.com/timesuckpodcast.Sign up through Patreon, and for $5 a month, you get access to the entire Secret Suck catalog (295 episodes) PLUS the entire catalog of Timesuck, AD FREE. You'll also get 20% off of all regular Timesuck merch PLUS access to exclusive Space Lizard merch. 

The Avid Reader Show
Episode 768: Lewis Cohen MD - Winter's End: Dementia and Dying

The Avid Reader Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2024 64:23


Arguably among the worst of all medical afflictions, the dementias slowly destroy one's personality, take a tremendous emotional, physical, and financial toll on patients and families, and are irreversible and inexorably fatal. Winter's End: Dementia and Its Life-Shortening Options is constructed around a lengthy and detailed nonfiction account that is layered with the voices of approximately 100 palliative medicine practitioners, legal scholars, bioethicists, social workers, nurses, neurologists, psychiatrists, and other authorities from North America and Europe.This book explores how and when one might prepare to foreshorten life after being diagnosed with a dementing illness, while not ignoring the reality that for most people such actions are unthinkable and unacceptable. Dan Winter was one of the exceptions, and after being diagnosed with early-onset Alzheimer's disease, he resolved to hasten his death. He struggled over what method to employ and the timing of when to act.Winter's End is intended to catalyze conversations between clinicians, people affected by dementias, and the general public. It is a spellbinding and provocative book about a taboo subject that is increasingly germane to all aging societies that value patient autonomy.Lewis Cohen, MD is a professor emeritus of Psychiatry and a Palliative Medicine researcher, who has received numerous literary and academic honours. He is a Guggenheim fellow and was a Rockefeller Bellagio scholar and a Bogliasco Foundation resident. He is a recipient of the Thomas and Eleanor Hackett Memorial Lifetime Achievement Award from the Academy of Consultation-Liaison Psychiatry and his research has been funded by NIH and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. As a medical student, Dr. Cohen studied under Anna Freud, who interested him in end-of-life issues.Buy the book from Wellington Square Bookshop - ​https://www.wellingtonsquarebooks.com/book/9780197748640

Vamos Todos Morrer
Anna Freud

Vamos Todos Morrer

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2024 10:10


A psicanalista inglesa morreu há 42 anos.

Les matinales
Clémence Boulouque pour son livre « Le sentiment des crépuscules »

Les matinales

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2024


ESSENTIEL, le rendez-vous culture présenté par Sandrine Sebbane qui reçoit Clémence Boulouque pour son livre « Le sentiment des crépuscules » aux éditions Robert Laffont. À propos du livre : « Le sentiment des crépuscules » paru aux éditions Robert Laffont Londres, 1938. Zweig présente Dalí à Freud. Londres, 19 juillet 1938. Stefan Zweig et Salvador Dalí rendent visite à Sigmund Freud, tout juste exfiltré de l'Autriche nazie. Proche de l'analyste, et lui aussi réfugié, Zweig a organisé ce rendez-vous sur l'insistance de son ami peintre, qui idolâtre Freud et trépigne de lui montrer une de ses toiles. Accompagnés de Gala, l'épouse de Dalí, et de son agent, ils sont accueillis par Anna Freud. Leurs échanges sont ponctués par les extravagances et facéties de Salvador qui mystifient l'assemblée. Puis, à mesure, tous se dévoilent : la rencontre autour de Freud agit comme un révélateur, confrontant chacun à ses démons et à ceux de l'époque. Mêlant biographie intime de figures d'exception et chronique de la fin d'un monde, Clémence Boulouque saisit ce moment suspendu, unique et méconnu, en un roman drôle et grave. Clémence Boulouque est professeure à l'université Columbia à New York. Romancière, elle a notamment publié Mort d'un silence (Gallimard, 2003) et Un instant de grâce (Flammarion, 2016).

El Lugar Correcto
EP: 24 ¿Por qué Hago lo que Hago? Los mecanismos de defensa del ego

El Lugar Correcto

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2024 44:51


Send us a Text Message.Descripción: En este episodio exploramos los mecanismos de defensa del ego, herramientas psicológicas que todos usamos, muchas veces sin darnos cuenta, para protegernos de las realidades incómodas o dolorosas. Basándonos en las teorías de Freud y su hija, Anna Freud, desglosamos cómo el ego maneja los impulsos del id y las demandas del superyó, y cómo estos mecanismos pueden tanto ayudarnos como obstaculizarnos en la vida cotidiana.Descubre cómo mecanismos como la represión, la proyección, la sublimación, y muchos otros, juegan un rol crucial en nuestra vida emocional y en nuestras interacciones con el mundo. También analizamos cómo el uso excesivo o inapropiado de estos mecanismos puede llevar a conflictos internos y problemas en nuestras relaciones.Lo que aprenderás en este video:

Chasing Leviathan
The Politics of Psychoanalysis with Dr. Carolyn Laubender

Chasing Leviathan

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2024 61:01


On this episode of Chasing Leviathan, PJ and Dr. Carolyn Laubender discuss the politics of psychoanalytic practice and the need to address its relationship to social justice. Dr. Laubender explores the historical and theoretical aspects of psychoanalysis, particularly in relation to the concept of neutrality. They delve into the concept of emotional security and its political implications. Their conversation also touches on the work of Anna Freud and her emphasis on authority in child psychoanalysis, linking it to the changing political landscape of the time. For a deep dive into Carolyn Laubender's work, check out her book: The Political Clinic: Psychoanalysis and Social Change in the Twentieth Century

Woman's Hour
Weekend Woman's Hour: Lottie Tomlinson, Madwomen of the West, Infants and domestic abuse, Elles Bailey

Woman's Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2024 52:57


Lottie Tomlinson rose to fame as the younger sister of One Direction's Louis Tomlinson. At 16, she went on tour with the band as a makeup artist and a decade on, has become an entrepreneur. Lottie's mother and sister died within a few years of each other, when she was just 20-years-old. She joins Anita to talk about her experience of grief, which she's written about her new memoir, Lucky Girl.Madwomen of the West is currently on stage at the Riverside Studios in London. Set in a suburban mansion - a group of women gather for an eventful birthday brunch and discuss topics ranging from gender politics to professional expectations, shifting marital relationships, menopause and womanhood. With four leading women over the age of 70 it stars stage and screen luminaries Marilu Henner, Caroline Aaron, Brooke Adams, and Melanie Mayron. Caroline and Marilu join Nuala.New figures released today suggest that children under two are present at 13% of police call outs to domestic abuse incidents in England, amounting to around 185,000 babies and toddlers. So what can the effect be on children of witnessing domestic abuse? And what can be done to overcome the trauma they could experience? We hear from Lauren Seager-Smith, CEO of the For Baby's Sake Trust and Dr Sheila Redfern, consultant clinical child and adolescent psychologist and Head of Family Trauma at Anna Freud, a world-leading mental health charity for children and families.Food writer Meera Sodha's new cookbook, Dinner: 120 Vegan and Vegetarian Recipes for the Most Important Meal of the Day, pays homage to the restorative power of cooking for the ones you love. Meera says it was written in the midst of ‘a difficult personal time and much reflection.' She joins Nuala to talk about mental health and rediscovering her love for food.The British roots, blues and Americana rock sensation Elles Bailey is a real trailblazer: she's a mother, a label boss, an artist, a champion of women in music, and she has been inducted into the UK Blues Hall of Fame. She joins Anita to talk about her unique voice, her new album and to perform live in the studio.Presenter: Anita Rani Producer: Annette Wells Editor: Louise Corley

Woman's Hour
Blues singer Elles Bailey, Author Abi Daré, Infants and domestic abuse

Woman's Hour

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2024 53:24


First to the news that thousands of anti-racism protesters gathered in cities and towns across England last night. They were rallying in response to a week of anti-immigration rioting and racist violence, sparked by misinformation over the deadly stabbings in Southport on 29 July. Thousands of extra police officers had been deployed last night but the protests were largely peaceful with few serious incidents. Some of the largest gatherings were in north London, Brighton and Bristol. To discuss, Anita Rani is joined by Labour's Susan Dungworth, the Northumbria Police and Crime Commissioner, and Aisha Gill, a Professor in Criminology, Head of the Centre for Gender and Violence Research at the University of Bristol. The British roots, blues and Americana rock sensation Elles Bailey is a real trailblazer: she's a mother, a label boss, an artist, a champion of women in music, and she has been inducted into the UKBlues Hall of Fame. She joins Anita to talk about her unique voice, her new album and to perform live in the studio.New figures released today suggest that children under two are present at 13% of police call outs to domestic abuse incidents in England, amounting to around 185,000 babies and toddlers. So what can the effect be on children of witnessing domestic abuse? And what can be done to overcome the trauma they could experience? We hear from Lauren Seager-Smith, CEO of the For Baby's Sake Trust and Dr Sheila Redfern, consultant clinical child and adolescent psychologist and Head of Family Trauma at Anna Freud, a world-leading mental health charity for children and families.New York Times bestselling author Abi Daré discusses her much-anticipated second novel, And So I Roar, which follows tenacious teenager Adunni and her fight for freedom in rural Nigeria.Presenter: Anita Rani Producer: Kirsty Starkey

Gin & Tantra
Fortifying our Position; The Psychology of Anna Freud

Gin & Tantra

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2024 76:14


In this episode we talk about psychological defense mechanisms, intellectualization and the tolerance of cognitive dissonance, Emotional insulation, rationalization, denial and repression, fantasy and types of projection, regression, identification and the negative internal voice.

Venus Codes – Spiritualität, Feminismus & Realtalk mit Suzanne Frankenfeld
121: Eine gute Therapeutin sein... und ein beruflicher Weg dorthin! Talk mit Johanna

Venus Codes – Spiritualität, Feminismus & Realtalk mit Suzanne Frankenfeld

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2024 48:56


She's back! Nach 15 Monaten "Podcast-Abwesenheit" ist heute meine Freundin Johanna endlich mal wieder zu Gast. Johanna hat kürzlich einen riesigen beruflichen Meilenstein erreicht und war deshalb auch so lange nicht in den Venus Codes zu hören. Aus Anlass dieses großen Meilensteins sprechen wir heute mal ausführlich über: ✨Johannas beruflichen Weg als Kinder- und Jugendlichenpsychotherapeutin (plus Suchttherapeutin plus Traumatherapeutin plus weitere Qualifikationen und Jobs!) ✨was genau sie während ihrer "Abwesenheit" getrieben hat ✨warum sie schon als 13-jährige Bücher von Anna Freud gelesen hat und wie lange sie den nun erreichten Meilenstein bereits als Ziel im Herzen trug ✨wie Johanna sich jetzt nach Erreichen dieses riesigen Meilensteins fühlt ✨wie wir beide uns (auch auf Johannas/unserem beruflichem Weg) kennengelernt haben ✨die extrem hohe Bedeutung von Selbst(er)kenntnis, Achtsamkeit und Bewusstheit für eine gute therapeutische Arbeit ✨Johannas Ausblick in ihre berufliche Zukunft und noch so einiges mehr! Viel Freude mit dieser neuen Folge! Links zu dieser Episode: >> Meine Onlinekurse für Dich https://suzannefrankenfeld.de/shop/ >> Meine 1:1-Formate für Dich – https://suzannefrankenfeld.de/einzelarbeit/ >> Schreib mir auf Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/suzannefrankenfeld/ >>Trag Dich gerne für meinen beliebten Newsletter ein – https://suzannefrankenfeld.de/newsletter/ >> Johanna hat aktuell keine Online-Präsenz Coverfoto: Selfie von Suzanne Frankenfeld

Instant Trivia
Episode 1255 - Oh "ph" - Wallaces - Chicago - 20th century thinkers - Written in cyrillic

Instant Trivia

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2024 7:03


Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 1255, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Oh Ph. With Ph in quotes 1: For the record, Thomas Edison invented the first practical one of these in 1877. the phonograph. 2: The mortar and pestle is a symbol of this profession. a pharmacist. 3: In days gone by this game bird was popularly served "under glass". a pheasant. 4: A finger bone, or a group of heavily armed infantry with overlapping weapons. a phalanx. 5: In mythology, after Hippolytus rejects her, this wife of Theseus hangs herself. Phaedra. Round 2. Category: Wallaces 1: Lurleen Burns married this man when she was 16 and later succeeded him as governor of Alabama. George Wallace. 2: Before "Braveheart" his story was told in the 15th century by Henry the Minstrel. William Wallace. 3: (Hi, I'm Wallace Langham) Mike's son, this broadcaster became NBC News White House Correspondent in 1982. Chris Wallace. 4: He and his wife Lila launched Reader's Digest in 1922 with a press run of 5,000. DeWitt Wallace. 5: "The Emperor of Ice-Cream" is a famous work by this poet whose day job was VP of an insurance company. Wallace Stevens. Round 3. Category: Chicago 1: Remove 1 letter from the name of a plaza in Dallas and you get this plaza in Chicago's Loop. Daley Plaza. 2: Nearly 250,000 gathered to see Obama's 2008 victory speech in Chicago's front yard, this park named for another president. Grant Park. 3: Scandalous highlight of the 1893 Columbian Exposition and title of the following:"She had a ruby on her tummy and / A diamond big as Texas on her toe, whoa whoa / She let her hair down and / She did the hoochie coochie real slow, whoa whoa". "Little Egypt". 4: Untouchable Tours visits such sanguineous spots as the site of this February 1929 event. the Valentine's Day Massacre. 5: Some attribute this nickname of the city to its proud, boasting citizens, not its breeziness. "The Windy City". Round 4. Category: 20Th Century Thinkers 1: Called the Russian Revolution's most brilliant thinker, he lost a power struggle with Stalin and was killed in Mexico. Trotsky. 2: This New Yorker wondered, "Can we actually 'know' the universe?... It's hard enough finding your way around Chinatown". Woody Allen. 3: The works of this woman on the left include 1965's "Normality and Pathology in Childhood". Anna Freud. 4: This 3-named economist was an architect of the International Monetary Fund and part of the Bloomsbury Group. Keynes. 5: This "in the machine" was Gilbert Ryle's term for the idea that the mind is apart from the body yet controls it. ghost in the machine. Round 5. Category: Written In Cyrillic 1: Some Tajik speakers call their language Zaboni Forsi, meaning this national tongue. Persian. 2: This carnivore associated with Russia is medved in Russian. a bear. 3: One way to say hello in Serbian is this, borrowed from Italian. ciao. 4: In Ukrainian, this winter month when Russia invaded in 2022 is Lyutyy, "cruel". February. 5: Belarussian took words like "pan", meaning "sir" or "mister" from this language spoken due west of Belarus. Polish. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!Special thanks to https://blog.feedspot.com/trivia_podcasts/ AI Voices used

Les Nuits de France Culture
"Le point central dans la vie d'Anna Freud est sa relation avec les femmes"

Les Nuits de France Culture

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2024 89:59


durée : 01:29:59 - Les Nuits de France Culture - En 2003, pour découvrir un peu mieux qui était Anna Freud, pour comprendre ses travaux en matière de pédagogie psychanalytique, sa pratique psychanalytique et son existence de "fille de Freud", Christine Goémé proposait de plonger dans le roman complexe de sa vie. - invités : Marie-Magdeleine Lessana

The Farm Podcast Mach II
Jung and the Archetypes at War w/ Dr. Cherlyn H.T. Jones & Recluse

The Farm Podcast Mach II

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 109:13


Carl Jung, Jungian psychology, archetypes, how Jung is perceived in modern day psychiatry, the rise of pharmaceutical cures to mental illness, Freud, Anna Freud, how Jung can be used to treat veterans, the military's view on Jung, the divide between military culture and mainstream America, PTSD, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS), how TMS can be used to successfully treat PTSD in veterans, Human Terrain Systems (HTS), special operations forces, anthropology, the weaponization of anthropology, HTS in Afghanistan, the issues with HTS, General Michael Flynn, Flynn's interest in HTS, the possibility of weaponized anthropology being used against the American public, QAnon, the shaman archetype, the benefits for veterans in embracing the shaman archetype, World War One (WWI), the psychic trauma of WWI, a Jungian view on WWI, the American Civil War, ongoing trauma from the Civil War in America, how the Jungian archetypes operate in today's geopolitical cesspool, sustainability, food security, Cherlyn's current work, Landnám WarriorCherlyn's website:https://landnamwarrior.org/Music by: Keith Allen Dennishttps://keithallendennis.bandcamp.com/ Get bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

New Books in Psychoanalysis
Linda Hopkins and Steven Kuchuck, eds., "Diary of a Fallen Psychoanalyst: The Work Books of Masud Khan 1967-1972" (Karnac, 2022)

New Books in Psychoanalysis

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 59:39


Masud Khan (1924-1989), was an eminent and, ultimately, scandalous British psychoanalyst who trained and practised in London during an important period in the development of psychoanalysis. From August 1967 to March 1980, he wrote his 39 volume Work Books, a diary containing observations and reflections on his own life, the world of psychoanalysis, his evolving theoretical formulations, Western culture, and the turbulent social and political developments of the time. In Diary of a Fallen Psychoanalyst: The Work Books of Masud Khan 1967-1972 (Karnac, 2022), readers will find fascinating entries on Khan's colleague and mentor Donald Winnicott and other well-known analysts of the period, including Anna Freud. Also featuring in these pages are leaders in the world of culture and the arts such as Julie Andrews, the Redgraves and Henri Cartier-Bresson. Dr Linda Hopkins was trained as a scholar in Islamic studies many years ago. She then trained in mental health and became a licensed clinical psychologist and then she underwent Psychoanalytic training. She is the recipient of the prestigious Sigourney Award from the International Psychoanalytic Association. Her book on Masud Khan, the False Self that appeared in 2006 has been widely read and appreciated. She then received the Goethe Award and the famous Gradiva award. Dr Steven Kuchuk is a psychoanalyst based in New York and is an expert on Relational Psychoanalysis. His background is both distinctively academic and clinically rigorous. He has taught extensively across the world and in particular at the doctoral program at New York University. He has written several books and was also the president of the International Association of Relational Psychoanalysis. One of his extremely well known books is titled the Relational Revolution in Psychoanalysis. In this interview Linda and Steven, talk about their collaborative effort in putting together this book, which contains a section of Khan´s workbooks from 1967-1972. We talk about the difficulties in putting this volume together and we also go into Khan´s life and his mind, the climate that he created and the cross-cultural nature of his identity. Masud Khan´s workbooks are set to find a space in an archive at the Freud Museum London. Ashis Roy (Ph.D) is a Psychoanalyst (IPA) and the author of Intimacy in Alienation: A Psychoanalytic Study of Hindu-Muslim Relationships Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/psychoanalysis

New Books Network
Linda Hopkins and Steven Kuchuck, eds., "Diary of a Fallen Psychoanalyst: The Work Books of Masud Khan 1967-1972" (Karnac, 2022)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 59:39


Masud Khan (1924-1989), was an eminent and, ultimately, scandalous British psychoanalyst who trained and practised in London during an important period in the development of psychoanalysis. From August 1967 to March 1980, he wrote his 39 volume Work Books, a diary containing observations and reflections on his own life, the world of psychoanalysis, his evolving theoretical formulations, Western culture, and the turbulent social and political developments of the time. In Diary of a Fallen Psychoanalyst: The Work Books of Masud Khan 1967-1972 (Karnac, 2022), readers will find fascinating entries on Khan's colleague and mentor Donald Winnicott and other well-known analysts of the period, including Anna Freud. Also featuring in these pages are leaders in the world of culture and the arts such as Julie Andrews, the Redgraves and Henri Cartier-Bresson. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network

New Books in Biography
Linda Hopkins and Steven Kuchuck, eds., "Diary of a Fallen Psychoanalyst: The Work Books of Masud Khan 1967-1972" (Karnac, 2022)

New Books in Biography

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 59:39


Masud Khan (1924-1989), was an eminent and, ultimately, scandalous British psychoanalyst who trained and practised in London during an important period in the development of psychoanalysis. From August 1967 to March 1980, he wrote his 39 volume Work Books, a diary containing observations and reflections on his own life, the world of psychoanalysis, his evolving theoretical formulations, Western culture, and the turbulent social and political developments of the time. In Diary of a Fallen Psychoanalyst: The Work Books of Masud Khan 1967-1972 (Karnac, 2022), readers will find fascinating entries on Khan's colleague and mentor Donald Winnicott and other well-known analysts of the period, including Anna Freud. Also featuring in these pages are leaders in the world of culture and the arts such as Julie Andrews, the Redgraves and Henri Cartier-Bresson. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/biography

New Books in Intellectual History
Linda Hopkins and Steven Kuchuck, eds., "Diary of a Fallen Psychoanalyst: The Work Books of Masud Khan 1967-1972" (Karnac, 2022)

New Books in Intellectual History

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 59:39


Masud Khan (1924-1989), was an eminent and, ultimately, scandalous British psychoanalyst who trained and practised in London during an important period in the development of psychoanalysis. From August 1967 to March 1980, he wrote his 39 volume Work Books, a diary containing observations and reflections on his own life, the world of psychoanalysis, his evolving theoretical formulations, Western culture, and the turbulent social and political developments of the time. In Diary of a Fallen Psychoanalyst: The Work Books of Masud Khan 1967-1972 (Karnac, 2022), readers will find fascinating entries on Khan's colleague and mentor Donald Winnicott and other well-known analysts of the period, including Anna Freud. Also featuring in these pages are leaders in the world of culture and the arts such as Julie Andrews, the Redgraves and Henri Cartier-Bresson. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/intellectual-history

New Books in Psychology
Linda Hopkins and Steven Kuchuck, eds., "Diary of a Fallen Psychoanalyst: The Work Books of Masud Khan 1967-1972" (Karnac, 2022)

New Books in Psychology

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 59:39


Masud Khan (1924-1989), was an eminent and, ultimately, scandalous British psychoanalyst who trained and practised in London during an important period in the development of psychoanalysis. From August 1967 to March 1980, he wrote his 39 volume Work Books, a diary containing observations and reflections on his own life, the world of psychoanalysis, his evolving theoretical formulations, Western culture, and the turbulent social and political developments of the time. In Diary of a Fallen Psychoanalyst: The Work Books of Masud Khan 1967-1972 (Karnac, 2022), readers will find fascinating entries on Khan's colleague and mentor Donald Winnicott and other well-known analysts of the period, including Anna Freud. Also featuring in these pages are leaders in the world of culture and the arts such as Julie Andrews, the Redgraves and Henri Cartier-Bresson. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/psychology

New Books in British Studies
Linda Hopkins and Steven Kuchuck, eds., "Diary of a Fallen Psychoanalyst: The Work Books of Masud Khan 1967-1972" (Karnac, 2022)

New Books in British Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 59:39


Masud Khan (1924-1989), was an eminent and, ultimately, scandalous British psychoanalyst who trained and practised in London during an important period in the development of psychoanalysis. From August 1967 to March 1980, he wrote his 39 volume Work Books, a diary containing observations and reflections on his own life, the world of psychoanalysis, his evolving theoretical formulations, Western culture, and the turbulent social and political developments of the time. In Diary of a Fallen Psychoanalyst: The Work Books of Masud Khan 1967-1972 (Karnac, 2022), readers will find fascinating entries on Khan's colleague and mentor Donald Winnicott and other well-known analysts of the period, including Anna Freud. Also featuring in these pages are leaders in the world of culture and the arts such as Julie Andrews, the Redgraves and Henri Cartier-Bresson. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/british-studies

Ordinary Unhappiness
52: Standard Edition Volume 1 Part 9: Repression is a Scorpio: The Final Fliess Extracts feat. Christine Smallwood Teaser

Ordinary Unhappiness

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2024 4:35


Subscribe to get access to the full episode, the episode reading list, and all premium episodes! www.patreon.com/OrdinaryUnhappinessIn the final installment of the Fliess Extracts portion of the Standard Edition, we are joined by novelist and literary critic Christine Smallwood. These last letters see Freud really feeling himself as a stylist – and, not coincidentally, ruminating about masturbation, sexual dysfunction, and his mounting frustration with his interlocutor. We discuss the disintegrating Freud-Fliess friendship; an adorable dream from 1½ year-old Anna Freud; primate analogies, embodied metaphors, and noses turned up, turned down, and turned away; censorship both by “Russians” and the Stracheys; horrifying case studies and salacious gossip; and whether Freud's much-trumpeted “self-analysis” would have ever been possible without a overdetermined transference with his nose-besotted friend.Have you noticed that Freud is back? Got questions about psychoanalysis? Or maybe you've traversed the fantasy and lived to tell the tale? Leave us a voicemail! 484 775-0107 A podcast about psychoanalysis, politics, pop culture, and the ways we suffer now. New episodes on Saturdays. Follow us on social media: Linktree: https://linktr.ee/OrdinaryUnhappiness Twitter: @UnhappinessPod Instagram: @OrdinaryUnhappiness Patreon: patreon.com/OrdinaryUnhappiness Theme song: Formal Chicken - Gnossienne No. 1 https://open.spotify.com/album/2MIIYnbyLqriV3vrpUTxxO Provided by Fruits Music

Power Your Parenting: Moms With Teens
#268 Reflective Parenting vs Reactive Parenting

Power Your Parenting: Moms With Teens

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2024 41:31


Today we are going to discuss how to implement Reflective Parenting vs. Reactive parenting. In this episode we talk about what is a Reflective Parent and can teens be reflective. We explore the three basic biobehavioral systems: reward systems, mentalizing, and the stress/threat system and how understanding this empowers us to be better parents. Our guest today is Sheila Redfern PhD ,a Consultant Clinical Child and Adolescent Psychologist. She is currently a Head of Clinical Services for Family Trauma at Anna Freud, a children and families mental health charity in London, UK. Dr Redfern also worked as a senior lecturer as part of Guy's Medical School from 1996-2005. She is the Director of Redfern Psychology Services, an independent clinical psychology practice, where she offers direct clinical work, training and supervision and where she is devoted to promoting insight, compassion, and empathy in individuals, families, institutions, and communities. Dr. Redfern's clinical psychology practice spans thirty years, and she has published extensively in peer reviewed journals on parenting, fostering and child and adolescent mental health for the professional audience. Dr Redfern has authored two books for parents; Reflective Parenting: A Guide To Understanding What's Going on in your Child's Mind (Routledge) and How do You Hug A Cactus? Reflective Parenting with Teenagers in Mind (Routledge). To learn more go to: https://redfernpsychology.org/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Ordinary Unhappiness
43: The Mirror Crack'd: The Mirror Stage, Part III

Ordinary Unhappiness

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2024 75:01


Abby, Patrick, and Dan conclude their adventure through Lacan's mirror stage! They reprise Lacan's parable of the mirror-besotted baby and tie together the many threads – theoretical, clinical, and philosophical – woven through it. They walk through how Lacan musters evidence for his argument using both cases of pathology (i.e. psychosis) and “normal” dreams and fantasies, and how his situating of alienation within the ego puts him at odds with other schools of psychoanalysis, specifically those associated with Anna Freud and Melanie Klein. They outline how Lacan's polemic against “ego psychology” expands from a critique of contemporary Anglophone psychoanalysis into a broader objection to schemes of social control and ideologies of “a freedom that is never so authentically affirmed as when it is within the walls of a prison.” Does Lacan's parable suggest any radical potential, and does it open up new ways for thinking about the inevitability, limits, and flexibility of identity claims in our own lives and our historical moment? They confront this question by unpacking the different senses of an “exit” to the mirror stage, and how Lacan's essay on the origins of subjectivity relates to the open question of where work of therapy ends and new possibilities of remaking ourselves and the world begin.Have you noticed that Freud is back? Got questions about psychoanalysis? Or maybe you've traversed the fantasy and lived to tell the tale? Leave us a voicemail! 484 775-0107 A podcast about psychoanalysis, politics, pop culture, and the ways we suffer now. New episodes on Saturdays. Follow us on social media: Linktree: https://linktr.ee/OrdinaryUnhappiness Twitter: @UnhappinessPod Instagram: @OrdinaryUnhappiness Patreon: patreon.com/OrdinaryUnhappiness Theme song: Formal Chicken - Gnossienne No. 1 https://open.spotify.com/album/2MIIYnbyLqriV3vrpUTxxO Provided by Fruits Music

Buchkritik - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
Tom Saller: "Ich bin Anna" - Anna Freud lehnt sich auf

Buchkritik - Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2024 8:21


Eine eigenständige und kluge Frau war Anna Freud, die Tochter Sigmund Freuds. Wie die Gründerin der Kinder- und Jugendpsychoanalyse gegen familiäre und gesellschaftliche Strukturen aufbegehrte, zeichnet Tom Saller im Roman „Ich bin Anna“ nach. Kupferberg, Shellywww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Lesart

Lesart - das Literaturmagazin - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
Tom Saller: "Ich bin Anna" - Anna Freud lehnt sich auf

Lesart - das Literaturmagazin - Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2024 8:21


Eine eigenständige und kluge Frau war Anna Freud, die Tochter Sigmund Freuds. Wie die Gründerin der Kinder- und Jugendpsychoanalyse gegen familiäre und gesellschaftliche Strukturen aufbegehrte, zeichnet Tom Saller im Roman „Ich bin Anna“ nach. Kupferberg, Shellywww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Lesart

BitchStory
Bitchstory Lesson 60- Heroines of Mental Health

BitchStory

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2024 51:56


January is Mental Health Awareness Month, so we are kicking off a brand new year of Bitchstory with some ladies who improved our lives with breakthrough discoveries in the area of mental health. Two of these ladies specifically did research in women's reproductive health, and without them, we'd all be in institutions, labeled as hysterical and told it is all in our heads. Dr. Jamie Maquire - researched and found a breakthrough treatment specific to postpartum depression https://www.brainfacts.org/diseases-and-disorders/mental-health/2020/the-discovery-that-led-to-the-first-specific-treatment-for-postpartum-depression-111920 Dr. Katharina Dalton - helped identify, name, and treat PMS https://www.womensinternational.com/blog/tribute-to-dr-katharina-dalton/ Anna Freud - recognized the need for specialized child psychology Marie Nyswander - developed margarine as a treatment for heroin addiction https://medium.com/invisible-illness/6-female-mental-health-heroes-you-should-know-this-womens-history-month-729765ab962 Don't forget to check out the other House Of Bleep pods: BitchScopes and BitchSplaining.  Support us and check out all the stuff at Patreon.com/houseofbleep Email us: heybitches@bitchstory.net Instagram: @bitchstory.pod Thanks for being our best bitches! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/bitchstory/support

TNT Radio
Dr Carole Lieberman & Michael Letts on Compass with Jason Olbourne - 27 October 2023

TNT Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 27, 2023 55:47


GUEST 1 OVERVIEW: Carole Lieberman, M.D., M.P.H is a board-certified Forensic Psychiatrist ; Trial Expert Witness, & Columnist of "Inside the Criminal Mind" in Front Page Detectives (FrontPageDetectives.com) is available for interviews and analysis.  Dr. Lieberman was trained at NYU-Bellevue including the Forensic Unit where she was Chief Resident in Psychiatry and where all the notorious criminals are held and at Anna Freud's London Clinic. She's also the author of many best selling books including Bad Girls: Why Men Love Them & How Good Girls Can Learn Their Secrets  and author of the book Lions and Tigers and Terrorists, Oh My!  Learn more at www.expertwitnessforensicpsychiatrist.com and also at www.drcarole.com GUEST 2 OVERVIEW: Michael Letts is the Founder, President, and CEO of InVest USA, a national grassroots non-profit that is helping hundreds of communities provide bulletproof vests for their police forces through sponsorship, and fundraising programs. He also has decades of law enforcement experience and is a decorated US Army Veteran. www.investusa.org.

Les Nuits de France Culture
"Le point central dans la vie d'Anna Freud est sa relation avec les femmes"

Les Nuits de France Culture

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2023 89:59


durée : 01:29:59 - Les Nuits de France Culture - par : Philippe Garbit - En 2003, pour découvrir un peu mieux qui était Anna Freud, pour comprendre ses travaux en matière de pédagogie psychanalytique, sa pratique psychanalytique et son existence de "fille de Freud", Christine Goémé proposait de plonger dans le roman complexe de sa vie. - invités : Marie-Magdeleine Lessana

The Cancer History Project
John Laszlo: Finding the cure for childhood leukemia and writing a book about it

The Cancer History Project

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2023 58:52


John Laszlo, professor emeritus at Duke University Medical Center and former national vice president for research at the American Cancer Society, speaks with the Cancer History Project's Alex Carolan and Paul Goldberg about his life, career, and his authoritative book, “The Cure of Childhood Leukemia: Into the Age of Miracles.” When Laszlo, 92, joined the Acute Leukemia Service at NCI in 1956, the cure for childhood leukemia seemed beyond reach. He worked directly with Emil “Tom” Frei, and Emil J Freireich—early researchers and doctors of childhood leukemia at NCI. Laszlo's book is based on taped interviews of doctors and scientists whose work led to the cure of childhood leukemia. It is an essential primary source for anyone interested in oncology and its history, and is now available for free as a digital download on the Cancer History Project. In 1937, Laszlo's family fled Vienna as Jewish refugees. His mother, a psychiatrist who trained with Anna Freud, discovered she had breast cancer on the SS Île de France while the family journeyed to America. She died two years later. His father, Daniel Laszlo, a physician who specialized in cardiovascular physiology, found a job in cancer research at Mount Sinai Hospital. He went on to study folate antagonists in mice—though folate antagonists hadn't been characterized yet. The untested regimen was administered against his recommendation to none other than Babe Ruth. A transcript of this recording is available on the Cancer History Project. 

SinnSyn
#412 - Et vrengebilde av oss selv og verden

SinnSyn

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2023 34:57


Begrepet om psykiske forsvarsmekanismer stammer fra Freud, men det var hans datter, Anna Freud, som videreutviklet konseptet innenfor en retning som kalles egopsykologi. For Freud spilte forsvaret en sentral rolle ved utviklingen av symptomer. Han forstod forsvaret som ubevisste mentale mekanismer, hvis oppgave var å holde uakseptable følelser og tanker på avstand. Med andre ord var det forsvarets oppgave å passe på at våre mindre attråverdige impulser og innskytelser ikke presset seg inn i bevisstheten og skapte unødvendig mye uro. Freud påpekte at uakseptable eller forbudte impulser fremkaller signalangst (det er fare på ferde), noe som deretter aktiverer en slags avvergingsmekanisme som bestreber seg på å holde impulsene utenfor bevisstheten.Denne prosessen er komplisert, og mens hensikten er å beholde en slags sjelefred, ender det ofte opp mer en forvrengt oppfattelse av eget «selv» og verden omkring. I dagens episode skal jeg dykke ned i menneskets motstridende krefter og se på hvordan vi klarer å forholde oss til paradoksene i oss selv på en mer eller mindre sunn måte.For den psykologisk interesserteEr du mer interessert i mennesket indre liv, relasjoner og selvutvikling, håper jeg du klikker deg inn på min Patreon konto og bli supporter av SinnSyn og WebPsykologen. På den måten støtter du dette prosjektet, og som takk for støtten får du masse ekstramateriale. Du får flere eksklusive episoder av SinnSyn, mentale øvelser, videomateriell som ikke publiseres andre steder, og du kan høre meg lese og gjennomgå min første bok, Selvfølelsens Psykologi – Bedre selvfølelse ved å bruke hodet litt annerledes. Og deretter kan du fortsette på min andre bok, Jeg, meg selv og selvbildet. Dersom du ønsker å gå dypere ned i dagens tematikk, kan du sjekke ut episode #82 - Motstridende krefter i den menneskelige psyke hvor jeg reflekterer videre over de motstridende og tidvis paradoksale kreftene i menneskets sjelsliv som kjemper på grensen mellom det bevisste og det ubevisste. Ellers er målet med SinnSyns mentale helsestudio å finne øvelser hvor den psykologiske teorien kan forankres i hverdagslivet. Ved hjelp av en rekke psykologiske tradisjoner forsøker jeg å lage et slags treningsprogram hvor man gjør øvelser som styrker selvbilde, selvfølelsen og mentale muskler. Er du blant de som finner verdi her på SinnSyn, og litt over middels interessert i psykologi og filosofi, så er medlemskap i SinnSynes mentale helsestudio kanskje noe for deg. Håper å se deg som Patreon-supporter. Du finner medlemskapet på www.patreon.com/sinnsyn. Nå har jeg også et tilbud til bedrifter på dette mentale treningsstudioet. Man kan forebygge sykefravær ved å styrke den enkeltes psykiske helse. I tillegg vil en bedre psykisk helse gi seg utslag på en positiv måte i arbeidsmiljøet. Det kan øke den enkeltes energi og entusiasme og styrke relasjonene mellom de ansatte. Av den grunn tilbyr jeg nå medlemskap for bedrifter på SinnSyns mentale helsestudio. Er du leder i en organisasjon, en kommune eller en bedrift eller lignende, kan du kontakte meg på webpsykologene@gmail.com for å be om et tilbud. På WebPsykologen.no finner du også en beskrivelse tilbudet på helsestudio. Få tilgang til ALT ekstramateriale som medlem på SinnSyns Mentale Helsestudio via SinnSyn-appen her: https://www.webpsykologen.no/et-mentalt-helsestudio-i-lomma/ eller som Patreon-Medlem her: https://www.patreon.com/sinnsyn. For reklamefri pod og bonus-episoder kan du bli SinnSyn Pluss abonnent her https://plus.acast.com/s/sinnsyn. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

man er acast med alt av freud denne jeg selv verden ved ellers selvf dersom anna freud begrepet for freud sinnsyn webpsykologen sinnsyns sinnsyns mentale helsestudio psykologi bedre
Les chemins de la philosophie
Les grands concepts de Melanie Klein 2/4 : La psychanalyse des enfants

Les chemins de la philosophie

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2023 58:57


durée : 00:58:57 - Avec philosophie - par : Géraldine Muhlmann - La psychanalyste austro-britannique Melanie Klein a révolutionné la psychanalyse par le jeu avec les enfants en bas âge. En quoi la psychanalyse des enfants diffère-t-elle de celle des adultes ? Et quelle était la nature de son conflit avec sa grande rivale, Anna Freud ? - invités : Bernard Golse pédopsychiatre-psychanalyste (membre de l'Association Psychanalytique de France) et Professeur émérite de Psychiatrie de l'enfant et de l'adolescent à l'université René Descartes ; Didier Houzel professeur honoraire de Pédopsychiatrie à l'université de Caen, membre titulaire de l'Association Psychanalytique de France et rédacteur du Journal de la Psychanalyse de l'Enfant

Ordinary Unhappiness
09: Get Freudpilled: The Standard Edition

Ordinary Unhappiness

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2023 72:22


Abby and Patrick introduce a new series: the Standard Edition. That's right; they're going to read and discuss the entire Standard Edition of the Complete Psychological Works of Sigmund Freud. In this episode, Abby and Patrick discuss why they're undertaking this project; the origins of the Standard Edition and the cast of characters who brought it into being, including Ernest Jones, Anna Freud, and James and Alix Strachey; the allure of becoming a completist; the pleasures and surprises of rereading; what a canon is and how it gets created; enticements of and resistances to systematicity; and Freud's obsessive, wonderful footnotes and countless intertexts. (The Standard Edition will be a regular Patreon-only series; to follow along, subscribe to the Patreon at patreon.com/OrdinaryUnhappiness!)Have you noticed that Freud is back? Got questions about psychoanalysis? Or maybe you've traversed the fantasy and lived to tell the tale? Leave us a voicemail! 484 775-0107 A podcast about psychoanalysis, politics, pop culture, and the ways we suffer now. New episodes on Saturdays. Follow us on social media: Linktree: https://linktr.ee/OrdinaryUnhappiness Twitter: @UnhappinessPod Instagram: @OrdinaryUnhappiness Patreon: patreon.com/OrdinaryUnhappiness Theme song: Formal Chicken - Gnossienne No. 1 https://open.spotify.com/album/2MIIYnbyLqriV3vrpUTxxO Provided by Fruits Music

Analyze Scripts
Episode 7 - "What About Bob"

Analyze Scripts

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2023 52:57


Welcome back to Analyze Scripts, where a psychiatrist and a therapist analyze what Hollywood gets right and wrong about mental health. Today, we analyze the psychoanalytic classic "What About Bob." Bill Murray and Richard Dreyfuss portray a larger than life characters allowing for a rich discussion about the therapist-patient relationship. We discuss everything from our diagnostic impressions to our critiques about Dr. Marvin's office decor and...bizarre family puppets?!? We hope you enjoy! Analyze Scripts Instagram Analyze Scripts TikTok Analyze Scripts YouTube Analyze Scripts Website [00:19] Dr. Katrina Furey: Hi. [00:20] Portia Pendleton: Welcome back for another episode of Analyze Scripts. Today we are going to be talking about about psychoanalytical classic movie, What About Bob? [00:30] Dr. Katrina Furey: Yes, we are. [00:31] Portia Pendleton: So, just a reminder, I'm Portia Pendleton. I'm a licensed clinical social worker, and. [00:36] Dr. Katrina Furey: I'm going to be speaking with Dr. Katrina Fury. I am a psychiatrist. And we're glad that you're back joining us, or if it's your first time, welcome. Yeah. So glad you're here. [00:47] Portia Pendleton: So we picked what about Bob? Because it's so rich with just characters and silly people and really a lot of questions around diagnostics. [00:59] Dr. Katrina Furey: Yes. And just the therapist patient relationship. [01:04] Portia Pendleton: I guess I would start with how I felt watching this movie. [01:08] Dr. Katrina Furey: Okay. [01:08] Portia Pendleton: Which was not good. I felt so anxious. I felt icky. I felt nervous. I felt like I did not feel good. I kept picturing somebody stalking me on the family vacation. [01:24] Dr. Katrina Furey: I know. [01:24] Portia Pendleton: And just driving me insane. The more the movie went on, the more I just felt like, this is, like, my worst nightmare happening. [01:34] Dr. Katrina Furey: I know. I wish I had a better understanding of how they came up with the concept for this movie, because I feel like you could analyze this movie in so many different levels. Like, on the really surface level, it's a movie about Kooky patient played by Bill Murray, which seemed like a perfect choice, growing really attached to a new psychiatrist really quickly and then following him on vacation, and all the hygiene, sudden sue. That's, like, level one. And then level two is sort of like the metaphor, I think, for what it feels like to be working with a patient who's really challenging and crosses boundaries. And then I was thinking, like, on a third meta level, is there something even more about us now, analyzing this dynamic between the analyst and his patient and then the patient becoming a therapist at the end? It got too overwhelming for me to make sense now. [02:33] Portia Pendleton: Totally. Yeah. I mean, where do you even want to start? What feels helpful to kind of get us going? [02:42] Dr. Katrina Furey: I think where I always want to start is analyzing the therapist's office. Okay. So I thought this was, like, a really classic therapy office in Manhattan. It looked like it was in a really nice high rise with the doorman, some sense of security. I think they were on, like, the 40th something floor, because we saw Bob walk up all those steps because he's afraid of elevators. Again, this movie came out in the 90s, so you can tell with the clothes, which I love. But this white man therapist had a female secretary who was dressed in kind of, like, 80s secretary clothes. And he had a nice big office, I think, with some nice big windows, a big old mahogany desk. And then what did you think about all his degrees on the wall? [03:34] Portia Pendleton: I thought, and you can maybe be a little bit insightful here as a psychiatrist, I thought it was like the perfect stereotypical psychiatry office. Right? Like there is a desk between a patient and the doctor. Because I think in the still a little bit more like Freudian maybe there's. [03:56] Dr. Katrina Furey: Like a couch or a chair. [03:57] Portia Pendleton: I'm still picturing the dark colors. Mahogany type stuff too. But I just think having a book having bookshelves with all of your books and then all of manuals and all that stuff and his degrees. [04:12] Dr. Katrina Furey: He had one of those big fancy rugs. Yes. Which I do have my office. Oh, my God. The bust of Freud. Yeah, he did have there was like behind the chairs underneath his wall of degrees was some sort of horizontal shelf and on it was glass. Again, I'm always like why it looks like almost like a little crystal goblet with little tiny crystal glasses like you might use to pour like after dinner drinks or something. I thought it was out of place but sort of spoke to his own feelings of self importance I think. But again I'm always like we don't have glasses, anything glass or breakable in. [04:53] Portia Pendleton: The office and you're not offering any patient a drink. And you might if you are in an office, a law firm, anything else type of thing. [05:05] Dr. Katrina Furey: Right. We might do like deals and sign the dotted line or something. In my training, even as a psychiatrist I hated that he talked to his patient behind his big old desk. My office is not set up that way. We were always trained not to have something in between you and the patient. That's just such like a nonverbal barrier. Quite literally and clearly dr. Leo Marvin, played by Richard Dreyfus, is Freudian because he named his son Sigmund and his daughter Anna and Sigmund Freud. And then Sigmund Freud's real daughter was named Anna Freud. So that was pretty funny. He has the Freudian bust which I thought was just really intense. And then the degrees too. I don't like when people display their own degrees. I think it could be off putting. I guess it goes both ways. I don't do that in an office where I see patients. I worry about that being off putting or making someone feel like uncomfortable or inferior. I feel like it's trying to communicate how smart you are. But why do you have to do it that way? [06:17] Portia Pendleton: I think it's also too like information that I might not want every single person to have. I think you can absolutely look people up and obviously there's so much information available now too. But maybe I don't want you knowing where I got my bachelor's. Maybe that's where my home state is. So I think again even just thinking about that I think more in maybe a presenter or like a lecturer. I think it's maybe something to right. [06:41] Dr. Katrina Furey: Like if you're on a zoom call for you're being interviewed by the news or something. He also had family pictures of remember Bob comes right in a patient like this will just zero in right away. So, again, that was like a big no no. And his book, Baby Steps, being, like, all over his own bookshelf, what do you think of that? [07:06] Portia Pendleton: So I laughed out loud when he was, like, pretending to find it. Let me peruse my bookshelf here and give you the book that I think would be so helpful. Oh, here it is. I wrote it. [07:18] Dr. Katrina Furey: I wrote it. It just came out and it's a big hit. [07:21] Portia Pendleton: And you owe me now, what, $30.29 95. I didn't even tell you I'm going. [07:27] Dr. Katrina Furey: To charge you for it. I know. This psychiatrist, again, I feel like is such a good character, and I hope psychiatrists aren't like this, but I think there might be some who sort of smell their own farts, as they say. [07:47] Portia Pendleton: Yeah, I mean, I think, too, the field, in my opinion, has come, like, a long, long way, and I think that's intentional and good. And I think psychiatry specifically has been more like, I'm the doctor. I'm in this position of power. And I think obviously we know that that's not helpful. So now you don't have the desk in between you. You are more accessible. You are still a caregiver, a helper, a healer and kind of taking on more of those identities than just like, in an ivory. Right, exactly. [08:18] Dr. Katrina Furey: Yeah. But what a perfect depiction of an egocentric psychiatrist. And I do have to say, as he's perusing his shelf, looking for his own book to give to Bob, you could tell he was really enjoying that, being able to give him his own book. And he was so excited that Good Morning America wants to interview him. I was like, oh, no. Am I Dr. Leo Marvin with this podcast? Because I'm really excited about it. And I was like, oh, no, I don't think so. I don't think so. Let's back up. [08:54] Portia Pendleton: Do you want to talk about the referral? [08:57] Dr. Katrina Furey: All day long we love talking about referral. So before we get into Dr. Marvin's office or before Bob gets into it, we see a colleague of his, give him a call to sort of talk about referring a patient to him. And I love that they pan to the colleague, like, frantically packing us stuff up, and he's like, I'm quitting the field. I'm leaving the country. I have to get out of here. [09:23] Portia Pendleton: Which sometimes I think we all feel like running away. [09:26] Dr. Katrina Furey: Yeah. [09:27] Portia Pendleton: But we don't. And we get supervision and self care and then we come back and hopefully. [09:32] Dr. Katrina Furey: You learn and have the support in the organization you work in to work with the patients. You feel like you have the capacity to help and not take on the ones who you're not equipped to help for whatever reason. Right, but so this colleague is trying to refer a patient to Dr. Marvin and really appeals to his narcissism by being like he really just needs a brilliant doctor. He knows what to do. And Dr Marvin, you see him sort of like that feels good and he feels so good and valued and he's like, yeah, you're right. I probably could help him. And I wrote down a couple of things that he said. He was like, always comes on time, always pays. Just things like that before he even gets into why is he in treatment to begin with? What were your thoughts? [10:29] Portia Pendleton: It's like he almost put everything out there. That is the positive spin of Bob's quote unquote issues. So he shows up every time because of course he does. He's probably 5 hours early because he wants to spend more time with you or making sure that he is paying. Because obviously that is a piece how we access care so he's not going to miss a payment and so on and so forth. But I think it also keeps you. [10:54] Dr. Katrina Furey: On the hook if he pays early. [10:55] Portia Pendleton: Right. [10:56] Dr. Katrina Furey: You're like indebted to him, right? He's got the power. [10:59] Portia Pendleton: And I think with referrals we tend to want those details. What kind of insurance do they have or do they come regularly? How do they schedule? Do they need an afternoon appointment or a day appointment? Those are questions that we might ask someone who's coming to us just so we can see if we're a good fit. [11:20] Dr. Katrina Furey: But what Dr marvin didn't ask is, why are you referring him out? And I think he didn't even think of it because he was so flattered and on such a high that this psychiatrist feels like he can't possibly help this patient. He needs someone brilliant and that's who he thought of. [11:37] Portia Pendleton: This was a takeaway for me and I was like, I think I need to tweak my questions a little bit. I'm going to ask some more. [11:46] Dr. Katrina Furey: Oh yeah, ask a little more background info details. Yeah. So we see that. I think the old psychiatrist even says like, I'm free once Dr. Marvin agrees to see him. And then we see Dr Marvin sort of phone conference again. Very ninety s out to his secretary. She steps away. Right? I know. I also hated that the secretary brought in the patient. I don't know, just so much. I don't like the way Dr Marvin does it. But anyway, he's like book him for brief telephone consultation after I return from vacation. And she's like, oh, he's your next patient. He's already here. And he's like, okay, I guess I'll see him because then I'm going to be gone for a month. And that's again for me like Therapist 101. Right? What were you going to say for you? [12:35] Portia Pendleton: I was going to say that exact same thing. You also don't spend ten minutes with someone again. Maybe that is a part of the theatrical piece. We don't have time to have an hour and a half session to watch. But he's with him so briefly gets all of this information is able to make all of these diagnoses and then I'm going to abandon you. [13:00] Dr. Katrina Furey: And I think that ten minute intro, I feel like, is more akin to. [13:06] Portia Pendleton: A screening phone call. [13:08] Dr. Katrina Furey: When someone new is coming to your practice and you spend, like, ten to 15 minutes on the phone with them, just talking, hearing what they're looking for, asking some of those questions, like insurance coverage, time of day, things. Like that. You sort of start to glean some information to figure out if you think you'll be able to help them, if you're a good fit or not. But yeah, it seemed like Dr. Marvin really quickly picked up on a lot of Bob's interpersonal issues. He walks right in and is like, can I call you Leo? Oh, that's your family. I'm going to get their names. Tell me about, like already you're like, oh, boundaries, boundaries, boundary. Like, this guy has really hard time with boundaries. Again, one day we'll have like a little jingle to play when we talk about boundaries, but again, to then still, after getting all of that, be like, okay, I'll see you in a month, right, and you're not going to have any trouble with this. [13:59] Portia Pendleton: But I did hear or I did pick up on, like he had a physician covering. That's good. If you're going away for an extended period of time and there's patients who need refills or just like a touch point, it's great to have a covering provider for you, right. [14:19] Dr. Katrina Furey: And that's standard of care. Again, I would have cautioned Dr. Marvin not to make the exception and squeeze him in and meet him before you're going away, maybe stick to the boundary of meeting with him when you get back. And if that's not going to work for him, then he would have found another provider in the interim. But again, I don't think Dr. Marvin is really thinking about that. His mind's on the Good Morning America interview. [14:44] Portia Pendleton: Vacation. [14:45] Dr. Katrina Furey: The vacation. And he just felt so good about himself when his colleague manipulated him to sort of dump this case on him. [14:53] Portia Pendleton: Yeah. So then we kind of are following Bob right back to his apartment. [14:58] Dr. Katrina Furey: He's taking baby steps. He took baby steps out the door. He comes back in the door, he walks all around his windows. You're just like, whoa. [15:05] Portia Pendleton: He gets in the elevator. I mean, funny. He screams. The camera kind of pans away, right? [15:16] Dr. Katrina Furey: We're back after another technical snafu. It's really hard to figure out batteries and podcast technology, but we are professionals, so we're going to jump right back in. I think we left off just talking about Bob very quickly attaching to Dr. Marvin and idealizing him. I would imagine in Bob's mind, he's now devaluing his former therapist and he sort of like, very quickly is healed, so to speak. He gets this book, Baby Steps, written by Dr. Marvin, handed to him by the very Dr. Marvin doesn't even read. [15:55] Portia Pendleton: It yet and is literally taking baby. [15:59] Dr. Katrina Furey: Steps literally taking baby steps to get out the door. Comes back in the door, takes baby steps around the office in an inappropriate manner, but then does get on the elevator, which he couldn't do coming in the door. Correct. So it's sort of this like, flight to wellness that is unbelievable. And in fact, it is unbelievable. Doesn't last long. Right. [16:20] Portia Pendleton: And we see Bob, like, checking his pulse on his way there multiple times. He seems to be like, repeating a mantra, having some sort of memory repetition prior to this appointment. [16:32] Dr. Katrina Furey: Right. [16:33] Portia Pendleton: I think he says, I feel good, I feel great, I feel wonderful, over and over and over again. [16:37] Dr. Katrina Furey: Right. And I thought it was interesting when he was walking to the appointment, repeating that to himself, they had another extra type character walk by who seemed to be having more like, paranoid thought processes going on. I thought that was an interesting juxtaposition. I also was shocked that Bob, it looked like he worked from home before. Working from home was a thing. Like he has his apartment with his fish, Gill. And then he was like, okay, bye, Gill, see you later. I'm going to work. And he sits at his desk and then punches in. And I wasn't sure what was up with that. [17:10] Portia Pendleton: Yeah. I don't know. I didn't catch that. I think it's just funny. Especially at that time, he's living in New York City with seemingly some sort of like a contamination phobia. Right. I don't know. And I think, again, they purposely show us it's like a dirty street. This man bumps into you. [17:28] Dr. Katrina Furey: He's using a handkerchief to touch everything. [17:30] Portia Pendleton: Yeah. [17:32] Dr. Katrina Furey: Right. I mean, that sounds like the ultimate exposure of all exposure to live in New York City and get through the day. I know. Diagnostically. What were you thinking as you were watching this? [17:45] Portia Pendleton: A lot of things. Yeah, definitely. Like some phobias, maybe some OCD in there. Obsessive compulsive disorder, panic symptoms. Kind of a panic disorder, I think, where maybe like, others seem to be curious is like kind of the bigger, though, overall overarching diagnosis. Is this a personality disorder? [18:08] Dr. Katrina Furey: Is this trauma? [18:10] Portia Pendleton: Yeah. What is going on here that is kind of anchoring all these other symptoms? [18:16] Dr. Katrina Furey: Right. Like, what's the base foundation of everything Bob's experiencing? [18:20] Portia Pendleton: Yeah. [18:20] Dr. Katrina Furey: He was really afraid of having Tourette's, remember? And he kept saying, like, well, if I fake it, then I don't have it. [18:25] Portia Pendleton: Right. [18:25] Dr. Katrina Furey: And even that I thought was really fascinating. Like, I could mull on that for a while. [18:33] Portia Pendleton: Seems like he has an ex partner, ex wife who he ended the relationship with because of a disagreement about Neil Diamond. [18:41] Dr. Katrina Furey: Right. And I love Dr. Marvin's analysis of that being like, oh, I see. So you left her because you don't like Neil Diamond. She didn't leave you for all of these other obvious reasons. Again, I thought that was a little early in the therapeutic relationship to point something out like that. But I think it served to, again, idealize him in Bob's eyes, which he probably enjoyed and sort of right away was sort of alluding to Bob's issues, I think, with abandonment, which we see by him taking such big steps to get to Dr. Marvin at Lake Winniposaki. [19:19] Portia Pendleton: Right. So what do you do? Are you seeing any kind of disorders with Dr. Leo? [19:28] Dr. Katrina Furey: Like, narcissism, for sure. I think he's just very classically a narcissist. I was really surprised he didn't wear a tweed coat at any point in this movie. I feel like psychiatrists are such a stereotype of them wearing, like, tweed coats with an old smoking pipe when he was preparing for the interview. Yeah, I was dying when he had the gun on the wall. [19:50] Portia Pendleton: In today's society, that would be a no go. Like you are. Please remove the gun from your mental health. [19:58] Dr. Katrina Furey: And then he settled on the bust of Freud I just couldn't. [20:01] Portia Pendleton: And make it with them. [20:04] Dr. Katrina Furey: And he made his family stand there and watch and chime in and like the weird puppets. [20:09] Portia Pendleton: Oh, my goodness. [20:10] Dr. Katrina Furey: The weird puppets. At first I thought that was just like, a weird decoration, but then he used it with his daughter. Oh, it was just weird. [20:17] Portia Pendleton: So his daughter Anna is played by Catherine I don't know how to say her last name. Erby Urbe. And she's in law and order. And I knew I recognized her. I mean, she was much younger movie, but I looked her up right after because I was like, where do I know her from? Where do I know her from? And then his wife, Faye. I feel like I know her from other things. I really liked her character. [20:40] Dr. Katrina Furey: Me too. [20:41] Portia Pendleton: I feel like it's almost like blissful ignorance or something. She was like, a good contradiction to her. [20:52] Dr. Katrina Furey: She was like an interesting combo between kind of seeming blissfully unaware, maybe even dim wooded. I hate to say it, but, like, in a sweet way to then sort of calling him out or pointing things out to him. But again, in a way that didn't seem like any of them were really listening to him when he was trying to say, like, this is inappropriate from it is. It totally is. Wildly, wildly. [21:20] Portia Pendleton: They felt bad for Bob, but they were like, oh, Bob needs this. And I was just like. [21:26] Dr. Katrina Furey: Leo was. [21:27] Portia Pendleton: Being, like, gaslit by his own family. [21:30] Dr. Katrina Furey: And then even by the psychiatric colleagues once he so we'll get there in a second. But in terms of diagnoses, I mean, I think to me this is a really, again, over the top comedic depiction of something like a cluster b personality disorder, like borderline personality disorder or something like that. I think we see a lot of the common, I guess, defense mechanisms that you often see with cases like this. Like the splitting we see a lot of splitting, which is kind of like what we're just talking about with his family, being able to convince all the family members that he's so good and he needs their help. But then Dr. Leo is seeing, like, oh, this is really inappropriate and making me uncomfortable, seeing things as either all good or all bad. That black or white thinking is really apparent in so many ways. [22:31] Portia Pendleton: I guess. [22:31] Dr. Katrina Furey: Should we talk a little bit about what is borderline personality disorder before we sort of dive in? Yeah. [22:37] Portia Pendleton: So so let me just say this before we do that, because I think this is almost like my big question about his diagnosis is, like, at times I was wondering if he was intentionally manipulating people or at other times it seemed like he had just, like, no idea self awareness. [23:00] Dr. Katrina Furey: But was that an act? Is that you're wondering? [23:02] Portia Pendleton: That's where I'm kind of on the fence of even just like to take someone who maybe has their own stuff narcissism and literally render them insane. Right. For lack of a better word. And I'm just like, that takes a big skill. [23:24] Dr. Katrina Furey: Yeah. [23:25] Portia Pendleton: And I'm just like, what is the skill again? Is it intentional? Is it not? Is it to get a need met? Or is it more like sociopathic? Right. So why don't you take us through some borderline traits? [23:36] Dr. Katrina Furey: Yeah, I think I always struggle to explain borderline personality traits or disorder to sort of like people not in the mental health field because I think it's complicated. But the way we think about in the field, personality disorders are persistent ways of relating to ourselves and other people in behaving and interacting with others that sort of become apparent. These patterns become apparent by early adulthood and persist. So these aren't maladaptive ways of coping that only come out when you're under severe distress or really depressed or having a psychotic episode or things like that. This is more like a pattern of relating to people that persist sort of in all your relationships and over the course of your life. So for borderline personality disorder in particular, it's defined as a pervasive pattern of instability in interpersonal relationships, self image and affects, which is like, the way people express their mood. So sort of like the way your face looks, the way how loud you're talking, if you're crying or not. That sort of thing. Along with market impulsivity beginning by early adulthood, present in a variety of contexts with five or more of the following symptoms frantic efforts to avoid real or imagined abandonment which don't include things like suicidal gestures or self injurious behavior like cutting. That's another diagnostic criteria. A pattern of unstable and intense interpersonal relationships characterized by alternating between extremes of idealization and devaluation. I saw that a lot with Bob really idealizing Dr. Marvin, like, to everyone around him. [25:25] Portia Pendleton: I didn't really see devaluation. [25:28] Dr. Katrina Furey: I guess I did when he briefly spoke of his old therapist, okay, he ran through he's had several. Sometimes when patients come to us and they've been in treatment with someone else for a while, there is this period of mourning or sort of comparing you to them, trying to get a feel for just get a feel for a new relationship. You don't often just like 100% dive in right away. That's sort of more in line with personality characteristics like this identity disturbance, unstable self image or sense of self impulsivity in at least two areas that are potentially self damaging, like spending sex, substance abuse, reckless driving or binge eating, recurrent suicidal behavior, gestures or threats, and or self injurious behaviors like cutting, affective instability. Again, that's like your emotional reaction. So sort of swinging really quickly from one pole of emotions like on the happiness positive side, to the negative pull of emotions like the sadness anger side. And oftentimes these mood swings are really intense, can have some sadness, irritability, anxiety, but they only last from like a few hours to a few days. So that's what's different about borderline personality disorder compared to things like bipolar disorder is those mood swings in bipolar disorder also go along with changes in your behavior, the way you think, the way you speak that last for much longer and don't so quickly turn on and off. And then the last couple of diagnostic criteria are chronic feelings of emptiness and inappropriate intense anger or difficulty controlling your anger, like with frequent verbal outbursts, recurrent physical altercations, and lastly, transient stress related paranoid thoughts or severe dissociative symptoms in the most severe cases. I don't think Bob displays all of these characteristics, but I think certainly this fear of abandonment is evident like right from the get go. It's interesting to me that he didn't feel abandoned by his old therapist. Maybe that's because he's so quickly attached. [27:41] Portia Pendleton: And idealized like he might have behind the scenes. [27:44] Dr. Katrina Furey: True. [27:45] Portia Pendleton: Until then, he was connected with to this new person. [27:48] Dr. Katrina Furey: I mean, the fact that he follows him to the lake, some might call that stalking. I always wonder why didn't Dr. Marvin call the police at some point and the whole faking his suicide to manipulate the poor woman who is covering the phone to give him the address. [28:07] Portia Pendleton: But like really clever. Really clever. [28:10] Dr. Katrina Furey: And then at the end, he even boosts her ego, right, by saying like, oh, Bob did say he loved I forget her name. He loved Loretta or whatever her name was. She was so nice. Can we he knows what to say to get you to do what he needs you to do for him. And again, that is manipulative. And we do see that in all sorts of different patients to get their needs met. [28:33] Portia Pendleton: Sure. I mean, I think why we typically don't diagnose any personality disorders really until we like to kind of wait until early, after 18 is because there's a lot of, you know, a lot of teen behavior. Is that our borderline symptoms. [28:49] Dr. Katrina Furey: Right. [28:50] Portia Pendleton: So, like, really having trouble regulating your emotions, difficulty with interpersonal relationships, impulsivity. [28:58] Dr. Katrina Furey: It's like, all of that has to. [28:59] Portia Pendleton: Do so much with your brain not being developed all the way. [29:01] Dr. Katrina Furey: Yeah. [29:02] Portia Pendleton: And learning. Right. All these things also really common to toddlers. Right. [29:06] Dr. Katrina Furey: This is like a toddler, but in an adult body. And you kind of think psychologically patients with personality traits like this are kind of psychologically stunted in that developmental phase. And why is a good question. Like most things, we think of it as a combo of genetics and environmental factors. But a lot of people with personality traits like this do have pretty significant trauma history, especially in childhood. I really wondered about Bob's history. I wish we had learned anything about it. [29:37] Portia Pendleton: Yeah. I'd like to know more about his relationship with his ex wife. How long were they together? What did their relationship look like? [29:45] Dr. Katrina Furey: And was it really, in his mind, the Neil Diamond thing? Like, did he idealize her until then? And then was like, oh, we can't come back from this. I could see that with Bob. [29:54] Portia Pendleton: And again, I'd say, not that there's true or false borderline but I think people can have traits at points of time or can demonstrate traits in extreme times of stress 100%. But this is all day, kind of every day in situations where the reaction that they're presenting with is inappropriate. Right. [30:19] Dr. Katrina Furey: I think that reminds me one time in my training, nancy McWilliams came and gave a big talk and she is a wonderful author. I don't know if you've read any of her work, but she writes a lot about personality development. And, like, in our first year of residency, we all read her book because it outlines all the different personality disorders and the common defense mechanisms you see with them really well. And I think we all felt a little relieved when she said something like, we all get a little borderline if we're under enough stress. I think everyone was like, oh, okay. Yeah, we do. But, yeah, a lot of other things can also look like this. Like trauma. I mean, a lot of people who have been traumatized or especially grow up in chaotic environments learn how to manipulate to survive and get what they want or have a really severe fear of abandonment. We can see these other things. And again, I don't think he met the full criteria. I was also wondering about, like, a dependent personality disorder. Someone who, again, feels so dependent on their therapist or their primary attachment figure and it's almost like their own self disappears if they're not around this person. Right. Yeah. [31:37] Portia Pendleton: I think that it's a good movie that many programs have you analyzed because I think it isn't super clear. So you can kind of take different ways of thinking about how he presents. [31:56] Dr. Katrina Furey: Eventually. Unfortunately, Bob does kind of drive his psychiatrist mad. I. Mean, he gets to the point where he like ties him up in the woods and wants to kill him. And I was like, Whoa, that's intense. But he also tries to drop him off at a psychiatric unit and like sign him in and the staff there were like, well, you know, we're going to have to agree with you. We're not just going to sign someone in. And he felt so confident they'd all see what he was seeing and then they didn't. [32:21] Portia Pendleton: I know, what a talent for splitting, right? [32:26] Dr. Katrina Furey: But I thought it was interesting when Dr. Marvin was there like totally aghast that he called him a narcissist and a sociopath rather than borderline or dependent personality. I thought that was interesting. Did you catch that or what do you think about that? [32:40] Portia Pendleton: I think it was almost like Dr. Marvin, I don't know, like wanting to make it as severe as it possibly right. Like and you know, again, I think Bob does demonstrate some traits right, of of a lot of things. So you know, I think Dr. Marvin was just like, what do you mean? Bob is in there holding court, making. [33:03] Dr. Katrina Furey: Everybody laugh, telling jokes with mental health focus that are like offensive. [33:09] Portia Pendleton: I think Marvin or Leo was just kind of like shocked and reached but. [33:14] Dr. Katrina Furey: Then it's also like as soon as Bob showed up at Lake Winnipesaki, no more treatment relationship. Like now it is over. It's over. Right. [33:26] Portia Pendleton: But he could see Dr. Marvin kind of started with a really firm boundary and then it's like Bob push and he pushed hard. That's a fact. It was very annoying. He was very pushy. He was very, well, if you just do this for me, I'll leave. And finally I think Leah was like, okay, sure, right. [33:50] Dr. Katrina Furey: And I think again, him being an older psychiatrist who's written a book, you think he's seasoned. He's been around the block. Again, I think goes to show that patients with personality traits like this can sort of manipulate and push even the most seasoned professional. Sure. And it is sort of like this boundary nudging over and over and over and you could tell there were points where Leo thought like, okay, fine, if I call you at four then you'll leave me alone. But I think that's a risk. And again, that's why boundaries are so important to maintain right from the get go, to not give that message like. [34:29] Portia Pendleton: Oh, I can get you, and picking up early on things that are red flag. I mean, red flag. [34:36] Dr. Katrina Furey: Can I call you Leo, Dr. Marvin like right away you're asking about your family or all of it was right away. And again, there wouldn't be a movie if Dr. Marvin had said, no, this isn't a good fit. But at any point he could have. [34:50] Portia Pendleton: What did you think about that couple I love they were such a fun addition in the diner who were really getting it they do not like, Dr. Marvin. [35:00] Dr. Katrina Furey: Sounds like he stole their dream house from them. And so this was finally like their. [35:04] Portia Pendleton: Payback from New York. [35:06] Dr. Katrina Furey: So this was finally their payback. But I did love how they dropped. [35:09] Portia Pendleton: Him off, but they were just like, hey, Dr. Marvin. [35:12] Dr. Katrina Furey: Oh, I know where he lives. [35:13] Portia Pendleton: I'll take you right there. They knew that that was inappropriate. They were like, Ha. [35:18] Dr. Katrina Furey: I thought that was a really funny detail. I loved when Dr. Marvin was trying to encourage Bob to pick a vacation from his series, and then he shows up the next day in his shirt. That's like, don't hassle me, I'm on vacation. Right? [35:36] Portia Pendleton: He almost takes things too literally at times, right. With the baby step. [35:41] Dr. Katrina Furey: It's so concrete, I guess. So primitive, right? [35:43] Portia Pendleton: Which then is like, so you makes me think, okay, so he really doesn't have the awareness, but then he does things and I'm like, whoa, what you're doing here? [35:51] Dr. Katrina Furey: Right? [35:53] Portia Pendleton: That's where I'm just kind of left confused on this presentation, right? [35:57] Dr. Katrina Furey: 100%. I thought it was really fascinating how they depicted Bob being able to connect with Leo's kids in a way that Leo couldn't. And I think there is this stereotype or joke, I guess, in the mental health field that maybe your kids will have that you'll always be analyzing them so then they won't open up to you. And they sort of depicted that in a funny way. But I think we're all kind of fearful of actually happening. [36:30] Portia Pendleton: Well, when he uses the puppet of the daughter oh, my gosh. In public. I know his daughter is older. I could see again, therapy. And we use dolls and that's something that I no longer do, but it was definitely useful. And that might thing that we would encourage a parent to do when they are a child inside their home, not in a public place. [36:57] Dr. Katrina Furey: When you're just having dolls in his pocket, right? Like, he's just carrying those dolls around, waiting, and they look like them. So creepy. [37:05] Portia Pendleton: It was just so weird. [37:06] Dr. Katrina Furey: Oh my God. Like, so creepy. Portia, if a weird, creepy doll ever shows up on your doorstep, it's from me. [37:15] Portia Pendleton: That's good to know because I would probably have some panic. Yeah, I'd have some panic around it. [37:20] Dr. Katrina Furey: But then that and when he brought Siggy, I couldn't get over his kid's name. It just was like, oh my God. And that's where his wife's so sweet, but you don't intervene and be like, this is too far. Now you're idealizing Freud. Like, this is where you are. But bringing his son out to teach him to dive, and he's like, this is so important to me. I have my big interview tomorrow. I have a lot to prepare, but I am carving out time for you. And you know, like, in his head he's thinking, so you better be grateful and dive. You better do it. [37:48] Portia Pendleton: And then you got pressure, right? I think the intention and maybe not, but the intention is like, I want you to know that this is important to me, but it's like the delivery made it really bad and seem like we got to get this done. I have all these other things that are more important, and you better perform. [38:07] Dr. Katrina Furey: The way I want you to. It's a very narcissistic thing to say. And that's when Bob helps him learn to dive. I was just like there were points like that where it was like, does Bob know what he's doing? And then the other scene for me was when his wife invites him for dinner and he keeps making all these moaning, oh, my God. [38:26] Portia Pendleton: Noises. I felt so uncomfortable. [38:28] Dr. Katrina Furey: I know about how good the food is, but then it's also kind of sexual. And he's, like, really complimenting his wife and he asks for more chicken and she gives him the breast piece. And that's where someone asks if Leo wants it. And he's like, no, that's okay. But there were just all these sexual innuendos, and it was like, is that where he knows what he's doing? He's really, like, getting one over. [38:53] Portia Pendleton: I also felt that or was maybe I didn't feel it. Maybe I was nervous that I was going to feel that with his daughter. [38:59] Dr. Katrina Furey: Yeah, right. [39:01] Portia Pendleton: She kicked him on the cheek. I just felt like there was a little flare of inappropriateness there besides yes, the boundary issue inappropriate, but there was like a little extra, too, of like, maybe some teenage daughter. [39:17] Dr. Katrina Furey: I felt so uncomfortable when he was wearing Leo's pajamas and in his son's room. I was like and then we learned that Siggy is like this deep soul who's so preoccupied with the purpose of life and we're all going to die and all these things, but yeah, gosh, I can't imagine what I'd feel like if a patient showed up on my family vacation. Yeah, not good. [39:45] Portia Pendleton: No, I mean and even on accident, like, I you know, and again, like, we are human. And like, if you practice within an hour radius of where you live, like, you're going to see people run into people, whether it's on a playground or at a grocery store or in some way at a doctor's office. And it just so many therapists joke about just put your hat on and go about your day. But also it's kind of like when you're little and you see your teacher. [40:13] Dr. Katrina Furey: Out, you're like you exist outside the. [40:15] Portia Pendleton: Confines of the class. [40:16] Dr. Katrina Furey: Exactly. You're a real person. What are you doing? [40:19] Portia Pendleton: And we do so I think if you saw a patient who did not follow you, if you saw a patient on vacation, you acknowledge it. If they do, maybe you're a little uncomfortable, but you get over it and don't do anything wildly inappropriate in public. [40:33] Dr. Katrina Furey: Right? Yeah, but if they just show up I'm realizing push. A lot of our early episodes are about stalking. I feel like we could analyze that in ourselves. [40:44] Portia Pendleton: I was feeling like he was stalking him. I mean, regardless of the need, regardless of how it relates to whatever diagnosis it feels like stalking. And stalking is scary. [40:57] Dr. Katrina Furey: It's scary. So again, I was like Liam Arbor again, there wouldn't be a movie if he got a protective order and things like that. And then at the end, when he. [41:07] Portia Pendleton: Marries oh, my gosh. And becomes a therapist oh, gosh. [41:11] Dr. Katrina Furey: And writes a book. Death Therapy. [41:14] Portia Pendleton: And Leo suits them. And Leo is just like right. Like a nonverbal brought to the wedding. [41:21] Dr. Katrina Furey: So, like catatonic, basically. [41:23] Portia Pendleton: And it's like, did bob? Is it possible? And I guess it is in the movies that one person can really drive you mad and disrupt your whole world sense of self, everything. [41:36] Dr. Katrina Furey: I know. [41:37] Portia Pendleton: And I guess in this movie it happened. [41:39] Dr. Katrina Furey: I know we talked a little bit. [41:43] Portia Pendleton: About some of the stuff in the office. Obviously, potentially getting a protective order. What are other steps maybe you would take that Dr. Marvin did not with Leah or Bob showing up on the vacation. [41:56] Dr. Katrina Furey: Oh, my God. I mean, for me, it wouldn't even get there because I don't think I'd take on, like, the whole referral phone call would go very differently. Oh, my God, you're showing up on vacation. I feel like I would call the police. That's what I would do. [42:11] Portia Pendleton: Yeah. [42:11] Dr. Katrina Furey: I'd be really scared. Yeah. Especially if my kids were there. Yeah. I don't think there's any coming back from that. I don't think there's any. And I thought, like, when he first called and pretended to be the sister again how did he know he had a sister? I don't know. Sometimes you just get a sister or brother. And I guess he was right. That, for me, would have been grounds to stop. I mean, there was a lot of grounds to stop. But that, for me, would have been that deception and lying. And I thought what Leo said to him actually was really sound like the therapeutic relationship is based in trust. If you lie to get to me, I can't trust you. But it just escalated him. [42:53] Portia Pendleton: It seemed like in the movie and it is a movie there was nothing that Leo could have done besides not take him on to kind of stop him. At that point. They had already kind of developed this relationship because he did say that. And I thought that was a really good way to put it. I think he was, again, like a firm initially. Firm initially. Firm initially. And then Bob kept pushing, pushing, pushing and then would get wanted. And then kind of learned that he learned how to manipulate Leo with his using his family kind of other tactics. [43:27] Dr. Katrina Furey: Right. And the suicide thing is also really striking, I thought. Again, it's a movie but someone calls him in the middle of the night to tell him he's committed suicide and he has like 1 second of feelings about it and then it's like I don't want to let it ruin my vacation. I feel like if that were to happen in real life you'd be distraught to hear something like that. But it's a movie. But again so I think all the more why it was so shocking when all of a sudden he was there and he just like gets off the bus and starts shouting his name with the fish. With the fish. I know. The fish I found really interesting as this attachment but then it went away. Right. [44:11] Portia Pendleton: He was a strong attachment only friend. Whatever he brings with him, he then takes care of. He then leaves at the house, he. [44:19] Dr. Katrina Furey: Comes back for it. [44:20] Portia Pendleton: But then after that we don't see. [44:22] Dr. Katrina Furey: It as much the fish anymore. [44:23] Portia Pendleton: And I'm wondering is that because he developed this attached he doesn't need the fish anymore? Now he's a whole new family, right? [44:29] Dr. Katrina Furey: I think so. I think in his mind he really does move on that quickly. Yeah, I think so. [44:37] Portia Pendleton: How did you feel watching the movie? [44:39] Dr. Katrina Furey: Nervous. [44:40] Portia Pendleton: Yeah, nervous. [44:41] Dr. Katrina Furey: I mean there are funny parts like Bill Murray's hilarious. All of the actors and actresses did a really good job in their roles. Like I thought it was an enjoyable movie. I think it's hard to watch as a psychiatrist. [44:53] Portia Pendleton: I agree. [44:54] Dr. Katrina Furey: I think it'd be just funny maybe if I was not in this field. But I think having interacted with patients who suffer from whether it's borderline personality disorder or some other trauma or I guess you could just call it interpersonal difficulties, it really did speak to the dynamics of that. And when you have someone who's really struggling on an impatient unit and the whole staff's riled up right, like half of them in a positive way, strong feelings of affection like the whole team when Bob's cracking jokes and then the other half in a negative way who are on the negative side of the split. So I think that was hard to watch but again, depicted in such an on the nose but right way and. [45:42] Portia Pendleton: I think that's where a patient can present very differently. [45:47] Dr. Katrina Furey: Right. [45:47] Portia Pendleton: So I think if a patient who has a personality disorder maybe specific to something like borderline presents to you and you are on their quote unquote good side, they are an entirely different patient. And I think you might not even know that there's all of this other stuff going on and sometimes all of a sudden it comes out and you're like wow, shocked. Or kind of rethinking the treatment plan, rethinking everything. But I think that just speaks to how pervasive it is. It's also not an act, it's who they are presenting to you and then something kind of might trigger them to. [46:22] Dr. Katrina Furey: Change the often like a feeling of rejection or fear of abandonment. Again, that's where having a really good quality group team is really important, I think, in treating patients with Bpd. Yeah. And things like DBT, like we've talked about, can be really helpful, but it's hard to do on your own. [46:42] Portia Pendleton: No, totally. And I think it's hard to have support and access good treatment for Bpd. I mean, I think we've talked about medications for it. It's really hard to treat in the sense that there's no pill that's going to make it better. There's medications that can help symptoms that, you know, and then it's a lot of work, and it's a really, really it is. [47:08] Dr. Katrina Furey: Because, again, it's not just again, you're totally right. Portia the medications. There isn't, like, one medicine for borderline personality disorder. Oftentimes you're providing medications to provide symptom relief, whether that's depression, anxiety, insomnia, it could be different things for different people. And then the therapy is what I really think is at the crux of the treatment. But you have to be in a stable enough place to do the therapy, and you have to feel a sense of trust, and that's really hard. A lot of patients with these traits have been really burned. They've either lived through really traumatic things, or they have had a hard time maintaining relationships. Right. [47:48] Portia Pendleton: Yeah. So it's not an easy disorder to experience, and it's not an easy disorder to treat. [47:55] Dr. Katrina Furey: Right. But there is treatment out there, and people do get better. And I have been impressed and happy to see more and more people talking about having this. I remember the football player from a couple of years ago. Yeah. Pete Davidson came out about it. Selena Gomez has talked about how helpful she found DBT. I don't think she's ever mentioned if she's been diagnosed with this or not. Again, she does not have to. That's her personal health information. But I think by just destigmatizing, it can be really helpful. And the woman, Marsha Linihan, who pioneered DBT, has been very open about having borderline personality disorder herself, I believe. So. Again, I find a lot of the professionals in the community who work with these patients have a personal or family connection, and they get it. That's kind of why they're invested in this type of work, so you can learn how to regulate and interact with people in a way that can lead to a more meaningful life. Unfortunately, that did not happen for Bob or Leo. [49:01] Portia Pendleton: Yeah. I felt, I think, very similarly to you. I really struggled to find any of it funny. I was, like, horrified. I was stressed. I was anxious. I felt empathy at the end a lot for Leo and just, like, his, I don't know, predicament. [49:23] Dr. Katrina Furey: So I've noticed every time I've watched this movie, I think I've seen it three times. I'm engaged at the beginning. As soon as he shows up at Winniposaki, I start cleaning or going on my phone. And then by the end, I'm always more on my phone than engaged. And now as we're talking about it. I think that just reflects how uncomfortable I feel that I'm having to disengage as it gets more and more intense. [49:46] Portia Pendleton: Yeah, I agree, because I think I was talking to my partner about the movie. He had seen it years and years ago and he was like, oh, it's so funny. And then he was coming in here and there watching clips of it and laughing, and I was just like stone face sitting there so uncomfortable. And I was like, that should never happen, and pointing all these things out. And he's enjoying the movie because it's ridiculous. It is, at the end of the day, a comedy. It's funny, it's silly, it's not supposed. [50:14] Dr. Katrina Furey: To be, but I think there's such a thread of truth to it that it's terrifying. Yeah, that was a good one. [50:24] Portia Pendleton: Yeah. I'm, like ready to watch something light hearted that's light and not going to make me kind of stay up at night. [50:32] Dr. Katrina Furey: There you go. Well, I think next time we're going to be talking about encanto and we'll have our very first guest host, one of my former colleagues from residency, Dr. Christina Aradondo. That's a little lighter. Hopefully it doesn't keep you up in. [50:48] Portia Pendleton: The it was a great movie. I'm excited for our listeners to hear that podcast. Our guest is really very highly intelligent, knowledgeable, and was really lovely to talk to. [50:59] Dr. Katrina Furey: She was. [51:00] Portia Pendleton: Yeah. [51:01] Dr. Katrina Furey: All right, guys. Well, like always, don't forget to rate, review, subscribe, and share with your friends and family near and far. And I guess we will see you next time. Yeah, thanks. [51:11] Portia Pendleton: Bye. [51:19] Dr. Katrina Furey: This podcast and its contents are a copyright of analyzed scripts, all rights reserved. Any redistribution or reproduction of part or all of the contents in any form is prohibited. Unless you want to share it with your friends and rate, review and subscribe, that's fine. All stories and characters discussed are fictional in nature. No identification with actual persons, living or deceased places, buildings, or products is intended or should be inferred. This podcast is for entertainment purposes only. The podcast and its contents do not constitute professional mental health or medical advice. Listeners might consider consulting a mental health provider if they need assistance with any mental health problems or concerns. As always, please call 911 or go directly to your nearest emergency room for any psychiatric emergencies. Thanks for listening and see you next time. Our sand.

15 Minutes Ov Flame With Robert Phoenix
11-25-22 Friday FARcast - The Freud Fraud and 20th Century Fallout With Russ Winter

15 Minutes Ov Flame With Robert Phoenix

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2022 132:58


On the last Friday of each month, Russ Winter of http://winterwatch.net jumps on board and on this episode of FAR, Russ unloads on Sigmund Freud and the outright scam of his psychoanalytic approach, which shaped modern psychiatric theory for nearly the whole of the 20th century, influencing millions with his half baked theories, all mostly based around keeping his the daughters of well paying Viennese clients in a constant state of therapy to deal with their hysteria. Freud had discovered that the source of their emotional turmoil was in fact due to their being sexually molested at home. But once Freud confronted the parents, they were furious and threatened to stop payment and treatment. Freud then forged his Oedipal theories and ascribed them to the girls hysteria, thus making sure the payments for their therapy would keep flowing.Freud was also a coke head and thought it was the cure all for just about anything, even doing his own (flawed) studies on himself as a user.In short, an entire field of work that was taken very seriously was the imaginarium of a crackpot.Freud's daughter, Anna went on to bring his work to the USA and corporatize Freudian thought and treatment. Later in Anna's life, she had realized she had made serious errors in applying her father's work as a canvas for "normalcy" in post WWII America.We get into this and a lot more with Sigmund Fraud.

Méta de Choc
Que vaut la psychanalyse ? avec Jacques Van Rillaer — SHOCKING ! #25.4

Méta de Choc

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 21, 2022 61:29


Chapitre 4 : Une abondante progéniture.Parler de la psychanalyse, c'est parler de Freud bien sûr, et le resituer dans son époque, mais c'est aussi évoquer celles et ceux qui lui ont succédé.De son vivant, Freud a côtoyé et formé énormément de professionnel•les de la santé mentale, qui ont ensuite fait vivre et évoluer la psychanalyse au fil des décennies. Qui sont ces gens et qu'ont-ils apporté à la connaissance de la psyché humaine ?•• SOUTENIR ••Méta de Choc est gratuit, indépendant et sans publicité. Vous pouvez vous aussi le soutenir en faisant un don ponctuel ou mensuel : https://metadechoc.fr/tree/•• RESSOURCES ••Toutes les références en lien avec cette émission sont sur le site Méta de Choc : https://metadechoc.fr/podcast/que-vaut-la-psychanalyse/•• SUIVRE ••Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, PeerTube, YouTube.•• TIMECODES ••01:17 : Les neurosciences confirment-elles les théories de Freud ? Théorie du frayage, plasticité cérébrale, Boson de Higgs, réflexe de Semmelweis, études neuroscientifiques.05:33 : Freud était-il un héros ? Auto-analyse, Freud était-il un charlatan ? mensonges de Freud, traitement par la cocaïne, guérison des hystériques, neurasthénie et masturbation, récits d'incestes, aveux forcés.11:10 : Alfred Adler : volonté de puissance de Nietzsche, socialiste, complexe d'infériorité, psychologue clinicien, biais d'interprétation, biais de sélection, Karl Popper.19:26 : Otto Rank et Sandor Ferenczi : le traumatisme de la naissance, désir de retour à la mère, discorde sur l'efficacité de la thérapie, psychanalyse active, exclusion.25:18 : Carl Gustav Jung : inconscient collectif, archétypes, féminin universel, anima, animus, persona, masque social, synchronicités, individuation, spiritualité, occultisme, conflit avec Freud, archétype de la pomme, analyses didactiques, le thérapeute se met en risque pendant la thérapie, influence sur le mouvement New Age, alchimie, pensée par analogie.38:33 : Wilhelm Reich : spiritualité, intuition, marxisme, libération sexuelle, énergie cosmique, énergie vitale, cuirasse caractérielle, psychologie des masses, paranoïaque, brise-nuage, orgone, critique de la pulsion de mort, thérapie biodynamique, Fritz Perls, Gestalt thérapie, théories très variées en psychanalyse, Wilhelm Steckel, angoisse de la mort, confirmation de la théorie par le patient, L'Homme au rat, la psychanalyse s'autoconfirme.46:57 : Les femmes de la psychanalyse : Lou Andréa Salomé, Anna Freud, Marie Bonaparte, Gustave Lebon, plaisir clitoridien, traduction des textes de Freud en français.52:00 : Dans les pays anglo-saxons : Ernest Jones, fuite des psychanalystes juifs en Angleterre et aux États-Unis, Melanie Klein, inconscient du nourrisson, complexe d'Œdipe, mère dévorante, fantasme de destruction du sein de la mère, Donald Winnicott, objet transitionnel, mère suffisamment bonne, John Bowlby, théorie de l'attachement affectif, Konrad Lorenz, imprégnation, psychologie cognitive. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Méta de Choc
Que vaut la psychanalyse ? avec Jacques Van Rillaer — SHOCKING ! #25.3

Méta de Choc

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2022 59:15


NOTE IMPORTANTE : Au sujet de l'amnésie traumatique, il existe des cas où le traumatisme crée un cloisonnement de l'information et un fonctionnement neurologique spécifique. Nous n'avons pas développé cet aspect ici, mais il en sera question plus en détail dans la série SHOCKING ! 26.Chapitre 3 : La méthode en question.Le fer de lance de la psychanalyse, ce sont les cas de patients présentés comme emblématiques à la fois des souffrances humaines et de l'efficacité de la méthode de Freud. Examinons donc quelques-uns de ces cas, et passons les théories du père fondateur au crible des écrits historiques et des connaissances scientifiques actuelles.Dans ce troisième volet, Jacques Van Rillaer continue de déplier la carte du monde freudien et nous guide pas à pas sur le chemin sinueux des fondements de la psychanalyse.•• SOUTENIR ••Méta de Choc est gratuit, indépendant et sans publicité. Vous pouvez vous aussi le soutenir en faisant un don ponctuel ou mensuel : https://metadechoc.fr/tree/•• RESSOURCES ••Toutes les références en lien avec cette émission sont sur le site Méta de Choc : https://metadechoc.fr/podcast/que-vaut-la-psychanalyse/•• SUIVRE ••Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn, PeerTube, YouTube.•• TIMECODES ••01:07 : Les grands cas de la psychanalyse : Anna O., Joseph Breuer, Petit Hans, peur des chevaux, complexe d'Œdipe, phobie, thérapie comportementale, Dora, hystérie, masturbation, énurésie, interprétations abusives, Anna Freud, Mélanie Klein, scène primitive.18:07 : D'autres cas de Freud : L'Homme aux loups, trouble maniaco-dépressif, bipolarité, interprétation des rêves, renversement dans son contraire, Horace Frink, suggestion, manipulation, cynisme, désillusions de Freud.29:37 : Les théories de Freud à l'épreuve de la science : la psychanalyse est-elle irréfutable ? l'inconscient, processus inconscient, fantôme de la machine, refoulement, rumination, mémoire épisodique, mémoire traumatique, associations libres, comportementalisme, phobie des araignées, bonne ou mauvaise interprétation, décodage symbolique, jeux de mots, constitution des rêves pendant le sommeil paradoxal, jouissance, désir d'inceste, complexe d'Œdipe, complexe d'Électre, impact de la libido infantile sur la vie d'adulte, voyeurisme, envie du pénis, complexe de castration.49:43 : Le manque de méthode statistique : Françoise Dolto, frigidité, Philippe Grimbert, cigarette, pulsion de mort, concept mentaliste, raisonnement circulaire, Molière, Le Médecin imaginaire. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

radioWissen
Im Bunde mit dem Vater: Anna Freud

radioWissen

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2022 18:41


Tochter sein ein Leben lang. Schicksal, aber auch Chance, die Anna Freud genutzt hat. Keine kannte Sigmund Freud so wie sie. Ein schwieriger Balanceakt, den eigenen Weg zu finden, der doch so stark von ihm geprägt war. Eine unermüdliche Helferin für den kranken Vater und die ihr anvertrauten Patienten. Besonders den kleinen fühlte sie sich ein Leben lang verpflichtet. Die Kinderanalyse, die keineswegs als "Abklatsch" der klassischen Psychoanalyse zu sehen ist, bleibt mit ihr verbunden. In dem Verständnis, im Kind eben nicht den kleinen Erwachsenen zu sehen, ist sie auch ihrer "Konkurrentin" Melanie Klein um einiges voraus. Das englische Vorschulwesen ist stark von Anna Freud geprägt worden. Eine Seelen- und Sozialarbeiterin par excellence. (BR 2006)

Historically Thinking: Conversations about historical knowledge and how we achieve it

On March 15, 1938, Adolf Hitler addressed 250,000 Austrians in Vienna, announcing the end of the Austrian state. Close by on that same day, Nazis entered the apartment of Dr. Sigmund Freud and his family. They were literally bought off when first his wife Martha offered them cash, and then daughter Anna Freud opened a safe and gave them the equivalent of $840. At this point “the stern figure of Sigmund Freud himself suddenly appeared,” writes my guest Andrew Nagorski, “glaring at the intruders without saying anything…They addressed him as Herr Professor, and backed out of the apartment... After they left, Freud inquired how much money they had seized... He wryly remarked, 'I have never taken so much for a single visit'." It seems astonishing that the author of Civilization and Its Discontents, who seemed to have so few illusions about mankind and its “aggressive cruelty”, should have been there to witness the Anschluss. It's even more astonishing that even after the Anschluss he continued to insist that his life was safe, and that it was possible to “ride out the storm.” But a circle of friends and disciples not only persuaded Freud to leave, but then arranged his emigration to England, where he lived he last sixteen months of his life. Andrew Nagorski was bureau chief for Newsweek in Hong Kong, Moscow, Rome, Bonn, Warsaw, and Berlin. Author of seven books, his latest book is Saving Freud: The Rescuers Who Brought Him to Freedom, which is the subject of our conversation today.   For Further Investigation One of Nagorksi's previous books is Hitlerland: American Eyewitnesses to the Nazi Rise to Power. We discussed a part of that dystopian country's terrain, and how it came into being with horrifying speed, in a conversation with Peter Fritzsche that you can find in Episode 244: Hitler's First One Hundred Days. The general recommendation for the first place to read Freud are the lectures he gave at Clark University in 1909, published as Five Lectures on Psychoanalysis. Given the topic of Nagorski's book, you might also want to have a look at Civilization and Its Discontents The Sigmund Freud Archives in the Library of Congress; and a brief history of the collection Sigmund Freud Museum, Vienna Freud Museum, London

Police Off The Cuff
Traits of the Active shooter 18-22 years old #ActiveShooter #MassShootings #HighlandPark #Shooter

Police Off The Cuff

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2022 61:26


Traits of the Active shooter 18-22 years old #ActiveShooter #MassShootings #HighlandPark #Shooter Traits of the Active shooter 18-22 years old #ActiveShooter #MassShootings #HighlandPark #ShooterMass shootings have increased significantly in the United States, according to the most recent data available from the FBI. Statistics show that from 2000 to 2007, mass shooting incidents averaged 6.4 incidents annually, while from 2008 to 2013, they increased to 16.4. As a result of this increase, several studies have looked at the individual motivations and psychological “micro-foundations” that drive targeted violence–everything from video games to religious beliefs–in an effort to help law enforcement officials understand mass shooting, hate crimes, terrorism, and violence not only in the United States but also abroad. A 2015 study published in Behavioral Sciences and the Law, “The Concept of Identification in Threat Assessment,” examines the relationship between psychological “identification”–or the process by which an unstable person subsumes his or her own identity and models themselves after a violent aggressor–and acts of targeted violence. The researchers are based at the University of California-San Diego and the State University of New York Upstate Medical University as well as the San Diego Psychoanalytic Center, the firm Operational Consulting International and the Institute of Psychology and Threat Management in Germany. The authors drew on information from reviews and indirect assessment of evidence of criminal cases, as well as consultation with psychiatrists, psychologists and judicial officials who had direct access to primary investigative evidence on the cases. They also examined four detailed case studies on perpetrators of targeted violence: Antares Wong, Seung-Hui Cho, Joseph Paul Franklin and Anders Breivik. In analyzing the psychology of the four “active shooters,” the study authors drew on the work of psychiatrists Sigmund and Anna Freud and Erik Erikson on psychosocial development. The study's findings include: The four perpetrators committed different acts of targeted violence, at different points in time, killing and injuring innocent people in the United States and abroad. Despite their differences, they all evidenced common expressions of “identification.” “In the context of threat assessment, identity becomes embedded in aggressive identifications, if not extremely violent images of the self in action, most often apparent in the fantasies of the young adult as a perpetrator of homicide against another.” Identification is characterized by one or more of five characteristics: pseudo-commando, warrior mentality, close association with weapons or other law-enforcement/military paraphernalia, identification with other attackers/assassins, and becoming an agent to advance a particular cause or belief system. Authors identified eight warning behaviors, including: Pathway warning behavior: research, planning, preparation, or implementation of an attack Fixation warning behavior: an increasingly pathological preoccupation with a person or a cause Identification warning behavior: a psychological desire to be a “pseudo-commando,” have a “warrior mentality,” closely associate with weapons or other military or law enforcement paraphernalia Novel aggression warning behavior: an act of violence that appears unrelated to any targeted violence pathway behavior which is committed for the first time Energy burst warning behavior: an increase in the frequency or variety of any noted activities related to the target Leakage warning behavior: the communication to a third party of intent to do harm to a target through an attack Last resort warning behavior: evidence of a violent “action/time imperative” Directly communicated threat warning behavior: the communication of a direct threat to the target or to law enforcement before at attack.

The Stress Nanny with Lindsay Miller
Wading through confusion

The Stress Nanny with Lindsay Miller

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2022 32:34


On this episode with America's Psychiatrist, Dr. Carole Lieberman helps parents and kids move through the confusion of the past few years into a place of intentional action. Encouraging parents to get involved in their children's lives, Dr. Lieberman says the biggest mistake we can make is thinking kids aren't impacted by world events. She gives some simple tools and activities parents can use to talk with kids about hard things. We touch on post-pandemic struggles kids are having, reactions to the war in the Ukraine and the general sense of uncertainty that is floating around. With years of wisdom as well as insights from books she's written on these topics, Dr. Lieberman helps us wade through confusion to a place of intentional, compassionate action. When you listen you'll feel seen in your current struggels and empowered to move forward with more confidence and resilience.Dr. Carole Lieberman is a Los Angeles Based board-certified psychiatrist and an award-winning and bestselling author. She was trained at NYU-Bellevue and at Anna Freud's London Clinic. She has served on the Clinical Faculty of UCLA's Neuropsychiatric Institute for years. When Dr. Carole isn't seeing patients or testifying at trials as a forensic psychiatrist/expert witness, she's working as a three-time, Emmy-honored TV personality who has appeared on Oprah, the Today Show, Good Morning America, CNN, Fox News, HLN, ET, ABC, CBS, NBC and many more. You can find her on twitter @DrCaroleMD or her websites:www.drcarole.com www.terroristtherapist.com www.expertwitnessforensicpsychiatrist.comLindsay Miller is known for her suitcase tricks and playful laugh. When she's not playing catch with her daughter or rollerblading on local trails with her husband, you can find her using her 20+ years of child development study and mindfulness certification to dream up new ways to get kids excited about deep breathing. Having been featured on numerous podcasts, platforms and publications, Lindsay's words of wisdom are high impact and leave a lasting impression wherever she goes. To download Lindsay's Mindfulness At Any Age Guide click here. To rate the podcast, please go to ratethispodcast.com/thestressnanny. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Dubious
Marilyn Monroe and Freud

Dubious

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2022 75:29


On the Freuds, films, and psychoanalysis in the life of Marilyn Monroe.In this episode we are talking all about psychoanalysis. What is it, where it came from, and how it directly contributed to Marilyn Monroe's decline and unfortunate suicide. If you like our content please subscribe to our premium episodes! We begin with a discussion of Sigmund Freud and psychoanalysis, and its impact on the culture of the late 19th and early 20th century. Thanks to Adam Curtis for the wonderful documentaries, but in particular for this episode we mention The Century of the Self, a BBC documentary that is one of the few in mass media to examine the impact of the theories of Freud in modern culture. 1 We then cover the life of Marilyn Monroe from the time of her childhood in orphanages on through her adult fame in the post WW2 American Film industry. Marilyn is inseparable from the film business, because of her association with the "method acting" school, Actors Studio, founded by Lee Strasburg with funding in large part provided by Marilyn. Sadly Strasburg's method was fundamentally incompatible with Marilyn personally, since it teaches people to draw on their past experiences to summon emotion for the camera, but Marilyn's past was mostly traumatic and only led to her continued psychiatric decline. 2 We also discuss Marilyn's relationships with Joe DiMaggio and Arthur Miller, and the conspiracy theories surrounding her affairs with Bobby Kennedy and John F. Kennedy. DiMaggio seemed to be her only reliable friend at times and Miller an unfortunate marriage of professional considerations that didn't work out. The irony of Arthur Miller relegating his wife to a secondary role in a movie starring her, coming from the author of Death of a Salesman, cannot possibly be overstated. Last but not least we cover in detail Marilyn's mistreatment at the hands of her psychiatrists, all of which were proteges of the Freuds, Anna in particular. Sadly Marilyn was not the only notable celebrity to die in the care of a Freud, Tiffany and Co. heiress Mabbie Burlingham died due to sucide in the care of Anna Freud as well. In Marylin's case she was most mistreated by Drs Marianne Kris in New York, who convinced Marilyn to commit herself to the Payne Whitney Mental Hospital in Manhattan (incidentally also the site of MKUltra experiments) where she was sexually assaulted by a staff physician, and by Ralph Greenson her psychoanalyst in Los Angeles who employed the bizarre technique of "adoption therapy" in which he convinced Marilyn to live in his house and pretend to be one of his family. We also talk a bit about Freud's bizarre first trip to America after World War I. 3, 4 As a book recommendation for this episode, we recommend Gloria Steinem's "Marilyn: Norma Jeane" as the most relevant to the subject matter we are discussing. It is not only a deeper dive into the same stories but includes iconic photos of Marilyn taken by the late, great celebrity photographer George Barris, who took the last picture of Marilyn before she died. 5 1. Adam Curtis, The Century of the Self, BBC, 2002. ⇤2. Rachelle Bergstein, How Method Acting Led Hollywood's Biggest Stars to Behave Bizarrely, New York Post, January 2022. ⇤3. Sam Kashner, Marilyn and Her Monsters, Vanity Fair, November 2010. ⇤4. Daniel Akst, Freudian America, The Wall Street Journal Europe, August 2009. ⇤5. Gloria Steinem, Marilyn: Norma Jeane, Open Road Media, 2013. ⇤

Building Abundant Success!!© with Sabrina-Marie
Episode 2240: Dr. Carole Lieberman, M.D., M.P.H. 3X Emmy Winner on Re-Claiming Peace in Today's Chaotic World!! Pt.1

Building Abundant Success!!© with Sabrina-Marie

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2022 40:12


3x Emmy Award Winner ~ How can we become a more positively peaceful being in a 24/7 Pop Culture-Social Media World? My Guest this week has some solutions.Dr. Carole Lieberman's multi-dimensional career as an internationally renowned "Media Psychiatrist" is always leading edge! There is so much pain & suffering in headlines right now. Dr.Carole is "the doctor who helps you stay sane in an insane world!" On TV, Radio, the Internet, in Film, Print, as a Speaker and as the first Shrink on Board airline in-flight entertainment, Dr. Carole's insights help people seize the moment to live happier, more fulfilling lives. Today, called upon more than ever to help people cope with terrorism and other 21st century challenges… the doctor is in!A three-time Honoree by The National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences & The Academy of Television Arts and Sciences Daytime Emmy Awards, Dr. Carole Lieberman analyzes the psychological impact of world events, as a guest and/or host on all major media outlets. Her passionate commentary is far more than entertaining and exciting -- it dauntlessly cuts to the heart of the issue! Perhaps that explains why everyone from Oprah to Larry King, Katie Couric to Bill O'Reilly, and countless others, think of Dr. Carole when they need a 'house call'. Viewers will recognize her from frequent appearances on Fox News, CNN, BBC, "The Today Show", "Good Morning America", Court TV, "Entertainment Tonight" and many more.She can be heard live as the host of "Dr. Carole's Couch", a weekly Internet radio show on voiceamerica.com. Here she analyzes the problems and pop culture of today's headlines: from terrorism to trials, love affairs to business affairs, and success stories to celebrity scandals.Dr. Lieberman's work has not only garnered Emmys, but also numerous other awards, including those from the Writers Guild of America, City of Los Angeles and Film Advisory Board.Since 9/11, recognizing that what the world needs most is help coping with the ultimate monster in the closet: terrorism, Dr. Carole Lieberman has devoted herself to rousing people from denial and giving them the psychological tools they need to survive. Her latest book, Coping with Terrorism: Dreams Interrupted , has recently been released in London by European Atlantic Publications. Her book for children is called Lions and Tigers and Terrorists, Oh My! is Winner: 2018 NY, London, Paris & Hollywood Book Festivals & Mom's Choice Award.She has used her unique blend of therapeutic skills to create the first Shrink on Board, a Relaxation Channel, which soothes fears in the air (and on the ground), and the first Terrorist Stress Hotline.Dr. Lieberman is the author of the bestselling book Bad Boys: Why We Love Them, How to Live with Them and When to Leave Them (Dutton/Signet). At a time when men and women are more confused, hurt, lonely and desperate for love than ever, yet hooked on heartbreak, Dr. Carole unlocks the door to healthier relationships. She reveals how women can turn their frogs into princes, and how men can crawl out of the dating swamp to find love.Born and raised in New York City, Dr. Carole received her M.D. degree from Belgium 's Universite de Louvain and received her psychiatric residency training at N.Y.U.-Bellevue, where she was Chief Resident. She also studied in London at Anna Freud's Hampstead Clinic and at the Institute of Psychiatry/Maudsley Hospital. She is a Diplomate of the American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, and has served as a well-respected member of the clinical faculty at U.C.L.A.'s Neuropsychiatric Institute. Awarded an NIMH grant, for research in how to use the media for public health education, Dr. Lieberman has a Masters Degree in Public Health.Dr. Carole Lieberman is regularly quoted in newspapers and magazines around the world, including: U.S.A. Today, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, Newsweek, Time, the Washington Post, the Hollywood Reporter and Variety. She has written for several publications - from her "Hollywood on the Couch" column in the National Enquirer - to her psychiatric treatise in the Encyclopaedia Britannica. Cosmo magazine chose her as one of the nation's "top therapists".Maintaining a star-studded practice in Beverly Hills, Dr. Lieberman is also well known as a psychiatric expert witness who testifies in high profile trials, and analyzes trials in the media. She has written Murder by TV: A Descent Into Madness, a first-person account of the Jenny Jones Talk Show Murder Trial, where she was the forensic psychiatrist for the defense. Dr. Lieberman has testified before Congress on several occasions, as well, notably regarding the harmful impact of media violence.Dr. Carole is recognized as the preeminent authority on the psychology of show biz and the influence of media on our minds. With an ongoing campaign to make the public more media savvy, she puts the entertainment industry on the couch. She is a formidable activist against media violence, having stopped the launch of a NASA rocket that would have touted an advertisement for a Hollywood action movie on its exterior, and having laid the groundwork for the TV ratings system. She is the most sought after psychiatric script consultant in Hollywood, including top soap operas, "The Young and the Restless" and "The Bold and the Beautiful", in addition to other TV and film projects.Dr. Carole Lieberman, M.D., M.P.H.. is listed in numerous Who's Who directories, including The World Who's Who of American Women and International Who's Who in Medicine. She is a member of the Writers Guild of America, SAG, AFTRA and the Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. drcarolelieberman.com© 2022 Building Abundant Success!!© 2022 BuildingAbundantSuccess!!Join Me on ~ iHeart Radio @ https://tinyurl.com/iHeartBASSpot Me on Spotify: https://tinyurl.com/yxuy23baAmazon ~ https://tinyurl.com/AmzBAS