August 5, 2010
Exercising Parental Authority
Psychiatric Orgone Therapy
One of Wilhelm Reich’s most important and lasting contributions is a unique treatment for emotional disorders called psychiatric orgone therapy. Reich began as a psychoanalyst and was a member of Freud’s inner circle, but moved away from Freud’s method of free association when he developed a more effective verbal approach he called character analysis. Later he came to recognize the existence of a specific biologic energy in living organisms that he called “orgone,” which was coined from the word “organism.” With this discovery Reich was able to combine his verbal method with a technique that could normalize a person’s energy. The result was an entirely new approach to treating emotional disorders that he named orgone therapy.
Reich’s work with patients convinced him the disturbance in an individual’s energy state is caused by contractions in the body, especially in the musculature. He called these contractions “armor,” and established that they begin to develop in infancy as a way to block out emotionally painful events.
Past traumatic experiences are locked in the body--and they remain throughout life. How this happens is not fully understood, but there is no question that anxiety, anger and sadness, as well as the other upsetting feelings and emotions from childhood are not forgotten. Armor not only holds the disturbing past, causing it to remain alive but out of consciousness awareness, but it also affects how one feels and functions. Because living a natural healthy life depends upon whether a person’s energy flows freely or is blocked, the aim of psychiatric orgone therapy is to free up energy by breaking down armor. As these areas of holding dissolve, patients release their long buried feelings and emotions in the safety of the therapist’s office. They most usually surface spontaneously with the specific method Reich innovated, without the need of urging or any intervention on the part of the treating psychiatrist. However, occasionally, pressure needs to be applied to spastic muscles, or other techniques used to normalize the body. Because this treatment combines a verbal approach with a physical technique, it addresses both the mind and the body to bring about profound changes in how one thinks, feels and functions.
Today almost all people seeking treatment from a psychiatrist are given medications to reduce their symptoms. However, with psychiatric orgone therapy it is usual that patients, over time, find themselves able to wean themselves off medication and function without pharmacologic treatment. Reich’s therapy is unique in that it not only relieves distressing symptoms, but also does much more. It enables individuals to expand and feel pleasure, and better enjoy the many satisfactions life has to offer.
There are people who claim to practice some form of “Reichian” or “orgone” therapy, even though they have had no formal training in medicine or psychology. Often the techniques used by these self-proclaimed therapists have little or nothing to do with the very specific methods Reich developed and taught. The value of such therapies is questionable and may even harm those who get involved in them.
Qualified psychiatric orgone therapists have extensive training. They are physicians who have gone on to specialize in psychiatry and then in the very unique subspecialty of orgone therapy. They practice in much the same way as Reich did more than a half century ago. Ph.D. Psychologists who have had proper training can practice a form of orgone therapy safely and effectively. However, it is crucial they have supervision by a qualified psychiatric orgone therapist.
2 comments:
Excellent article Richard, I appreciate you referencing Wilhelm Reich's work as it corresponds to the different aspects of your subject.
Like most people, I have come across beautiful infants and children who are full of joy, enthusiasm, and what seems like “knowledge” of their immediate environment. As Wilhelm Reich stated in his personal writings, it brings great pleasure when an adult can make emotional contact with these “children of the future”. I think this is so because as adults, we see clearly what the potentials for humans can be, and this encourages us.
What happens to these children? I wish I knew the answer, but when one looks at teens and adults, it is rare to see ones that still have the sparkle and grace of healthy infants. Something must occur between their innocence and growing up.
The “something” is both parenting and the emotional plague on the social scene. It is difficult enough for the well-intentioned parent to raise healthy children in our technology-driven (mechanistic) culture, but added to this is the destructiveness of certain societal norms that hurt children. Some of these are the confusing advice about childhood sexuality; the awful entertainment industry; and the anti-authoritarian culture that predominates America. Because this anti-authoritarian style influences the family, confusion and destructive acting-out is so common.
I recently saw a long-term couple in my office who complained about a terrible family vacation. As I am listening to their story, it became apparent that their toddler was the primary cause of their distress. Not withstanding the couple’s own issues, the child had frequent temper-tantrums and unceasing demands. I pointed out that their anger towards each other was really their frustration in being unable to enjoy themselves due to their inability to control their child. They admitted that the only thing to do in these episodes is to wear earplugs and tolerate it! They also spoke about the vastly different parenting ideologies and how confusing it was and how they felt shame at being inadequate parents.
This brings to mind Reich’s experiments with children and self-regulation (see Children of the Future, or a report at http://www.wilhelmreichmuseum.org/index.html), and although times were authoritarian then, parents enrolled in the study also suffered from the “not-good-enough” guilt syndrome.
As Dr. Schwartzman has pointed out, parenting should feel natural for the parents in that they have a basic knowledge of the child’s needs, with adequate contact to raise joyful children. But this requires contact with oneself first.
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