tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post1295309756960402601..comments2024-02-11T18:16:53.445-08:00Comments on Janov's Reflections on the Human Condition: The Simple Truth is Revolutionary: Is Depression a Disease like Diabetes?Arthur Janovhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/16709863014923629409noreply@blogger.comBlogger19125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-24224453973385768302011-04-03T13:46:09.767-07:002011-04-03T13:46:09.767-07:00Thanks Art. I just finished reading The Janov Sol...Thanks Art. I just finished reading The Janov Solution, your book on depression. It was very helpful; I found myself having many insights while reading it thinking that if only I had gone deeper in my therapy back in the 70's and 80's and now I realize how really stuck in birth and first line I have been. Of course I don't think the therapy had evolved to this point yet. Also, I found myself feeling more hopeless after reading your book because if I go back to primaling and to the Center(which I obviously need to do) how will I ever get through all these early birth feelings, there is so much. Back in my days of therapy buddying was greatly encouraged. I think that helped lead me to getting stuck because I was abreacting without realizing it. How does one get back to feeling first line and birth via skype. Is that not how one does therapy from afar? I live on the east coast. Back in the old days the consensus was that 'feeling one's pain and primaling' at some point became an ongoing process and that there was an end to it---this is not so. <br />JeanUnknownhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02341886626923381399noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-46219525591693034622011-03-17T12:52:35.569-07:002011-03-17T12:52:35.569-07:00Dr Janov: Yes, AA should espouse what you recommen...Dr Janov: Yes, AA should espouse what you recommend, but they won't get off their mystical nonsense for a long while because their ideology is so entrenched within their souls and in our society.And, I beleive, you clearly explained why their espousal of God or some Higher Power is so strong within them, in that great chapter "Ideas as Opiates" in Prisoners of Pain. Unfortunately I cannot as yet be as objective about these matters as you are in that chapter. Therefore I just get irritated by these references to God. I still go to AA meetings though, it may surprise some, faute de mieux (translation for the gallicly illiterate: better than nothing).If one is regularly starved for human contact, AA at least gives me one meal. Which is nice.Just please spare me the illusions that some benevolent God is watching over us! Was this God watching over the japanese victims of the tsunami, or is It watching over some of the people in the liberated zones of Lybia who now may be slaughtered if that madman Gaddafi takes over!? Ah, but reasoned arguments cannot win over the God-obsessed neurotic... I forget so easily.macor22https://www.blogger.com/profile/00652948318839690382noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-86530858654743781392011-03-17T03:05:31.922-07:002011-03-17T03:05:31.922-07:00Hey Art, you got half my post up there - my editin...Hey Art, you got half my post up there - my editing error.<br /><br />I was making an off-topic point about left-brainer's. That is, the ones in New Zealand who were pushing for nuclear power to be introduced into our country (which is still thankfully nuclear free). <br /><br />They were so certain it was safe because of the "statistics". So clued up on the numbers, so confident, yet at the same time so bloody stupid.Andrew D Atkinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04492591375757227409noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-73149430361833420382011-03-17T01:28:23.624-07:002011-03-17T01:28:23.624-07:00Jean. I really think that if you read my book on ...Jean. I really think that if you read my book on depression you will begin to understand your plight. Sorry for your distress. art janovArthur Janovhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18009571728800026496noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-13038054942241371672011-03-17T01:24:57.027-07:002011-03-17T01:24:57.027-07:00Marco: The one thing AA should espouse is that we ...Marco: The one thing AA should espouse is that we are the higher power and only we can cure ourselves, not someone out in space or wherever. AJArthur Janovhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18009571728800026496noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-92184700607968954902011-03-16T12:14:09.403-07:002011-03-16T12:14:09.403-07:00What is the opposite of Depression?
Gaiety, eleva...What is the opposite of Depression?<br /><br />Gaiety, elevated? <br /><br />After having read these Reflections a couple of times and when I analyzed the opposite of all your 15 hallmarks/examples of depression, then they would all fit on me! "I wish to die", hit me when I struggled myself into pieces in the wrong direction in a project or a relationship etc. It turned up in a force to commit suicide, lasting sometimes for hours. However, there was always another way to give myself a new opportunity.<br />I can now finally permit myself to be lazy, considerate(!), stupid, bored, lost after having lived the horror of the struggle for life or death being stuck in the birth canal and numb. My need to be ”gaiety”, ”elevated” has slowed down to a point that I often see or experience new perspectives of life if I allow the feelings.<br />When I write this, I can remember, when my psychiatrist gave me Cipramil to get out of a "depression". It brought me straight into my birth and epilepsy, so I did not take them. (You should have seen my doctors face, when I, at my last visit, gave her 2 years of potential Cipramil consumption, in a plastic bag, at a value of 8-9.000 USD together with the Biology of Love!.)<br /><br />Jan JohnssonJan Åke Johnssonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15107966321155297159noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-39118861992290773772011-03-16T00:49:02.618-07:002011-03-16T00:49:02.618-07:00Yet they were blind to the simple truths like the ...Yet they were blind to the simple truths like the fact that power plants are built by people who break safety rules, are strategic targets in wars, and earthquakes can ultimately be of any size etc.<br /><br />This disaster we see developing in Japan is what you get when you have a world being run by psychopaths and robot-heads who can only think with half a brain! We desperately need to start screening the madness out of both private and public power.Andrew D Atkinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04492591375757227409noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-88635351044636226602011-03-15T21:32:56.073-07:002011-03-15T21:32:56.073-07:00Frank, when Art uses the word "panic" he...Frank, when Art uses the word "panic" he is talking about the type of panic response that will stop you from fully experiencing a memory.Richard Atkinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13587935146938446604noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-12789883211477686992011-03-15T16:55:10.259-07:002011-03-15T16:55:10.259-07:00Labelling depression a disease like diabetes is a ...Labelling depression a disease like diabetes is a very convenient way to avoid feelings and real effective therapeutic relationships.So the depressed person does not have to take the risk of really opening up about their depresson, and the doctor does not have to feel any real concern or compassion; he or she can hide behind their professionnal and scientific reserve.Because, make no mistake, I am beginning to see that whatever the techniques used by a therapist, what the patient needs is an understanding and caring person to be there for them.At least that`s what I feel I need. And NOT a bunch of anti-depressant pills to gobble up.<br /><br />I have seen the disease concept used in AA for other dubious purposes. To combat the moralism alcoholics were subjected to in society , the founders of AA came up with the apparently scientific concept that alcoholism was a disease, you know, like arthritis or pneumonia. You wouldn`t judge the arthritic, so please don`t judge us drinkers, they say.I suppose that manoeuver helped. But adding to that apparently scientific orientation, AA also weirdly mixes in all this mystical nonsense about an apparent Higher Power that will save the alcoholic.And they`ve added some shallow group therapy...and voila...70 years later, a social phenomenon millions swear by despite its confusion and superficiality. AA has the merit , in my opinion at least, of having saved many lives, to bring people from what Freud called their "hysterical misery" to "common every day unhappiness" (the same modest goal as psychoanalysis). <br /><br />Dr Janov effectively debunks the disease concept of "alcoholism" in his chapter about an "alcoholic" in "The Primal Revolution".macor22https://www.blogger.com/profile/00652948318839690382noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-30214892534797066952011-03-15T14:54:54.420-07:002011-03-15T14:54:54.420-07:00Another email comment: "Hi, Art once again th...Another email comment: <i>"Hi, Art once again thanks for what you wrote on depression. It's my impression, that this diagnosis, is the most common one of all. I have had the code memorized for years, 296.33. Its as prevalent as the common cold. What's unusual, is anyone getting better from it. Once your diagnosed as depressed, it's like a sentence of Doom. It's probably true that when someone gets better, through Primal Therapy, most professionals would say, that the patient has been mis diagnosed, that they never were really depressed in the first place." </i>Arthur Janovhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18009571728800026496noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-20790094450579126972011-03-15T14:53:22.532-07:002011-03-15T14:53:22.532-07:00Apollo: As it happens I wrote the book, Sex And Th...Apollo: As it happens I wrote the book, Sex And The Subconscious, which is out in France but not yet sold in America. If not published soon I will put it out on my blog. It is a big book. AJArthur Janovhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18009571728800026496noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-62405738320411275122011-03-15T14:52:30.801-07:002011-03-15T14:52:30.801-07:00Jean. We know so much more now. I hope one day yo...Jean. We know so much more now. I hope one day you will come back and let us get to the bottom of your depression. In the old days we just did not know enough. Like science it improves a bit at a time. art janovArthur Janovhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18009571728800026496noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-66575816519114118552011-03-15T14:51:47.646-07:002011-03-15T14:51:47.646-07:00An email comment:
"Thanks for that. I guess ...An email comment:<br /><i>"Thanks for that. I guess I'm definately not depressed. Remember Set and Setting Art? Think. Humans can, believe it or not, actually think...I defined Intellegence as the ability to derive constructive conclusions and solutions from inadequate information. Wasn't it you who ONCE wrote that integration was the connecting...like beads on a string or pearls on a necklace...of thoughts, feelings, words and gestures...or something very close to that...into one loop or strand. Tryyyyyyyyyyyyyyy to remember Art. Now where oh where did I put my glasses...those papers...my feet.....ooooohhhhh...there they are. b. "</i>Arthur Janovhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/18009571728800026496noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-39799070958774228922011-03-15T11:25:49.322-07:002011-03-15T11:25:49.322-07:00Dear Dr. Janov,
Depression hovers over me like a ...Dear Dr. Janov, <br />Depression hovers over me like a dark cloud. The hallmarks of depression that you listed I experience some of them or most of them all of the time. My mother said she was given ether at the time of my birth. I am passive and in survival mode I am parasympathetic. Only after several cups of coffee in the morning do I feel artificially energized. <br />I was in primal therapy in the 70's and 80's. At that time I didn't seem to have difficulty with second line feelings but with the first line I never thought that I got the help that I really needed. Does depression only get resolved through feeling birth primals? When I was in therapy I felt that I was too 'good' of a patient; i went into a feeling too quickly. Over the years I have lost access to even second line now. I hope to get to the primal center this year. <br />Thank you so much for all your writing; it gives me hope. <br /><br />Sincerely,<br />JeanJeannoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-26352423585605934402011-03-15T02:59:13.590-07:002011-03-15T02:59:13.590-07:00Richard,
Panic is acceptable when the suffering i...Richard,<br /><br />Panic is acceptable when the suffering is at its infancy... there are no distractions then.<br /><br />FrankFrankhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02242354226308728116noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-80864372482589848532011-03-14T23:09:34.289-07:002011-03-14T23:09:34.289-07:00I thought this was a particularily well said post,...I thought this was a particularily well said post, Art. <br /><br />1. You say: "I promise not to discuss neurology anymore if neurologists will lay off psychology."<br /><br />Promise nothing! Everything is connected and an "outsider" can always have something to say. A Ph.d doesn't mean you 'own' a territory. <br /><br />2. You say: "...That may be later translated into wanting to die because it is the only way to stop the pain." <br /><br />Yeah. I don't mean to get into a religious debate, but I'm suspiscious that that feeling you describe is what drives many people to be athiest - that is, they're attracted to the idea of ultimate death because it's the only way they can imagine having any kind of final peace/relief. I think people tend to pick a religion (or religious disposition) on the basis of what matches their feelings/needs etc. <br />(Hmmm, maybe I should start up a cult that targets a niche neurotic market. 10% of say 200 people's income could do me quite nicely.)Andrew D Atkinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04492591375757227409noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-84207103411758196732011-03-14T22:04:33.718-07:002011-03-14T22:04:33.718-07:00I was wondering Arthur, many people may not be ove...I was wondering Arthur, many people may not be overly interested in psychology, per say. But knowing how much primal imprints mess with sexual behavior, perhaps a book strictly about sexual problems and why they are as they are and how they are corrected, might broaden the appeal of the book a little. People are interested sex and how to fix performance and joy. I recall my cousin telling me about her girlfriend who could not have an orgasm. She would try just about anyone to see if she could get off but with no luck. We both know that her system is shutting down that response.<br /><br />But many people would like to be liberated from the prison of not being able to feel or enjoy sex. There is more incentive to pursue PT, maybe, when sex is the goal. Few want to hunt down fear and pain and face them. Many books have been written about sex but none come close to what you have discovered. You have many cases that could illustrate the very many different twists and complications of Primal Pain (PP) and their effect on sex behavior. Just something for consideration. Publicity and interest is always difficult unless you got some interesting bait. A little leverage might help offset the scale a little.apollohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02040184843184207525noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-48011485607251784192011-03-14T21:54:17.057-07:002011-03-14T21:54:17.057-07:00Ya know, watching science constantly resisting the...Ya know, watching science constantly resisting the obvious is endless entertainment. Thomas Szasz has many good books ripping up the field of psychology, (PT excluded by me). He is very good at showing it for the fraud it truly is. I note the tendency of psychology to refer to brain diseases, almost as if to suggest there was nothing we could do about any of it. Now, I am not one to throw stones at people or suggest they are immoral. We do not choose what happens to us that shapes us. But at the same time, I think we do have some control over our behavior. Some quite a bit and some not so much. Lots of varying degrees.<br /><br />To me, there is great interesting exploring why they resist the ideas of PT so vigorously. I have trouble believing they do not “see” it or believe it. Honestly, Arthur, you have done a very good job keeping us up to date with research and growing understanding and it is just too obvious to anyone, as is evidenced by many who post here, that there is much we can do about these so called diseases. Just think, by not admitting change, they can supply drugs, which you constantly need like fake therapy, in order to feel good. If you misbehave, they can deny our fix. The drugs have long term problems as well. They are not the answer or solution.<br /><br />But I don’t think they want a solution. They like the problems. They like keeping people confused and without direction. They keep them drugged with mindless entertainment and dumbed down educational criteria. Nobody likes a smart @$$ because they wise people up and that is not appreciated in many circles. So it is our lot to always be sort of a lunatic fringe. Only the brave need come here. And for those who like lies and sweet nothings whispered into their ears, there is always psychology, so called.<br /><br />On a more specific note, the last time I caught Dr. Drew, whose mannerisms are fairly pleasant, it seemed like he was not reigning in the “inmates” enough and as one patient put it, I have been in rehab many times and never in my life have I seen anything like this. It was mayhem. But some call that good television. But I would not be one of those.<br /><br />I have seen lot of psychologists, helpers, fixers, gurus and other such types. But I wondered at the complete lack of ground rules of some of those. Patients can be very fragile and I have seen some spoiled ones just attack many and they are seldom reigned in. It is quite the circus to watch.<br /><br />That’s “entertainment,” Arthur! You and I should be dazzled and impressed. Shame on us for not being so ;-)apollohttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02040184843184207525noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-3420173096635836108.post-5260766263663070012011-03-14T14:20:40.921-07:002011-03-14T14:20:40.921-07:00Art: another great blog, BUT it seems to me no-on...Art: another great blog, BUT it seems to me no-one is getting it. As I see it, IT'S VERY SIMPLE. Unless you have RE-LIVED your pre-birth, infant, early childhood event, then these professors, scientists, university studies are talking through the top of their heads (or maybe the other end of their bodies). They don't get it because they are wrapped up in their own academia (learnedness). How does one get through to them????<br /><br />Art, I hate to say this, but you are not getting through to them. Sadly, by using their language I don't believe you are EVER going to get through to them. I am considered a NUT, even to some on this site because I say:- "the problem is in our thinking", science, studying, academics, the university system. <br /><br />It's all so simple IF you ask the right question, but these guys aren't asking the right question. They are immersed in their own learnedness and cannot see outside of it. They are stuck in their own academic box. JackJack Waddingtonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/06427501529242639591noreply@blogger.com