Wiley Updates
RSS Feed for Updates
  • Home
  • About the Books
  • About this Site
    • Categories Used to Organize Entries on this Site

Wiley Psychology
Weekly Updates

Discussion Topics for Today's Classroom

Politics These Days: Tips from Clinicians Who Treat Psychotic People

Posted March 26th, 2017 by Mike Boyes & filed under Abnormal Psychology, Consciousness, Industrial Organizational Psychlology, Intervention: Adults-Couples, Intervention: Identifying Key Elements of Change, Language-Thought, Psychological Disorders, Psychological Intervention, Social Psychology, Social Psychology, Stress: Coping Reducing, Treatment of Psychological Disorders.

Description: Decades ago, psychiatrists used the term Schizophrenogenic Mothers to describe the mothers of individuals with schizophrenia and to then go on to talk about how the patient’s mother’s emotional ambivalence and related paradoxical behavior contributed to and perhaps even cause their offspring’s schizophrenia. Reflecting gender biased and even misogynistic attitudes, such hypotheses could simply and defensibly be dismissed. However, like the Icebox Mother theory of autism in children we can also look and see bits of reality behind these horribly biased and sexist perspectives. I terms of the mothers of schizophrenic young adults we can think about how we might come across if only our side of the conversations we were trying to have with our young adult son or daughter while they were showing a full blown “word salad” approach to conversation laced with delusional beliefs and statements. Analyzed out of context, the mother’s side of such conversations would seem a bit surreal to say the least. What about clinicians who engage in therapeutic connections/sessions with psychotic patients or clients? How does it feel to be trying to engage conversationally with someone who has effectively lost their grip on reality, and who, consequently is presenting an “alternative (psychotic and un-grounded) reality.” What else does this statement bring to mind? Does the phrase “alternate facts” suggest anything? Have a read through the essay linked below and see what you think.

Source: Trump’s Method, Our Madness, Joel Whitebook, The Opinion Pages, New York Times.

Date: March 20, 2017

Photo Credit:   Jean Dubuffet, “Tissu d’episodes” (c. 1976). Credit CNAC/MNAM/RMN-Grand Palais/Art Resource, NY, 2017 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/ADAGP, Paris

Links:  Podcast Link — https://www.nytimes.com/2017/03/20/opinion/trumps-method-our-madness.html

Be VERY clear. The author of the piece link above is NOT suggesting that Donald Trump is psychotic! What he is suggesting is that the way the social psychology experiment that is the Trump administration makes people feel could be usefully informed by considering the challenges faced by clinicians who are trying to engage therapeutically with psychotic clients. The “fusion of despotism and postmodernism” ascribed to Vladimir Putin’s advisor Vladislav Surkov that aims to keep critics and opponents “confused” informs an understanding of Trump as either a “calculating … puppet master” or as functioning on a showman’s intuition”.  Against such a social presentation, fact-checking is beside the point and exhausting. The key, it is suggested, is NOT to focus on the “manifest (surface) content” of the Trump administration roller-coaster ride but to instead, as a clinician working with a psychotic client might, work to get a grip on the “underlying dynamics” of what is being said, claimed, and done. Only then can an opportunity to get re-grounded in some sort of reality be found. To do otherwise is to run a longer term risk of burnout or “Trump-exhaustion”. And THAT is a serious challenge given the seemingly boundless energy levels of the current president.

Questions for Discussion:

  1. Define Psychotic?
  2. What is the relationship between thinking/reflection and reality in someone struggling with psychoticism?
  3. How can we think about the connection between talking to a psychotic person and talking to the Trump administration without calling Donald Trump psychotic (which we CANNOT do as we have not properly assessed him)?

References (Read Further):

Neill, J. (1990). Whatever became of the schizophrenogenic mother?. culture, 2, 14. http://www.psychodyssey.net/wp-content/uploads/2012/05/Whatever-Became-of-the-Schizophrenogenic-Mother.pdf

Ackerley, G. D., Burnell, J., Holder, D. C., & Kurdek, L. A. (1988). Burnout among licensed psychologists. Professional psychology: Research and practice, 19(6), 624.

Naeem, F., & Kingdon, D. (2016). Brief Cognitive Behavior Therapy for Psychosis. In Brief Interventions for Psychosis (pp. 27-39). Springer International Publishing.

Yung, A. R., & Lin, A. (2016). Psychotic experiences and their significance. World Psychiatry, 15(2), 130-131. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/wps.20328/full

Cavelti, M., Homan, P., & Vauth, R. (2016). The impact of thought disorder on therapeutic alliance and personal recovery in schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder: An exploratory study. Psychiatry research, 239, 92-98. https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/2664/ca8c97b7006451c57daf18bf8ce4516e1cf2.pdf

Tags: clinical engagement Psychosis Psychotic Reality Trump

Updates to your inbox

By clicking submit, you agree to share your email address with the site owner and Mailchimp to receive marketing, updates, and other emails from the site owner. Use the unsubscribe link in those emails to opt out at any time.

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.
Whoops! There was an error and we couldn't process your subscription. Please reload the page and try again.

Books for Success!

Recent Posts

  • SAD Signs and Treatments
  • Should Misophonia be a Disorder?
  • Stop It! Stop Overthinking
  • Temperament: The Start of the Social/Emotional You
  • Moving IS Correlated with Stress, But Why?

Tag Cloud

Categories

  • Consciousness (259)
  • General Psychology (652)
    • Abnormal Psychology (190)
    • Adult Development and Aging (65)
    • Child Development (165)
    • Clinical Psychology (85)
    • Cultural Variation (48)
    • Health Psychology (244)
    • Social Psychology (132)
  • Human Development (392)
    • Aging-Psychological Disorders (9)
    • Basic Cognitive Functions In Aging: Information Processing Attention Memory (29)
    • Cognitive Development: Piagetian and Vygotskian Approaches (8)
    • Cognitive Development: The Information-Processing Approach (21)
    • Death and Dying (9)
    • Development of the Self (65)
    • Disorders of Childhood (16)
    • Early Social and Emotional development (61)
    • Emerging Adulthood (76)
    • Families and Peers (67)
    • Gender-Role Development Sex Differences (14)
    • Health and Prevention In Aging (48)
    • Higher-Order Cognitive Functions in Aging (34)
    • Intervention: Children and Adolescents (49)
    • Long-Term Care (3)
    • Moral Development (24)
    • Physical Changes In Aging (9)
    • Physical Development: Birth, Motor Skills, and Growth (12)
    • Prenatal Development (8)
    • Successful Aging (16)
    • Work Retirement Leisure Patterns (11)
  • Indigenous Psychology (18)
  • Industrial Organizational Psychlology (105)
  • Industrial Organizational Psychology (98)
  • Intelligence (46)
    • Assessment: Intellectual-Cognitive Measures (11)
    • Intelligence-Schooling (5)
  • Language-Thought (96)
    • Language Development (17)
  • Learning (61)
  • Memory (60)
  • mental illness (65)
  • Motivation-Emotion (266)
  • Neuroscience (265)
    • Clinical Neuropsychology (110)
    • Genetics: The Biological Context of Development (26)
    • Physiology (44)
  • Personality (91)
    • Personality Disorders (17)
    • Personality in Aging (4)
  • Psychological Disorders (323)
    • Aging Psychological Disorders (9)
    • Anxiety OC PTSD (139)
    • Assessment: Clinical Decision Making (11)
    • Assessment: Intellectual Cognitive Measures (5)
    • Assessment: Interviewing Observation (5)
    • Assessment: Self-report Projective Measures (7)
    • Classification Diagnosis (19)
    • Clinical Assessment (23)
    • Depression (96)
    • Disorders of Childhood (25)
    • Eating Disorders (7)
    • Personality Disorders (8)
    • Psychophysical Disorders Health Psychology (12)
    • Schizophrenia (17)
    • Sexual Disorders Gender Dysphoria (3)
    • Somatic Symptoms Dissociative Disorders (8)
    • Substance-Related Disorders (13)
  • Research Methods (170)
    • Research Methods in ADA (20)
    • Research Methods in AP (24)
    • Research Methods in ChD (24)
    • Research Methods in CP (32)
    • Research Methods in SP (21)
  • selfies (2)
  • Sensation-Perception (51)
    • Sensory-Perceptual Development (14)
      • Physical Changes In Aging (2)
  • Social Psychology (414)
    • Aggression (34)
    • Altruism Prosocial Behaviour (46)
    • Attitude Formation Change (53)
    • Group Processes (66)
    • Intergroup Relations (65)
    • Interpersonal Attraction Close Relationships (59)
    • Persuasion (92)
    • Social Cognition (110)
    • Social Influence (96)
    • Social Perception (52)
    • Stereotype Prejudice Discrimination (60)
    • The Self (163)
  • Stress Coping – Health (394)
    • Chronic Illness (8)
    • Clinical Health Psychology (43)
    • Managing Pain (2)
    • Nutrition Weight Management (6)
    • Pain-General (3)
    • Physical Illness (12)
    • Psychological Health (63)
    • Serious Physical Illness (2)
    • Stress (103)
    • Stress Biopsychosocial Factors Illness (43)
    • Stress: Coping Reducing (173)
  • Student Success (146)
  • Treatment of Psychological Disorders (242)
    • Intervention: Adults-Couples (98)
    • Intervention: Children Adolescents (50)
    • Intervention: Identifying Key Elements of Change (83)
    • Legal Ethical Issues (91)
    • Prevention (26)
    • Psychological Intervention (35)
  • Uncategorized (56)

By clicking submit, you agree to share your email address with the site owner and Mailchimp to receive marketing, updates, and other emails from the site owner. Use the unsubscribe link in those emails to opt out at any time.

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.
Whoops! There was an error and we couldn't process your subscription. Please reload the page and try again.

By clicking submit, you agree to share your email address with the site owner and Mailchimp to receive marketing, updates, and other emails from the site owner. Use the unsubscribe link in those emails to opt out at any time.

Processing…
Success! You're on the list.
Whoops! There was an error and we couldn't process your subscription. Please reload the page and try again.

About Wiley

  • About Us
  • Subjects
  • Careers
  • Events
  • Locations
  • Brands
  • Investor Relations
  • Resources
  • Press Room

Resources

  • Authors
  • Instructors
  • Students
  • Librarians
  • Societies
  • Booksellers

Customer Support

  • Privacy Policy
  • Site Map
  • Contact Us
  • Help

About Wiley

About Us
Subjects
Careers
Events
Locations
Brands
Investor Relations
Resources
Press Room

Resources

Authors
Instructors
Students
Librarians
Societies
Booksellers

Customer Support

Privacy Policy
Site Map
Contact Us
Help

Copyright © 2015 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc., or related companies. All rights reserved. Review our privacy policy.