Mother is Not Negotiable

Happy Mother’s Day!

This month’s article is a couple of quick thoughts on the nature of, and need for, Mother. Notice I spelled that with a capital “M”, because the Mother I’m talking about is the archetypal mother, not the one who used to tell you to eat the runny eggs. That’s the corporeal approximation of Mother, who was hopefully a decent enough version such that the primal qualities of Mother-safety, validation, containment, holding, love-came through, despite (or perhaps as channeled by) the funky human qualities of mom. But whether that was the case for you or not, the need for Mother, meaning the need for those basic functions of mothering, is not negotiable. We really do need our Mother.

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How do I know when I really need professional help?

Q: As an individual, how do I know when I really need professional help?

A: At the point where you’ve tried what is inexpensive and less taxing and it has failed–when you’ve taken the pills, consulted friends, distracted yourself with B movies (which I often recommend!), patted the dog, went to the gym more often–and you still can’t feel better or figure out why you’re suffering, then that’s when you need a professional.

Why a professional (i.e., someone trained in the process of psychotherapy)? Because at the point where your familiar coping strategies have failed, you are facing ongoing overwhelm (whether it’s obvious to everyone, or more subtle and interior), and folks without experience in working with this situation can actually make things worse, even though they have the best intentions.

A professional therapist knows this terrain, and when to propose challenges, and when to offer support, in the service of decreasing the overwhelm and increasing the hope and motivation. When we’re lost, we often will benefit with a good guide, who has traversed the gullies and crevasses, and knows the safest route from A-B, from stuckness to motion, from despair to hope. A therapist doesn’t provide magic, but just (ideally) good guidance.

Now, that said, your own process of deciding that you’re at this point of “Help!”, that may take a day of insight, or 20 years of trying different strategies, or for some, banging your head against the problem. It’s very individual, but when everything else fails (relatively few go to therapy without a crisis in hand), there’s the recognition that you need something more, and that’s where therapists live.

The Peaceful Pugilist: First steps in learning to love conflict

So what about this issue of conflict? And what about this notion that you could actually love conflict? What does that mean, going out and joyfully picking fights? Or relishing squabbling with colleagues? Or not doing the dishes at home in eager anticipation of our spouse getting home and flipping out? Is it actually possible to have anything but a, well, conflictual relationship to conflict?

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