Sunday, February 9, 2014

The Courage of Memoir


 


 
Many of the people who have reviewed my book have mentioned my courage — the courage to reveal, the courage to break rules, the courage to tell the truth.

In his February 3, 2014 Amazon review, Paul D. Sanderson Ph.D., a Jungian colleague of mine, writes “It was a powerful and sad memoir. Unfortunately, the author's attempt to heal her early childhood wounds resulted more in pattern replication and violation of the Code of Ethics of her profession than it was a deeper grasp of the ethics of love. A good read, but not a good role model to follow for anyone entering the healing professions who has to deal with sexualized transference and counter-transference dynamics or with the emergence of love within the therapeutic relationship.

Sanderson is correct in so far as he identifies the replication of the sweet to bitter patterns of my experience that weave the opposites into that third inextricable meshing of what Jung called individuation. I perceive this as a spiraling toward the center.

Jung referred to the torment of ethical decision. As I wrote in my memoir, “he had found the essence of ethics not in the morality of collective opinion, but in the deepest tension held by the opposites within the Self. ‘Ethics are based on the phenomenon of conscience, which derives from a relationship between man and God.’...”

Sanderson’s judgment call has been predicted and anticipated. And his delivery leaves me both sad and mindful of how difficult it is to have a conversation between two people whose relationship with God, whose highest deepest truths are so very different.

I would like to believe that the intention to do no harm, as flawed as that proves to be in human interaction, is a common denominator between us.

I am reminded again of Russell Lockhart's quote, “Trusting the psyche is not an isolated or isolating act. It tends to bring us to the center and to that well at the bottom of the world. Bringing up water from there, each in his own way, with his own effort, is an eros act, not only for ourselves but also for others and for the world. It is this bringing up of psyche from the well and telling it to others that will bring us together.” Would that were true.

2 comments:

  1. I love this quote and hope you'll continue to believe it despite the initially hostile reaction your truth brought out: "It is this bringing up of psyche from the well and telling it to others that will bring us together." Many great thinkers, writers, and "life changers" have been opposed initially. I'd like to see more people who understand this book take a stand with Jane publicly!

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  2. Jane doesn't need anyone to take a stand with her. I read her book, having been alerted prior to the "violation of ethics" and found myself thinking that a woman's ethics may be different than a man's. A woman's heart is tuned differently and the response it gives may be heartbreaking and healing all at once. How do we judge and dare we?
    I always find it to be utterly smug when given the chance to critique a creation, the person doing the critiquing has to lob the chip of "but" into the fire. It's not necessary.
    I loved the book and deeply respect the author's insights, quest for knowledge and understanding and her choices. It was agony for her and that was clearly conveyed. Women are often in agony...men often have no clue. It must be good to be God.

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