Sandra Buechler, "Psychoanalytic Approaches to Problems in Living" (Routledge, 2019)
Oct 6, 2024
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Sandra Buechler, a recently retired psychoanalyst and author, discusses her book on the role of values in psychoanalysis. She delves into patients' common struggles, including loss, guilt, and the quest for meaning, illustrating how an analyst's values shape treatment. Buechler intertwines poetry with psychoanalysis to enrich understanding and shares insights from her experiences with her former supervisee, Christopher Bandini. She reflects on the complexities of retirement, emotional health, and the interplay of love and hate in personal growth.
Sandra Buechler emphasizes the integral role of poetry in enhancing psychoanalytic therapy, deepening emotional understanding and interpretive work between analysts and patients.
The concept of detailed inquiry is crucial in psychoanalysis, fostering collaboration and uncovering significant life patterns to guide therapeutic efforts effectively.
Deep dives
The Influence of Poetry on Psychoanalysis
The episode discusses the significant role of poetry and poets in shaping psychoanalytic thought. Sandra Buechler shares her admiration for poets such as Rilke, Eliot, and Oliver, highlighting how their works evoke emotions and experiences that resonate deeply with the therapeutic process. She emphasizes the connection between poetry and psychoanalysis, suggesting that both aim to articulate and make sense of complex feelings. By drawing on poetic insights, she aims to enhance the interpretive work of analysts, fostering a richer understanding of patient experiences.
The Importance of Detailed Inquiry
Buechler outlines the concept of detailed inquiry as a crucial step in psychoanalytic treatment. She believes that taking a comprehensive history from patients not only aids in understanding their backgrounds but also creates a collaborative environment. This process helps establish a shared language between the analyst and the patient that fosters intimacy and understanding. By diligently exploring a patient's life experiences, analysts can uncover significant themes and patterns that inform the therapeutic work ahead.
Navigating Emotional Health and Values
The discussion touches on the complexity of defining emotional health and how analysts' values impact their therapeutic work. Buechler posits that while there may not be a universal definition of health, analysts can draw on their clinical experience to identify maladaptive patterns and guide patients towards healthier living. She also raises the nuanced relationship between love and hate, suggesting that acknowledging and understanding emotions like hatred can be integral to the healing process. By embracing both positive and negative feelings, analysts can better support patients in navigating their emotional landscapes.
Reflections on Retirement and Continuing Contributions
As Buechler reflects on her recent retirement, she discusses the challenges and motivations behind her decision to step back from practice. She expresses a desire to explore other aspects of her identity and interests, such as writing and art, while acknowledging the inherent loss associated with concluding her clinical work. Despite retiring, she remains active in the field, planning to speak at various conferences and continue sharing her insights with others. This ongoing engagement showcases her commitment to the psychoanalytic community and highlights the importance of maintaining relationships and knowledge-sharing even after formal retirement.
Sandra Buechler joins hosts Christopher Bandini and Tracy Morgan to discuss her latest book, Psychoanalytic Approaches to Problems in Living: Addressing Life's Challenges in Clinical Practice (Routledge, 2019), which continues her long standing exploration of the role of values in the work of psychoanalysis. The book discusses the many common difficulties that drive patients into treatment, such as loss, a hunger for meaningful work, the wish for revenge, aging, queries over forgiveness, struggles with guilt and shame. Buechler shows us how the analyst’s values inevitably shape their approach to these common topics, tilting treatments in myriad directions. As is her wont, she engages with poetry to deepen her explanations. She tells us that each of her books is generated by questions left unanswered in the previous one. And in each book, including this one, we see her in conversation with her forebears, particularly Sullivan, Fromm and Fromm-Reichman—what she calls her internal chorus.
What makes this interview especially rich is the discussion between Bandini, her former supervisee of 14 years and herself. She is a member of his internal chorus. Their tone with each other has a familiarity and warmth. But they have both had to face the loss of that particular way of relating, supervisor to supervisee. Buechler most recently retired from clinical work, making her a maverick in a profession where “dying in one’s chair” is not exactly a joke.