www.nmgpsy.com内蒙古心理网内蒙古心理网5}VQD|t3nhAn with Erving, PhD内蒙古心理网D/lp@6`+V1b
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The Interview
Yalom: We could get started by asking how you got involved in this business of psychotherapy, many years ago.
内蒙古心理网L!O7],Yq6iPolster: Oh, I don't know where to begin on that.
内蒙古心理网(?7I$q5}*aZ'Nv&U6KYWyatt: What first sparked your interest in itself?
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PolsterI started college as journalism major. I had no thought of psychology but several things led me there. In high school I was a doorman in a movie theater in a very tough neighborhood in Cleveland. I came from a very lower middle class neighborhood, but there was no crime, and it was scandalous to do anything against the law. These kids at the theater were juvenile delinquents, yet they were terrific kids; I just really enjoyed them, and they enjoyed me, and we had a good time together. I got this sense of how different people actually are from what we might think they are. Later, I took a course in juvenile delinquency in the sociology department as a sophomore and really liked it. I realize now that the course in juvenile delinquency tapped into that same quality of how people may be different than they appear. I switched my major from journalism to sociology. I took a course in personality theory with Calvin Hall and he just flipped me over with his ideas, particularly his views of psychoanalysis, and the incredible power of the inner experience. I then went to graduate school in Hall's psychology department... so that's how I got into psychology.
`xTx c4i9d0Wyatt: What then stirred your interest in Gestalt, what drew you in?
.L'hsg#D OZ*W}m0Polster: In graduate school, I was psychoanalytically oriented as was the department and Calvin Hall. As a matter of fact I wrote my dissertation on ego functioning in dreams, which was previously said to be only for super-ego and id. I got involved with a workshop with parolees in New York, and it was really eye-opening about what you can do in therapy without being the distant intellectualizer pedantic. It showed me how to get down to the basics, to the raw experience that people have. And it also introduced being open in a group. These groups were very early in the game, I'm talking about 1953, and it was long before the encounter movement was in full swing in the sixties. It was a very eye-opening group experience, hearing people's internal experience, which was unheard-of in those days, except in very intimate situations.
内蒙古心理网0madC0C1ZD/y^DWyatt: What was your initial reaction to that?
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`]Jd0内蒙古心理网HE]d$DIn fact, I think when I started doing psychotherapy, I sat behind a desk. Coming out from behind that desk was a big change, metaphorically and literally.
$?+k cm'o{hC0内蒙古心理网5U5@o(ox1Nd gAPolster: Oh, I was spellbound by the possibilities of human experience. And it happened very quickly too, because the leader was very skilled in knowing where to go. There was one patient that I'd worked with before I got involved in Gestalt therapy. He was still working with me and our worked had changed, so I asked him, "What seems different in being here?" And he said "It's not so lonely anymore." And that was really a very eye-opening feeling as well, about the importance of the connectedness between the therapist and the patient, which was then quite rare. In fact, I think when I started doing psychotherapy, I sat behind a desk. Coming out from behind that desk was a big change, metaphorically and literally.
内蒙古心理网)N$iH3p+THP.U/{Yalom: Was there some loneliness for you though in abandoning the bastion of psychoanalysis, and doing this on your own?
内蒙古心理网$fxG8S%fCPolster: It wasn't lonely because I was joined with a group of people. I loved being with those people and so, no, quite the contrary, it expanded my community, rather than subtracting from it.
b3iD?;i,b0XT^w'r0~D!_z,O&~0Learning from Fritz Perls []
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Wyatt: So, looking back, what contributions did you pull from Perls? What nuggets still stick with you?
"Z7\7j3}#{fN0Polster: One thing I got from Perls is the power of simple continuity; if we stay with somebody step-by-step, and heighten their awareness so that there is an accumulation of vitality, that leads toward very strong and revealing experiences. That process is not required for depth, but depth comes through sequentially, rather than through proof and interpretation. Not that I think that one should never interpret, but I was impressed with how much leverage that continuity and heightening of experience had on the work.
#y;a?n+d ZDprW7p j0Wyatt: What are some memories and impressions of Perls as a person?
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fY0Polster: Perls was a very brilliant demonstrator of therapy. There was a strange sense of daring and safety joined together. Perls was radar; he just knew where to go. Well, he was a very unique person. I was not accustomed to a person so full of uniqueness: how a person can be really clearly differentiated from others and still have some connectedness, some offering, some contribution. Perls was a very brilliant demonstrator of therapy. There was a strange sense of daring and safety joined together. Perls was radar; he just knew where to go. And he had a presence which was very supportive. There was a sense that, if you went where he wanted to go you would never be in trouble. He could be supportive, kind, and resonant, as well as opinionated and impatient. Perls was a "my-way-or-the-highway" kind of guy.
内蒙古心理网d'V5}+u J8SWyatt: It must have been quite different coming from traditional analytic training. Did he work with you in a group or individually?
ixCk"J`}^0Polster: Read on this site. Well, when I rolled in, I had never seen anything like this. Many people in the group had been to Moreno's Psychodrama workshops. But it seemed valid and not out of tune with the people and where they were ready to go. So I felt very excited, but with a certain fear inside. It was very illuminating to experience within myself and see what was happening within others. In the beginning I thought "Hey, what's so new about this; this isn't all that different from psychoanalysis," but the more I could see it, the more I could differentiate it. It just "grew me up" as a professional, and expanded my sense of what could happen in people's minds.
内蒙古心理网*w?Z(|y\Oaw IYalom: Do you have any specific memories of working with Perls that still stand out for you?
M.O%b(Mb.U9Rs3z0Polster: Well, I remember that I reached way inside myself, and wound up in a deep cry, and not just tears, but crying. And it's like the whole world was in there, and suddenly I felt his hand holding my hand, and it was Fritz. It's a very touching thing to feel this kind of sense of appreciation of what I had been through, and not keeping his distance. It was a very mind-changing realization of people's need to connect, getting a feeling of interactive connection. Well, I remember that I reached way inside myself, and wound up in a deep cry, and not just tears, but crying. And it's like the whole world was in there, and suddenly I felt his hand holding my hand, and it was Fritz.
v&WXE\)K8nr/r0Wyatt: So these experiences you had in the group with Perls and with others, I mean I'm not exaggerating, it transformed your work and you personally?
1QLh*y)Dl$J;c0Polster: Yes it did transform me. And I love psychoanalysis, don't misunderstand me. I was really taken with the theory; it just opened me up tremendously.
内蒙古心理网+S|R`6_IUKfF S内蒙古心理网lBRg6{sThe Contact Boundary in Therapy []
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Yalom: You talk a lot about making contact, and you delved into that in your writing as well. Can you say more about the centrality of contact in Gestalt therapy?
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k0MpRSB+WX7L.KPolster: Well, there are a number of central principles, but that's as central a principle as any from my standpoint. For me it's the one that was the grounding through all the rest.
内蒙古心理网4q h(r,}:bYalom: Why is it so important to your work, and so important to you?
ovd:q0sHP-C-a8w|0Polster: I'm not exactly sure why it became so important to me. I just gravitate more to that concept than to others that are also very important to me-like awareness, experiments, and helping people to act their directionalism, to really behave in ways, rather than just knowing about something. But you are right that it is key to my work.