Schonberger | 玛格丽特·
Just nine months and 6 days after Gustav Schonberger and Eugenia
Weiner-Schonberger were wed, they bore a daughter on May 10, in 1897. Margaret
Mahler was born in the small western Hungarian town of Sopron close to Vienna.
The Mahlers lived an apartment house called Gyoery Palota (Palais of the
Railroad Co.) which once habituated the executives of the railroad and is now
nonexistent.
Her father Gustav was born in a town near Sopron, Ferto-Szent Nikos and growing
up accepted Hungarian as his language over German. Gustav graduated from Vienna
University School of Medicine and was a general practioner. He had a very active
social life being the Chief Public Health Official of their district and the
President of the Sopron Jewish Community. Eugenia married Gustav at the age of
19 and so began her misery. She felt she was too young to marry and be a mother.
So for the most part of her life she was a miserable German speaking housewife
from Lakenbach, Hungary who prided in her cooking and house chores. Eugenia
dominated the household and was very unhappy with having a child at such a young
age. Gustav became the primary care giver to Margaret. Margaret grew to be his
favorite and have little of a relationship with her mother.
Four years after Margaret an expected child was born, Margaret had a younger
sister named Suzanne that was adored by Eugenia. Margaret once overheard her
mother say to Suzanne "I have brought you into this world, I suckle you, I love
you, I adore you, I live only for you, you are my whole life." Margaret's heart
being shattered, replied, "And I, I was born to my father." Margaret later
believed that the way her mother treated her was the reason she grew such an
interest in pediatrics and psychoanalysis. One of the happiest moments of
Margaret's childhood was when Suzanne was two and put her cheek to a hot iron.
Their mother was mortified and hysterical. She couldn't believe her "pretty
daughter" ruined her face.
Growing up for Margaret was not a happy time, she had a very low self-esteem and
was jealous of the praises that Suzanne received from their mother. Eugenia ran
a very strict household. Gustav was not allowed to nap on the couch, friends
were not welcomed, and the house was to be kept spotless. (Margaret later felt
that her mother had some neurosis causing her to be insensitive to others
feelings.) Margaret only had one birthday party when she was 8 on one account,
that Margaret would have to give up her cherished chocolate collection of animal
figures for the lottery of the party guests.
Margaret's father supported her and watched while Margaret excelled in Math and
Science. Margaret felt she needed to make up where she was lacking, and gave up
her feminine self-esteem for an intellectual self-esteem. Crying one day to her
father because none of the boys noticed her he replied "You don't need a man,
you are man enough for yourself." From that moment Margaret felt if she was to
ever love, the man must be inferior to her and allow her to dominate the
relationship.
After completing a 6 year program at Higher School for Daughters, she decided to
continue her education even though women didn't and attend Vaci Utaci Gimnazium
in Budapest. She was the second woman from Sopron to receive higher education.
She was 16 when she went to Budapest and lived with her mother's sister who also
disliked Margaret. Most of the time Margaret stayed with her best friend
Alice-Szekely-Kovacs a classmate of hers at the gym. Alice's family was social
and constantly entertaining, mingling with Ferenczi, Michael Balint (who Alice
later Married.) After meeting Ferenczi, Margaret was intrigued and was
encouraged to read . She was fascinated with the idea of the unconscious.
Budapest was an incredible influence of Margaret's life and career. She met some
of the most interesting people and began to learn what she wanted out of life,
and wanted to give back.
In September of 1916 Margaret began at the University of Budapest studying art
history and learning to sculpt which she loved, but was not very good at. After
realizing she would not be a successful sculptor, she decided to enroll in
Medical school in January of 1917. Margaret's father was so proud she was
successful in gaining admission. Though he encouraged her to stay away from
anything to masculine and to study ophthalmology, because it was "dainty".
After 3 semesters Margaret and a few classmates transferred to the University of
Munich to begin their clinical training. Shortly after, around 1920 she began to
receive pressure because she was Jewish. At the time, very few Jewish were
permitted in Hungary to pursue university education.
About the same time, Suzanne, Margaret's younger sister wished to pursue a music
career in Munich, her parents forbid her unless Margaret would take over as her
primary care giver. With Margaret agreeing to do so, Susanne relocated to Munich
and shared a small room in a boarding house with Margaret. As tensions arose
towards the Jewish, Margaret and Suzanne were in the middle of the cross fire.
While eating lunch one day at the boarding house, they were arrested and thrown
in jail for being Jewish. A family friend who was a lawyer helped in getting
them out of jail and encouraged them to leave Munich as soon as possible, for
things were about to take a turn for the worse. Margaret and Suzanne knew it was
for the best not only with the tension, but inflation was becoming outrageous
and it was very expensive for them to stay. Margaret decided she wanted to go to
the University of Jena, to study with Ibrahim, The Professor of Pediatrics, in
the spring of 1920. Without Margaret to stay with her, Suzanne was forced to go
back to Vienna.
Margaret grew to love Ibrahim. He studied ruminating and pylorospatic infants.
Margaret began to learn how important play and love are for infants to grow
mentally and physically healthy. Again Margaret felt tension as many of the
students at the University did not accept her religion, so in 1921 she
transferred to the University of Heidelberg for her final semester.
For the first time in her life Margaret began to feel beautiful. Men began to
notice her and she had an on and off relationship with a gentleman by whom she
refers to as "J". "J" wanted to marry Margaret and followed her from city to
city attempting to win over her love. "J" wrote a letter to Margaret's father
saying Margaret was becoming promiscuous. Knowing his daughter was too smart for
that, he suggested that "J" stay away from her and that was the last of "J". In
Heidelberg, Margaret began to grow ill. She was having severe stomach pains and
would have attacks that horrified her circle of friend's. She was diagnosed with
Heirshsprung disease, "a congenital disorder of the colon rectum that is unable
to relax and permit the passage of stool." She was told she needed to have a
partial colonectomy, which at the time was major surgery. During the surgery,
however, the doctor's discovered she needed to have severe adhesions removed
instead of the colonectomy. After the procedure, the problem ended.
In 1921 she returned to Jena to take her written and oral exams and was one of
two students to graduate Magna Cum Laude in 1922. Margaret had a fear of failing
and therefore didn't show up for the final exam. Ibrahim talked her into taking
a special exam that he would administer which she took and passed. She wrote her
Doctoral dissertation on "Thrombocytopenic Purpura in Childhood".
In 1922 she headed back to Vienna to get her license and be able to practice.
She attempted to do this in Germany, but again was turned away because she was
Jewish. In 1923 She received her license and began to practice under a gentleman
who told her she could never move up from an apprentice to an assistant because
she was suppose to be a wife and a mother. Soon after the Doctor and his wife
jointly committed suicide together.
Margaret decided she was ready for the transition from pediatrics to psychiatry
that began in 1922. She began by contributing article's to the Journal for
Psychoanalytic Pedagogy. Right after, Vienna appointed her school doctor.
In 1926 she began her training analysis with Helene Deutsch. Deutsch was
completely against the idea, but with encouragement from Ferenczi she accepted.
After 14 months of constant cancellations Deutsch said that she was
unanalyzable. Deutsch insisted the only way her training could continue was if
she was paid. Seven years later, in 1933 Margaret was finally accepted as an
analyst, in the same year she was grief stricken, when her long time friend and
inspiration Ferenczi passed away.
Margaret being very active in her field and attending seminars mixed in the
circle with Anna Freud and at one of her seminars met Paul Mahler. In 1936 they
married, Margaret was 39. Paul was a chemist with a Ph.D., and a junior partner
of Viennese Cordial Factory that was far from successful, but a family business
that eventually caused him to go broke. Paul was an only son and very needy.
Margaret felt he was inferior and knew that she dominated the relationship, they
were a perfect match.
As the pressure from the Nazis became closer Margaret and Paul move to Britain
for a few months where they spent their time trying to help others escape and
immigrate to America. In 1938 the British Psychoanalytic Society loaned them the
money to move to America. Margaret and Paul were fearful of coming to the United
States. They had little money, spoke hardly and English, and were leaving family
and friend's behind. They came over on the Queen Mary which Margaret thought was
incredibly beautiful. Arriving in the United States, they meet up with old
friends and found an apartment on 98th street and Columbus. They didn't stay
long after finding a one room apartment on Central Park West.
Margaret set up her own private practice in the basement of a building and began
to rebuild her clientele after receiving a New York Medical license. In 1939 she
meet the famous Ben Spock and in 1940 gave a child analysis seminar, becoming
the senior teacher of child analysis. She joined the Institute of Human
Development and the Educational Institute along with the New York Psychoanalytic
Society.
In 1948 Margaret was involved with clinical studies on Benign and Malignant
Cases of Childhood Psychosis. Margaret loved working with children, it was her
passion. She loved the way the children gave her all of their attention and
enjoyed working with her as well.
Suzanne, still in Vienna, fled to Budapest to escape the Nazis. In 1944 her
father died one month after the German invasion of Hungary. Her mother was
encouraged to leave, ignoring the mayors suggestions she died one year later in
Auschwitz. Margaret went through a long painful mourning over her mother. She
was torn that they never developed a relationship like Suzanne had. She had
encouraged her mother to come to the United States, but her visa did not go
through in time.
Margaret longed for a summer home in the country. She loved the outdoors and to
garden. The Mahlers along with friends rented a summer house in Brookfield,
Connecticut and searched for a home to buy. In 1944 they bought a summer home
for $5000.00. Margaret loved spending weekends there.
In 1950 she joined the staff of the Albert Einstein School of Medicine and was
the chairmanship of the child analysis training program, which she continued
into the 1960's. Some of the candidates that trained under her are Delano,
Stewart Finch and Saul Harris.
During 1950 Manuel Furer and Margaret founded the therapeutic nursery for
psychotic children at Einstein. This was used to study if child psychosis occurs
at one and a half and through the age of two. Margaret believed that the
"psychological birth is not simultaneous to the biological birth." Margaret
learned that disturbed children can work with a therapist and succeeded in a
group setting, but that psychotic children need one on one help.
Margaret's main interest was in normal childhood development, but spent much of
her time with psychiatric children and how they arrive at the "self".
Her theory for the developmental Phase is as follows: Autistic Phase: first 1 to
2 months. The infant is oblivious to everything but himself.