6B WednesdayMarch12 2014 // The Statement Oedipus and drugs: The history of psychoanalysis in Ann Arbor by John Bohn Remember those cartoon Zoloft commer- cials? A sad white blob mopes around, but, pre- sumably having taken Zoloft midway through the commercial, is bouncing around happily in the end. Abilify, Cymbalta, Prozac. Before the era of Netflix, I remember being bombarded with pharmaceutical ads on cable television. In fact, the pharmaceutical industry spent $27 billion for drug promotions in 2012 alone. Since the 1980s, the growth of pharmaceuticals has had a significant impact on clinical practices and psychiatry units around the world. The turn to medicine is so common nowadays that it may come as a surprise to know that other forms of engaging with mental health are still available. One of the known alternatives is psycho- analysis - often referred to as psychodynamic psychotherapy, or a more comprehensive psy- chotherapy. However, the basic assumptions made in the one-paragraph explanations in Psychology 101 textbooks and the quick jokes made about Austrian psychologistcand credited founder ofPsychoanalysis Sigmund Freud don't detail the ways in which psychoanalysis can be valued and beneficialto out mental health. Caricatures and accusations surrounding psychoanalysishold some truth in thehistory of psychoanalysis, reflecting many of the cultural values of the 20th century society in which it emerged. However, since its inception, Freud's successors have taken his groundwork in new, progressive directions. Feminist psychoana- lysts Luce Irigaray, Helene Cixous and Julia Kristeva, during the '70s and '80s, challenged the psychoanalytic interpretation of women's psychology, updating the discipline for the demands of a Second Wave feminist audience. The rather mocking way in which some handle psychoanalysis obscures both these progressive developments, as well as the rich history the discipline has had in Ann Arbor. Walking down Washington Street, one may see a signthat reads "Michigan Psychoanalytic Institute" and assume it to be the relic of some fortunately forgotten past.Yet AnnArbor offers a vibrant community of analysts and scholars who employ psychoanalysis in their work and everyday lives, and who see its potential for understanding human relations and seek to push back against some of the numerous mis- conceptions that have emerged during its cen- tury-long history. In the 1970s, psychoanalytic practitioners worked side-by-side their nascent biomedical partners at the University's Psychiatric depart- ment. Analysts, like University alum Jean-Paul Pegeron, a practicing psychoanalyst in the Ann Arbor area, were trained in both disciplines during their residency at the University. "There was no question at the time, at least in that particular setting, that the two could not be compatible,"Pegeron said. In a psychiatric ward where both biomedical and psychoanalytic disciplines are used, the cli- nician would determine when medication was necessary and when long-term psychoanalytic therapy may be better suited. Pegeron, a certi- fied prescriber, often provides consultation to other psychoanalysts in making this decision. "There's obviously a gray zone," Pegeron said. "In the less severe cases, you often find some underlyingemotional issues, maybe some traumatic experiences and losses which would kind of tip you off to a more emotional issue." Pegeron said that though there is a whole range of depressive symptoms thatcan be diag- nosed, the issue might be more biological, in which case it cannot be treated solely through These factors can be so habitual or common- place in the life of the patient that they become difficult to determine where they are and why they are at play. Examinations of childhood experiences and past relations, along with pres- ent issues, work toward uncovering the hidden ways in which patients' past experiences affect their present. At the same time, the analyst seeks to prevent their own sentiments from influencingthe patients'understanding oftheir issues. "It's been said by an analyst recently, one who is espe- cially articulate, that Freud's greatest dis- covery was of a new form of human relat- edness," Shulman said. "It is a unique form of human rela- tionship that allows an unfolding of the self through this process." As ideal as the process sounds, psychoanalysis has found difficulties retaining credibility in the public eye. In recent years, a lack of exposure to the RUBY WALLAU/Daily process has been the result of pressure from insurance companies. "Most insurances don't cover psychoanaly- sis," Pegeron said. "They will cover psychother- apy, usually with a limited number of sessions even though they claim it's unlimited. And what they use is medical necessity. In other words, you have to show that the person is still having enough disturbances that they require continued therapy." The psychoanalytic process, however, never has a set trajectory. While four to five sessions a week is typical, patients are free to choose their ownpace and gradually build momentum. Even the conclusion of sessions comes from the patient. "People begin to talk about, and become able to think of their psychoanalysis ending, when they feel that enough of the difficulties they started with have been resolved and can be looked back on, and that they can reflect enough on their own about all that they have learned about themselves to carry on alone," Shulman said. Pharmaceuticals, however, provide a quick fix with fewer costs for insurance companies. Additionally, in the University setting, the capacity of pharmaceuticals to be tested on hundreds of subjects with immediate results makes conducting research simpler than in the case oflong-term therapies. As a result, the con- venience of medication has led to fewer practi- tioners such as Pegeron, who seekto bridge the two disciplines. While psychology departments in the United States have seen a decline in practicing psychoanalysts, University students can still gain exposure to the ideas of Freud through a variety of courses taught in LSA and seminars and conferences held at the Michigan Psycho- analytic Institute. Tomoko Masuzawa, profes- sor of comparative literature and history, and Andreas Gailus, associate chair and professor of Germanic languages, have offered such an opportunitycto varying degrees of success. "I tend to have a number of classes that include some Freud texts," Gailus said. "The first thing people will tell you is, well clearly isn't he wrong? They always assume that (psy- choanalysis) has somehow been completely superseded and that it's now entirely clear that everything Freud has to say is wrong." "I usually, as a beginning, say sexuality or sex in Freud isn't what you think," Masuzawa said of the way she overcomes many student's initial mindset. For Gailus, starting with a work by Freud on a topic outside sexuality is a rule of thumb. Mourning and Melancholia, Freud's essay on depression, has proven to be a popular read amongstudents. "(Students) find (the essay) fascinating and they realize that (Freud) has a way of bringing into relief the landscape of experience," Gailus said. Even in such a negative environment, stu- dents continue to find many concepts in psy- choanalysis useful. Rackham student Shannon Winston, who founded the University's psychoanalysis read- ing group, uses Freud's approach to imagina- tion in her work. Freud, in "The Interpretation of Dreams," examines the ways in which the imagination creates associations between objects that aren't necessarily connected by ideas, butrather by simpler qualities like shapes or color. For Winston, this approach becomes a new way of reading works such as "The Igua- na" by Italian author Anna Maria Ortese. "In Ortese's 'The Iguana,' I chart the color turquoise in its different manifestations," Win- ston said. "Inthe beginning of her novel, Ortese mentions the beautiful turquoise of the Medi- terranean. Then the narrative invokes stones and the Iguana of the same color. What I'm tracing are visual and perceptual networks of color throughout the narrative, which reveal perceptual resonances with the Sea." As Freud famously wrote in "Three Theo- ries of Sexuality," the only abnormal person is a psychologically normal person. As one in 10 adult Americans suffer from depression today, according to the Center for Disease Control, Freud's claim seems to be corroborated. With the prevalence of depression in many people's lives, one must wonder what the consequences are for a culture that largely resorts to one way, namely medication, in dealing with mental health and the interior landscape of the mind. To see the full version, go to michigandaily.com the thought bubble thefashion voyeur: clothing as an expressive tool BY ADRIENNE ROBERTS This semester, I'm in an English class that also counts as creative expression credit. This is probably one of the only classes where you get a mix of English majors - who often dress in clothing that could only be categorized as "hipster" - and everyone else, often students in Greek Life who, well, don't wear ripped tights, purposefully ugly sweaters and mom jeans. What is interesting is that this class is filled with seniors, yet the students in Greek Life still wear their letters on sweatshirts, t-shirts, etc. Add on rain boots, yoga pants and light wash jeans for men, and you have yourself a classic "Greek Life" look. We often PHOTO BY RUBY WALLAU "If I could do anything in the world, I would go out to Borneo tomorrow and I would just research orangutans and live in the forest, tent everything; if I could get a hammock it would be perfect. I could sleep up in the trees with (the orangutans). That would be a dream job, the best thing of my entire life." - MEGAN SKRZYPEK, LSA Freshman hear that freshman year is the year when students are making very conscious efforts to form their own identities in college through their appearance - they wear too much makeup, they put on pants to go to class (which seniors would argue is "trying too hard"), and they're basically walking advertisements for whatever club or group they joined at Festifall. I am not so sure if that theory holds up, though. I think students use clothing more than they imagine as a tool to express who they are and what they stand for - even seniors who say they barely make it out of bed each morning in time for class. On Saturday, air traffic control lost track of a plane traveling from Malaysia to Beijing carrying 239 passengers. The day was spent with rescue and search operations to find missing passengers over the South China Sea. ILLUSTRATION BY MAGGIE MILLER psychoanalytic therapy. "Their clock is set a bit lower than most people, so they might be in therapy for a while but nothing changes," Pegeron added. "So that would be an example of why you need to think about medication; lift enough of the mood and symptoms that their life hasn't changed yet, so then they can make use of therapy." In media, these therapy sessions have the stereotypical image of the patient lying on a reclined couch lamenting about their life while a silent analyst looks on indifferently. But whatever experiences Woody Allen may have had, the practitioners of Ann Arbor paint a differentpicture. "The invitation we make to our patients is this: to speak as freely as they can about whatever comes into their minds," University alum Michael Shulman, faculty member of the Michigan Psychoanalytic Institute, said. "Thoughts may occur that they're not sure they can or would like to say, but we ask them to do their best to speak them anyway." "What psychoanalysts do when we think we have something useful to say to help our patients speak more freely about what is inside," Shulman added. "But there is much more quiet and listening that develops than in ordinary conversation." Through this dialogue, both analyst and patient seek to understand the unconscious determining factors that may lead to recurring problems in relationships and everyday life. trending DMITRY LOVETSKY- Sochi isn't bidding adieu to athletics just yet. Amid the political crisis in Ukraine only 300 miles away, Russian soil will host 45 countries to compete for 72 gold medals over 10 days. ------------------- --- -- - - -------- - -- -- ----- - -- - - ------ - -- J soCHISZABADos cOM After winning her second gold medal as a member of the Canadian women's hockey team in Sochi, Szabados signed with the men's team Columbus Cottonmouth for the rest of the season. --g In 2024, Mars might be ready to welcome its first set of permanent human settlers. Over 200,000 astronauts have applied to be the first to take a one- way trip to Mars and restart human life. Training will begin next year. - - -Qiiiiiii