ALTERNATIVE
PSYCHOTHERAPY
This
Is A Fictional Speculation About How To Treat Psychiatric Patients And Related
Contrived Thoughts About The History Of Psychotherapy. This Should Only Be Taken Seriously By
Seriously Disturbed Folks.
By Izzy Ess Of Cluelessness
A kleptomaniac, Ms. Sally Effingham,
hooked up with an insomniac, Sir Samuel von Dittersdorf, and several other
maniacs, to form a vigilante group of in-mates of Mount Sinai Hospital, whose
purpose was some night-time raids for women’s panties and men’s bright Argyle
socks. At first the nursing and the
clerical good staff did laugh at Effingham’s Marauding Effing Vigilantes, the
EMEVs, but it soon became apparent that the group was quite serious about their
goals. Some staff had already lost their
panties and their argyle socks and many patients were complaining. EMEVs were rounded up and isolated behind
locked doors but administrators were quite adamant that they be treated like a
“normal” group of patients who just had bizarre and schizophrenic thinking that
was common in that section of the Hospital.
The psychiatric doctors offered nothing
in the way of chemical additions to their therapy to correct the suppose-ed
chemical imbalances and were the victims of the panty and the argyle sock sequestering,
repeatedly. Getting doctors clothing was
a special victory for EMEVs. The doctors
did write papers in their psychiatric journals and gave the new names, Panty
Kleptomania and Argyle Kleptomania to the world’s literature. The staff and patients were entertained by the
whole situation and the women saw to it that they wore worthwhile and
particularly sexy panties while the men wore very fashionable Argyle
socks. The entertainment was so
therapeutic it was seen as a great boon to the mental health of everybody.
Administrators saw the benefits of
having EMEVs in the hospital. It
translated into shorter stays and happier old patients and fewer re-admissions
to the hospitals. Patients started
talking about EMEVs and other psychiatric wards at other hospitals encouraged
Kleptomaniacs and their Insomniacs to form an EMEV with some other
maniacs. The articles in psychiatric
journals were enthusiastic about the benefits of EMEVs. Research indicated that this kind of therapy
was quite unprecedented. Since the time
of old Hippocrates, who did no harm, the principals of safe and sound good
therapies was soundly established, eh?
One doctor did remember that there was
another good example of a patient who had started “Motor Boating.” He suffered from Panic Disorder and had had
multiple great phobias. His anxiety
level was always high and his sinusitis was a bother. While in the shower, one day, he had started
fantasizing about driving a wild motorboat through some crowds of swimmers and
just mowing them down viciously. He got
the shower in his face and sputtered with his lips together making loud sounds
like a motorboat. Not only did his
sinuses begin to really drain, but also he felt so much better mowing his
imaginary swimmers down. He developed it
and felt much less anxious without medications which often gave him suicidal
ideation. “Sure!’ he said, “I may be
homicidal in my ideation but my angst has gone and my sinuses are draining
freely.” He taught it to some other
anxious patients and they all agreed that Motor Boating was much better than
the medications and the usual talk therapy.
Re-introducing Motor Boating was pushed
by the administrators who had noted great reductions in the level of anxiety
throughout the ward, no matter what the patients’ therapies consisted of. Again, there was reduction in the length of
stay and less frequent re-admissions.
Motor Boating got another sprinkle in the psychiatric literature and the
doctors were so pleased.
It goes to show that psychiatry is not
exact but actually leaves a lot of room for creativity. Most psychiatric medications are far more
dangerous than these approaches and harks back to Hippocrates who was
accustomed to taking such large groups of maniacs to a cliff and telling them
to jump. Those that jumped were then at
peace and those that didn’t felt more optimistic that they had lived. Apparently some British therapists would
abandon patients in a maze of hedges and just wait. Those that made it through to freedom felt
much better and those that didn’t were never seen again and presumably were
cured.
THE END
©
izzy sommers, md
Welland,
Canada
December
10, 2013
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