On 2005-01-18 00:50:00, Perrigaud wrote:
"Niles,
Sounds intense. Well the seminars are intense as well. Personally they helped me. Not every single process but a lot of 'em. It wasn't all about crying and feeling the pain for me. For me it was about releasing all the inner thoughts and feelings I never let out. Because I kept them in for so long they consumed me. They tore at me unitl one day I thought that the only way to get rid of them was to beat 'em out whether it was myself or others. "
You were lucky. When I was in college, one of my professors who was professor emeritus and former head of the psych department had *very* unkind things to say about the damage done to many individuals by the "sensitivity training" fad that stirred up a lot of emotions and memories in participants with unqualified training leaders who didn't know how to *properly* resolve what they stirred up.
That's what WWASPS and the other Programs reminds me of. I see the Programs as another psychotherapy cult/fad run largely by unqualified people who, as a result of not really knowing what they're doing, screw a lot of people's heads up in a big way.
I'm glad you're doing okay.
But the problem here is, you were *lucky*. I mean, I'm glad for you that you were one of the lucky ones. I just want the industry reformed and improved so there aren't as many psychiatric casualties of the process.
By "psychiatric casualties" I mean suicides (during or after), people who come out with PTSD, and inappropriate placements.
Some places are better than others. Some places are better some years than others. Sometimes some kids are lucky enough to get staff that are actually competent through training or naturally talented enough to muddle through.
But systematic reforms, particularly ones that prevent inappropriate placements in the first place and ensure minimum professional standards for training and qualifications of the various employees, could substantially reduce the number of casualties coming out of these places.
I'm glad you were lucky.
I want reforms to protect the ones who aren't lucky now, and the ones next week and next year who won't be lucky like you were.
Timoclea