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Appendix A: Memory Myths and Realities PDF

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Appendix A: Memory Myths and Realities Myth 1. You must identify the root cause of your unhappiness from the past in order to heal and be happy in the present. Reality 1. It is unfortunately the normal human lot to be frustrated and unhappy at various points in your life. There is no magic pill to make you happy, and your attitude in the present is much more the issue than anything that happened to you in the past. Myth 2. Checklists of “symptoms” are reliable tools to identify disorders. Reality 2. Beware of symptom checklists, particularly if they apply to nearly everyone in the general population. At one time or another, most people experience depres- sion, troubled relationships, ambivalence toward family members, and low self- esteem. These are not necessarily “symptoms” of anything other than the human condition. Myth 3. You can trust any therapist who seems compassionate, warm, wise, and caring. You do not need to ask about credentials, experience, training, philosophy, treat- ment approach, or techniques. Reality 3. Just because a therapist is warm and caring does not mean that he or she is com- petent or can help you. Training, philosophy, and treatment modalities are extremely important. Therapists who dwell unceasingly on your past are unlikely to help you cope with your present-day problems. Therapy should challenge you to change your way of thinking about and dealing with the present-day conflicts that sent you to therapy in the first place. © The Author(s) 2017 421 M. Pendergrast, The Repressed Memory Epidemic, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-63375-6 422 Appendix A: Memory Myths and Realities Myth 4. Your therapist should become an extremely important person in your life, a sur- rogate parent. Reality 4. Good therapists never encourage a client to become overly dependent. The goal of therapy should be to make one a fully functioning person capable of indepen- dent judgment. Any therapist who relishes the role of authority figure or guru should be avoided. Any therapist who tells you that he or she alone cares about you and understands you is a bad therapist. Good therapists constantly guard against bringing their own egos, needs, and biases into the therapy session. Myth 5. Therapy is an art, not a science. Therefore, it is inappropriate to ask for a treat- ment plan. Reality 5. Therapists who hide behind statements about how therapy is an art-form should take up painting and stop practicing their “art” on unsuspecting minds. Patients should not be used as guinea pigs for experimental techniques. Like brain sur- geons, those who treat mental problems should base their treatment on scientifi- cally proven, safe and effective methods. Patients should seek alternate opinions from therapists with different clinical orientations. Myth 6. Your therapist is an intuitive genius who does not need to consult with other thera- pists or refer you to a physician for any physical problems. Therapists have an uncanny ability to discern the truth of your statements. Reality 6. Therapists are no better than anyone else at determining truth or falsehood. Enormous confidence in one’s intuition turns out to be a drawback in terms of predictive outcome. “Clinical intuition” is notoriously inaccurate. In one study, clinical psychologists were correct less than 50% of the time in assessing sexual abuse. That being the case, therapists should remain suitably humble and seek outside consultation frequently, especially if clients present with physical prob- lems. Such clients should be referred to competent psychiatrists and other physi- cians for a full mental and physical evaluation. Myth 7. All “Christian therapists” and pastoral counselors can be trusted because they are sincere and in touch with the Lord. Reality 7. Unfortunately, more atrocities have been committed in the name of God than any other cause. True Christians believe in love, family unity, and forgiveness. Too many so-called Christian counselors and ministers have promoted hatred, family destruction, and no forgiveness. Appendix A: Memory Myths and Realities 423 Myth 8. Group therapy is always a good way to treat survivors of sexual abuse. Reality 8. Group therapy can indeed be helpful in some cases, but it can be extremely dam- aging in others, particularly when there is peer pressure to conform to group expectations. In an “incest survivor” group, for instance, retelling and embellish- ing horror stories can create an emotional hothouse atmosphere in which those who do not have “memories” feel inadequate or left out, and they feel pressured to “remember” similar horrors. Similarly, they are told that if they react strongly to a story, it is proof that they were abused. Myth 9. Self-help books are always helpful and authoritative. Reality 9. Self-help books can indeed be very useful, but readers should never forget that many publishers are interested primarily in profits, not accuracy. In other words, just because something is written in an authoritative style and is published in a best- selling book doesn’t mean that it is true. Books such as The Courage to Heal are full of misinformation and have caused untold damage. Intelligent readers of such books should employ their own critical thinking skills and should also read books expressing contrary views. Myth 10. If you recalled traumatic events on your own, outside therapy, they are reliable because you could not have been led into them. Reality 10. Beginning in the mid-1980s, and extending into the 1990s and into the 21st century, the idea that personal problems may stem from long-forgotten sexual abuse became so prevalent that almost all women (and many men) considered whether they might have been incest victims without knowing it. Many seeking answers to their problems desperately sought “memories” both in and out of therapy. Many recovered such “memories” after reading self-help books, being “triggered” by a talk show, or talking to a friend. They were led into this false belief system just as surely as in formal therapy. Myth 11. All good therapy takes a long time and involves delving into the past. Reality 11. The forms of therapy that have proven to be the most effective are cognitive and behavioral therapy that do not dwell on the past, but help clients cope with cur- rent life stressors, often by reframing the way they perceive their problems. Such therapy can often be short-term. Myth 12. Memories are always accurate. 424 Appendix A: Memory Myths and Realities Reality 12. All memories are reconstructions of likely scenarios in which you fill in the gaps. Thus, all memories are somewhat inaccurate, though they serve us well enough under normal conditions. Under authoritative social influence, how- ever, memories can be distorted or even entirely rewritten. Memory is largely a matter of rehearsal. The more often a scene is rehearsed, the more real it becomes to you. Experiments have shown that people can be induced to remem- ber traumatic events that did not occur. Myth 13. If you have a tiny intuition or a feeling that you may have been sexually abused, you probably were. Reality 13. If you have a “tiny intuition or a feeling” that you may have been sexually abused and that you have repressed the memories, you have probably been influenced by The Courage to Heal, similar books, or the popular culture that made such notions so popular. If you were truly sexually abused, the odds are very good that you remember it all too well. Myth 14. Repeated trauma is so distressing that it must be repressed or dissociated. You could have been raped for years and not remember anything about it. Reality 14. There is no scientific evidence that human beings are capable of “massive repression.” On the contrary, there is much evidence that traumatic events are more likely to be remembered than others. There is no way to prove that mas- sive repression does not exist, however, just as one cannot prove that ghosts or witches do not exist; one cannot prove a negative. Myth 15. If you cannot remember chunks of your childhood, you were probably so trau- matized that you forgot them. Reality 15. No one remembers every event from his or her childhood. Most people recall the high and low points, but not much in between. This is normal and does not indicate any trauma in childhood. Myth 16. You must remember and relive all traumatic events from your past in order to heal. Reality 16. Although talking through recent painful events may be helpful, dwelling on long-past traumas tends to make people worse rather than better. The idea that you must “relive” or abreact the trauma to get better is simply not true. On the contrary, therapists who tell clients, “You must get worse before you get better,” Appendix A: Memory Myths and Realities 425 are misleading them. The endless downward spiral into retrieving more and more “memories” is harmful rather than helpful. Myth 17. You have a huge storehouse of unresolved anger. You must “get your anger out” in order to heal. Reality 17. It is natural to want to express justifiable anger, but it is seldom healing in and of itself. When rage is encouraged as a “healthy” outlet, it tends to feed on itself and create more rage rather than less. People need to learn to express their dif- ferences in an appropriate and helpful manner. Often, it is best to avoid con- frontations until anger has subsided and a more rational discussion can ensue. Myth 18. Confrontation is necessary for healing. Reality 18. Confrontation should be undertaken only with the idea of achieving a better understanding and relationship. In other words, mediation in which all parties participate is preferable to judgmental confrontation. Confronting someone as a “hit- and- run” tactic, without allowing any dialogue, is cowardly and unfair— certainly not “courageous.” Myth 19. If you were a victim of incest, you must completely detach from your family in order to heal. You must detach from anyone who does not completely support you or who questions your memories. Reality 19. Even in cases of real, always-remembered incest, it is doubtful that complete detachment from the biological family is ultimately helpful. If the incest is ongoing, temporary separation is clearly indicated. However, therapy should involve the entire family, including the perpetrator, in order to promote change and healing. True family therapy has proved to be helpful in many cases. Unfortunately, some therapists encourage separation and isolation from the family without ever meeting other family members. There is an inherent danger in isolating already disturbed and vulnerable people from their family and friends. Myth 20. Multiple personality disorder is a common response to childhood trauma and is often diagnosed during adult psychotherapy. Reality 20. Multiple personality disorder (MPD, now renamed dissociative identity disor- der, DID) is a fad diagnosis. If MPD exists naturally at all (which is doubtful), it is exceedingly rare. People usually come to believe they harbor internal “alters” only after entering therapy or reading a book or seeing a movie. 426 Appendix A: Memory Myths and Realities Myth 21. Your eating disorder most probably stems from repressed memories of sexual abuse. Reality 21. Careful studies have shown that there is no significant correlation between eat- ing disorders and a history of sexual abuse. The percentage of those with eating disorders who were sexually abused is about the same as in the normal population. Myth 22. Your panic attacks are probably flashbacks to repressed memories. Reality 22. About 35% of the American public have panic attacks at some time in their lives. Panic attacks are extremely frightening. If you have one, you may fear that you are having a heart attack. You may feel dizzy, experience a choking sensation, and feel disconnected from reality. Cognitive and behavioral therapy approaches can help you with panic attacks, which stem from current life stress, not from past trauma. Panic attacks are neither life-threatening nor dangerous. They are treatable. Myth 23. Hypnosis is a good and accurate method of recovering memories from your subconscious. Reality 23. Hypnosis is defined as being a state of “enhanced suggestibility.” Hypnosis may be useful for suggesting someone into a desired frame of mind; i.e., some people have used it to for help in smoking cessation. But hypnosis should never be used to retrieve memories. Research indicates that memories retrieved under hypnosis (or guided imagery or sodium Amytal) are likely to be confabula- tions—a mixture of truth and fantasy—based on the expectations of the hypno- tist and subject. Myth 24. Therapists must treat your “narrative truth” without consideration or investiga- tion of historical truth. Therapists are not detectives. Reality 24. It is important for therapists to listen to clients and to distinguish narrative from historical truth—but that does not mean that what actually happened is unim- portant. Indeed, if clients believe that they have recalled previously “repressed” memories of sexual abuse, it is very important to the client whether these events actually took place. By validating these memories, the therapist is already act- ing as a “detective.” It is the therapist’s obligation to explain that such memo- ries are questionable at best and must be corroborated by firm external evidence before they are taken seriously. Appendix A: Memory Myths and Realities 427 Myth 25. Therapists are experts at interpreting (a) dreams, (b) writings, (c) artwork, (d) bodily pains. Reality 25. No one knows what dreams really mean, but true experts on dreams know that they reflect daily concerns. Therefore, it is not surprising that someone obsessed with an issue might dream about it. Dreams should never be taken literally. Similarly, just because someone writes a story about an issue or draws a picture does not mean that the story or artwork reflects reality. Intense self-examination often leads to vague bodily pains. Therapists who believe that such pains are “evidence” of so- called “body memories” are practicing pseudoscience. Myth 26. If you first remember one perpetrator, you probably were abused by multiple perpetrators and will remember them in time. Reality 26. Illusory memories of sexual abuse frequently progress from one perpetrator to multiple perpetrators, from limited incidents to rapes throughout childhood, from vague intuitions to detailed, horrifying scenarios. True memories of long- term sexual abuse have always been remembered, even if the memories have been “parked” away from day-to-day attention. Myth 27. There is a network of satanic ritual abuse cults around the world involving many “upstanding” citizens. These cults are usually intergenerational. Reality 27. There is absolutely no evidence that satanic ritual abuse cults exist at all, at least as defined in popular culture. In other words, there are no cults in which babies are bred, sacrificed, and eaten. Isolated psychopaths, such as Charles Manson or the drug/cult in Matamaros, Mexico, may commit hideous atroci- ties, but they are not organized ritual abuse cults. Rebellious teenagers may draw pentagrams and murder stray cats, but they, too, are simply imitating popular cultural myths. Myth 28. One-half of all women are likely to be sexually abused before the age of 18. Reality 28. Statistics about sexual abuse vary, depending on the study methods and the definition of sexual abuse. Most women experience some form of unwanted sexual approach in their teenage years, which is horrendous but should not necessarily be considered sexual abuse. The incidence of sexual intercourse between fathers and daughters appears to be less than 1% in the general popula- tion, according to several studies. Incest is indeed awful, but its incidence is far from the inflated figures often bandied about. 428 Appendix A: Memory Myths and Realities Myth 29. Trauma in your past, particularly sexual abuse, is so harmful that you will never fully recover from it. Reality 29. Humans are resilient. There are thousands of examples of people who succeed in spite of their handicaps. Although severe trauma of any sort is terrible and does indeed leave life-long scars, it need not be the sole focus of your life. Appendix B: Oral History Interviews A Note on the Interviews I conducted the interviews that follow throughout the United States, Canada, and England from 1992 to 1995, in person or by telephone. I found subjects through numerous means—by contacting organizations such as Survivors of Incest Anonymous, the False Memory Syndrome Foundation, or the British False Memory Society, by reading newspapers and watching television, by browsing through yel- low pages in telephone books, and, quite often, by word-of-mouth, referral, or pure serendipity. Because the repressed-memory phenomenon has affected so many peo- ple, it was not difficult to find a cross-section of stories. I told people that I was writing a book about the repressed memory debate and that I was conducting interviews with those on all sides of the issue. In every case except one, I sent the transcript to each interview subject for approval, change, or amendment. (In the single exception to that rule, the massage therapist specifically assured me that he did not need to see the interview.) I explained that I would use fictitious names unless they preferred using their real names, and that the interviews would be edited, but that they would feature verbatim voices and opinions. Therefore, unless otherwise noted, pseudonyms have been used throughout these oral history transcripts, and place names have usually been altered. To remove my questions from the transcripts, I sometimes had to paraphrase a sen- tence. For example, I might have asked, “How did you feel about your parents before your memories came back?” In the printed interview, that becomes, “How did I feel about my parents before I recovered my memories? Well, I knew I never felt loved …” Aside from such minor adjustments, all words here were spoken by the subjects. I cut extraneous background information, using it to write the italicized introductions. Since most conversations jumped from one idea or time reference to another, I also rear- ranged portions of the interviews to promote a smooth flow. These are standard journal- istic techniques pioneered largely by Studs Terkel, whom I considered a mentor. —Mark Pendergrast © The Author(s) 2017 429 M. Pendergrast, The Repressed Memory Epidemic, DOI 10.1007/978-3-319-63375-6 430 Appendix B: Oral History Interviews Chapter 1a: The Therapists We are especially prone to make mistakes when dealing with a domain in which we are expert. Knowing a lot about the self and a little about the other person is a recipe for a radi- cal misreading of personality … This means that an expert is not open-minded about him- self or about other people, and is less open-minded as the information available declines in quality. —Jeremy Campbell, The Improbable Machine1 Interviews in this chapter: Sam Holden, Christian counselor Peter Jones, British physician/hypnotherapist Janet Griffin, M.S.W. Horace Stone, minister/counselor Leslie Watkins, Ph.D., clinical psychologist Delia Wadsworth, British consultant psychiatrist Charlotte Halpern, psychiatrist Jason Ransom, body worker Hamish Pitceathly, British primary cause analyst Katherine Hylander, past-life hypnotherapist Sally Bixby, psychotherapist Linda Ross, retractor therapist I conducted interviews in the early 1990s with therapists, “Survivors” who had only recently unearthed repressed memories of abuse, accused parents, and retrac- tors who once believed in repressed memories but had realized that they weren’t true. In the next four chapters, you will hear, in their own words, what they told me. If I had met the following therapists at a party and the subject of repressed mem- ories had never come up, I would have thought most of them were interesting, vital, caring people. And, in their own ways, they were. Yet all of them, except Sally Bixby and (now) Linda Ross, were busily helping their clients unearth memories, most of which I believe were illusory. They repeated the same clichés that we’ve already encountered, speaking with great assurance about repression, dissociation, inner children, body memories, and intergenerational abuse. They explained how they helped their patients overcome the inevitable denial following their returned memories. They spoke soothingly of safety and healing, while promoting what appeared to be mental tortures. The voices represented here were by no means unusual or extreme. I conducted many more interviews than those you will read here, some far more outrageous. These therapists were representative of those whose specialty was repressed- memory extraction. They attended the same continuing-education conferences, read the same books, consulted with one another, and developed their own pet variations and theories. The majority of American therapists still believe in the reality of repressed memories, as several surveys have demonstrated. A sizeable minority— 1 Campbell, Improbable Machine, p. 254.

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Hypnosis is a good and accurate method of recovering memories from your subconscious babies are bred, sacrificed, and eaten. Isolated . psychiatrists often headed large mental health clinics, where they sometimes lost touch with .. now I use hypnotic age regression to get at repressed memories.
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