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Psychobabble: Exploding the Myths of the Self-Help Generation PDF

257 Pages·2012·3.2 MB·English
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Preview Psychobabble: Exploding the Myths of the Self-Help Generation

Contents Acknowledgements Introduction: what’s so wrong with popular psychology anyway? MYTH 1: The root of all your problems is low self-esteem MYTH 2: Let your feelings out! MYTH 3: Emotional intelligence is what really counts MYTH 4: Let your goals power you towards success! MYTH 5: No one can make you feel anything MYTH 6: Think positive and be a winner! MYTH 7: We need to talk ... MYTH 8: Whatever your problem, CBT is the answer MYTH 9: You can never be too assertive MYTH 10: Men and women live on different planets MYTH 11: Your inner child needs a hug MYTH 12: You can learn to do anything you want MYTH 13: You’d better get yourself sorted MYTH 14: You are stronger than you know MYTH 15: You are a master of the universe! MYTH 16: There is no failure, only feedback MYTH 17: It’s all your parents’ fault MYTH 18: You can heal your body MYTH 19: You are in control of your life MYTH 20: Married bliss: a matter of give and take MYTH 21: Discover the real you! MYTH 22: Make every second count MYTH 23: We must all strive to be happy Epilogue References Bibliography Acknowledgements To my very dear wife and long-suffering sons: thank you for all your patience and support. I promise I won’t write anything else for a while. Many thanks also to the team at Pearson, especially Paul East and Elie Williams for all their hard work behind the scenes. This book also owes much to the academics, bloggers and journalists who kindly furnished me with so much stimulating material, and also to Drew and Natalie Dee, creators of Married To The Sea. Their genius cartoons made me laugh out loud during a particularly gruelling phase of the writing. Most of all, thank you to my magnificent editor, Rachael Stock, who went way beyond the call of duty and generously offered to edit this book whilst technically on leave. I’m not sure about the wisdom of sawing through the branch you’re sitting on (or even helping someone else do so) but you have selflessly steadied my hand and I’m truly grateful. Finally, I want to acknowledge the contribution of my faithful hound, Lola, who has stayed glued to my side throughout the whole process, even though I suspect her devotion may have had something to do with her ability to persuade me to keep on putting my hand in the biscuit tin and turn a blind eye whenever she snuck up on the sofa in my office. I have only two words to say to her: GET DOWN! PUBLISHER’S ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS Cartoons from the strip, Married To The Sea (marriedtothesea.com). ‘Men willingly believe what they wish.’ JULIUS CAESAR ‘I believe in an open mind,but not so open that your brains fall out.’ ARTHUR HAYS SULZBERGER ‘Man is what he believes.’ ANTON CHEKHOV Introduction WHAT’S SO WRONG WITH POPULAR PSYCHOLOGY ANYWAY? We live in the age of self-improvement. As we go about our daily lives we are subjected to a million messages – some subtle, and some less so – intimating that a happier, richer, more successful life is just around the corner. With the immediate survival needs of food and shelter taken care of for the majority, western civilisation has now turned its attention to how much better it could all be. And this in turn has spawned a prolific, multi-million dollar industry of stadium-filling gurus, bestselling books, magazines and websites telling us how to be happier, thinner, richer, and all round better people. But is our culture of self-help really helping? Or is it just creating expectations that none of us can live up to? Has the casual psychologising of everyday life enlightened us, or are we just making a rod for own backs? These are questions we all need to be grappling with. This book is an invitation to pause, take stock, and maybe start weeding out some of the more insidious modern myths that have taken root in our collective psyche. I’m not simply trying to be a killjoy or score cheap points at other people’s expense. I fully appreciate that many contributors to the burgeoning self-help industry are sincere, well-intentioned individuals who genuinely want others to benefit from their wisdom and experience. The majority are not charlatans out to make a quick buck from our credulity. Some are well-informed and well-qualified to offer advice, and such people absolutely deserve to be listened to. However, insofar as this does feel like a grumpy tirade, it’s because I am increasingly concerned that something significant is happening within our society to which we continue to turn a naively blind eye. It’s too easy to dismiss the world of self-help as an amusing diversion, a quick read on the plane or a pleasant escapist fantasy of a life reinvented and transformed. Maybe we might even pick up a few handy tips or a couple of insights along the way. What’s the harm? After all, nobody takes these things that seriously, do they? But the truth is that secretly many of us do. Increasing that seriously, do they? But the truth is that secretly many of us do. Increasing numbers of us are turning to the pages of self-help books in search of answers to lives that feel in need of fixing. The phenomenal growth of the self-help sector in the last century is a testament not only to our rising levels of insecurity and self-doubt, but to the stealthy psychologising of our culture as a whole. The ideas and values associated with popular psychology have infiltrated our culture so deeply that we now take them largely for granted. Even for those of us who regard ourselves as fairly knowing, they form part of that framework of assumptions that constitutes the invisible scaffolding for the way we approach our lives. They shape our evaluations of other people and ourselves. They subtly colour the tone of everyday experience, bringing with them an agenda that radically affects the kinds of decisions and choices we make both as individuals and as a society. Rather alarmingly, much of this has taken place without us ever having paused to examine these precepts, or to question whether we can afford to follow where they lead. Whilst we may like to think that popular psychology holds up a mirror that allows us to understand ourselves, it is also a distorting mirror that remakes us in its own image. In The Selfish Gene, Richard Dawkins introduced us to the meme, defined as ‘an idea, behaviour or style that spreads from person to person within a culture’. Thanks to the powerful engine of the self-help industry, the memes of popular psychology are busy replicating themselves so effectively that they have become an integral part of the fabric of our lives and thought processes. Consider, by way of illustration, the popularity of talent shows like The X Factor. The format dictates that every contestant must undergo a journey of personal transformation. Their motivations are accounted for in terms of an emotive back story that usually implies some cod-psychological rationale for their decision to audition while the audience is invited to nod (and vote) approvingly as contestants ‘grow’ as artists and people over the ensuing weeks. Shania is a natural talent but ‘just needs to believe in herself more’. Ricky could be world-class but needs to get in touch with who he really is inside if he is ever to give a truly ‘authentic’ winning performance. And Cassie could be great if she ever manages to let go of those emotional demons from her past. Under the guidance of mentors whose assertive sound bites would make many motivational speakers blush, the contestants are prompted to change their lives and take charge of their fates. If they can just believe hard enough, give it 110 per cent, focus on their goals and ‘stay in the zone’, then maybe that elusive recording contract will be theirs. However, all the while the pseudo- psychological lore of such shows whispers in our ear that the true prize on offer psychological lore of such shows whispers in our ear that the true prize on offer is not the record contract but the personal fulfilment awaiting anyone brave enough to try and ‘live their dream’. You can dismiss this all as good storytelling by the production company but these format points are also an indication of the extent to which popular psychology and popular culture have become intimately fused. Psychobabble is a language that, like it or not, we are all learning to speak fluently, and elements of those Saturday night prime-time shows could have been lifted straight from the pages of the countless self-help books that line the shelves of your local bookstore, not to mention the CDs purchased and training courses attended by millions of us every year. The most successful self-help books have a long reach: classics like How to Win Friends and Influence People and I’m OK, You’re OK are said to have sold 15 million copies worldwide. You Can Heal Your Life by Louise Hay has sold over 35 million, while Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus and the Chicken Soup for the Soul series claim over 50 million and 100 million sales respectively. These are big numbers in the publishing world. If you are reading this you will almost certainly have heard of these books and probably have a fair idea of what is in them. But even if you haven’t, you will still have been affected by them. The congregational minister Edwin Paxton Hood once admonished: ‘Be as careful of the books you read, as of the company you keep; for your habits and character will be influenced as much by the latter as by the former.’ Perhaps we should be taking his advice to heart. The values and preoccupations of popular psychology are already profoundly influencing the nature of the stories we tell ourselves about who we are and who we can become. The question we need to ask is, when we take a cold hard look at the outcome, do we really like what we see? KEEPING IT SIMPLE One of the major selling points of any good self-help book is actually one of the most misleading, namely the promise that it will distil a potentially complex situation or life challenge into a manageable and readily digestible form. This would be great if it were remotely possible. As you may have noticed as you have fumbled along through the years, human beings are complex, their lives are complex, and the social environment they are trying to navigate is complex. There are innumerable variables involved in even the most simple of human activities. As the new branch of science known as ‘chaos theory’ has been amply demonstrating over recent years, even small local variations can produce a truly demonstrating over recent years, even small local variations can produce a truly bewildering variety of outcomes – so great in fact as to render prediction virtually impossible, even in a closed, deterministic system. The virtue of parsimony enshrined in Occam’s razor – the principle that a simple explanation or theory is usually preferable to a complex one – is all very well, but as our understanding of the world grows more sophisticated we are being forced to acknowledge that even the most economical explanations at our disposal are not necessarily straightforward. It turns out Oscar Wilde was right when he wrote: ‘The truth is rarely pure and never simple.’ For example, in the mysterious world of particle physics, Superstring Theory remains the most promising candidate to provide us with a workable ‘Theory of Everything’. This is the Grail of modern physics, the theoretical framework that will finally allow physicists to reconcile the uneasy bedfellows of quantum physics and general relativity. However, as Brian Greene points out in The Elegant Universe, although the theory looks sound, the maths involved is proving so complex that even the best mathematical brains in the world are currently struggling to make the highly convoluted sums add up. Understanding the way inert matter behaves is hard enough, but when we start trying to understand ourselves we have a truly momentous task on our hands. As David Rogers explains: ‘The most extensive computation known has been conducted over the last billion years on a planet-wide scale: it is the evolution of life. The power of this computation is illustrated by the complexity and beauty of its crowning achievement, the human brain.’ If, as Rogers claims, we are sitting at the apex of some notional pyramid of complexity, the chances that we will ever understand ourselves in any depth are pretty remote. After all, it is not even as if every human brain is identical or even running the same software. I would furthermore suggest that the chances that any significant aspect of our multifaceted, multidimensional and highly idiosyncratic lives (especially those murky unresolved zones we tend to demarcate as ‘problems’) can ever be covered adequately by a brace of simple rules, five key principles or seven effective habits, are practically next to zero. Yet this is precisely what the bulk of self-help books offer. Many popular- psychology authors and publishers even exalt in the fact. Take Norman Vincent Peale for example, the father of positive thinking, who berates us for ‘struggling with the complexities and avoiding the simplicities’. This would be all very well if life were simple, but if the maps we are using to guide us aren’t sufficiently detailed to do justice to the terrain we are traversing we shouldn’t be surprised if

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Exposing the self-help myths that make us all more miserable. This is what your psychologist would really tell you-if he thought you could handle it! This is the kick up the backside the self-help genre needs: an intelligent, provocative and thought-provoking expose of the modern myths that we're to
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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.