Paper Example Undergraduate 3,474 words

Jungian-based psychology concepts and applications

Last reviewed: December 22, 2010 ~18 min read

¶ … Jungian Analysis

Patient Background and Description

The patient is a middle-aged male who has been a well-known entertainment personality for several decades. As a professional radio personality, he talked to his audience in a free-flowing, extemporaneous manner for approximately 25 hours every week for much of his career, and for approximately 20 hours per week since 2007. The patient was married for almost twenty years, during which time he raised three daughters, aged 17, 15, and 7 at the time of the marital separation preceding a final divorce about a year later in 2000. The patient has been remarried since 2007 to a professional model 19 years his junior.

The patient is publicly known for or associated with various controversies, including his capacity for viciously berating his subordinates on the air, heated long-term feuds with other celebrities and media figures perpetuated through his access to a public communications medium, for sexually-charged humor and accusations of routinely exploiting females through sexual humor. This individual is likely most famous for his long-term battle with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in connection with language and conversational topics that were deemed "obscene" and which subjected his employers to substantial fines during the course of his career on terrestrial radio before his transition to the unregulated satellite radio medium in 2006.

Paradoxically, this ruthless, chauvinistic, and argumentative individual was a dedicated family man throughout his first marriage and proved to be a very responsible and loving father to his daughters. Despite continual scatological humor and humor of a sexual nature that emphasized toilette humor, his sexual frustration as a married man and easy regular access to potential sexual opportunities outside of his marriage by virtue of his celebrity status, the patient was never sexually unfaithful during his marriage. That relationship deteriorated largely because his commitment to his work limited his availability as a partner to his wife and because of his extreme reluctance to participate in any social activities with his wife during what he referred to as his "precious downtime." Meanwhile, the subject had incorporated many highly persona family issues into his comedy, baiting his wife into telephone arguments live on the air and famously parodying his wife's miscarriage prior to their first child. The marital dissolution was the culmination of the mutual realization between the marital partners that the patient would never agree to make the necessary changes to make his wife happier and their mutual decision that they were no longer compatible as life partners. The actual divorce was negotiated fairly, uncontested by any litigation and the patient has intimated that he consented to split an estate of between $10 million and $20 million at the time.

Currently, the patient lives with his second wife in Manhattan and in Southampton Beach; he maintains an amicable relationship with his former wife and sees his three daughters regularly. His daughters have a good relationship with his second wife. The subject is absolutely opposed to having more children and his second wife has no specific desire to have children either, but has expressed in no uncertain terms that she is absolutely opposed to abortion and would be compelled for moral reasons to bear a child in the event that she became pregnant. As a result, the patient, despite being monogamously married, insists on wearing a condom during marital coitus. However, the patient also refers to being "obsessive" about germs and acknowledges that this might also play some role in this particular choice. The patient also uses alcohol gel extensively and has difficulty in any social situation where handshakes are expected because of his reluctance to expose himself to germs. For similar reasons, the subject related that he prefers not to touch his own penis when urinating and he described the manner that he has developed for using his underwear to support his penis so that he can accomplish the task of urinating without any direct contact with his penis. The subject is extremely conscious about keeping coworkers from touching his belongings or his work space, and if he must handle fan correspondence, he insists that it be first sealed in transparent plastic wrap before it is handed to him. Since the first reports of bedbug outbreaks in New York City, he has retained the regular scheduled services of a bedbug detection company and submits his home to a complete search by a trained canine once a month and anytime a new piece of furniture is brought into the home, at a cost of several thousand dollars per search. He admits to being a "hypochondriac" who often fears having any disease of which he becomes aware and he has feared contracting tumors from the use of the chemicals in antiperspirants and cellular telephones.

The patient reports feelings of extreme but diffuse anxiety, resentment of other for various reasons that he realizes consciously are unjustified, and describes himself as "tormented" in many respects that prevent him from enjoying his life and from making others around him miserable. His second wife has been very accommodating of his foibles so far, but he admits to fears about whether that might change in the long-term or after he retires from radio and spends most of his time at home. He has also expressed resentment and jealousy over his wife's ability to enjoy herself socially, despite the fact that she would welcome his company and that it is strictly his choice not to share in most of her social events because of his need to get to bed by 8:00 PM in order to get up at 4:30 AM and perform the next morning. Despite being almost two decades younger, his wife is often forced to assume the caretaker role and the subject admits that she is the mother to his child in that respect. The subject describes himself as being very jealous of the male attention his wife receives although he has no specific fears of her being unfaithful to him. Nevertheless, their most serious fight occurred after she allowed a male masseuse to massage her while they were on a Caribbean vacation.

Finally, the subject has always had a contentious yet loving relationship with his parents. He has spoken at length publicly and also generated extensive humorous parodies about various issues in his family-of-origin relationships. Among other things, he has described (and played recordings of) his father's angry tirades in which he called the subject a "moron" and warned him "not to be stupid" throughout his childhood. According to the subject, his father became attentive to him only after the subject became professionally successful. The subject has also described and parodied the manner in which his mother controlled his life and also burdened him with her fears and traumatic experiences during her childhood. She continues to be hyper-critical of the subject today but they have an outwardly loving relationship.

Clinical Overview of Potential Jungian Issues

Clearly, this subject presents significant issues in relation to the individuation process (Young-Eisendrath & Dawson, 2008). His mother dominated his life both in concrete terms (i.e. strict house rules) and also emotionally by burdening him with her sorrows and fears, among other things. The subject also exhibits issues that likely originate in the concept of the anima archetype, in that, among other things, he appeared in female attire and makeup on the cover of his first book, which he also titled Miss America. He routinely adopts an exaggerated effeminate voice and mannerisms in much of his comedy and often expresses jealousy at the sexual opportunities available to women (Edinger, 1972). The subject exhibits numerous tendencies toward compulsivity and neuroses that are likely connected to unexpressed resentment over his mother's actual control over him throughout his life and also of his father's constructive control exercised by virtue of his withholding praise while expressing regular insulting criticism earlier in the subject's life (Young-Eisendrath & Dawson, 2008). The subject reports often dreaming of being mocked or ridiculed and of finding himself in situations where he disappoints those close to him. Finally, the also subject exhibits substantial issues in relation to the formation of the shadow archetype, such as in the profound dichotomy between his on-air, rebellious "bad-boy" persona and his off-air conservatism, neuroticism, and gentleness toward loved ones (Murdock, 2009; Young-Eisendrath & Dawson, 2008).

Jungian Analyses of Issues Presented

Individuation, Neuroses, and the Shadow

As a child, the subject's mother frequently made explicit references to the traumas she endured as a child, such as in connection with family members perishing during the Nazi Holocaust in Europe, the unexpected (and unexplained) death of her mother when she was a child, the physical abuse and emotional neglect she sustained from her father, and her profound fear of doctors. She religiously checked the subject's underwear for "skid marks" (as the subject says) into his adolescence, shamed him in that regard in front of others, berated him for transgressions such as leaving a t-shirt unfolded on his bed, and forbade his keeping any animals in the house as pets because of their "germs." The subject describes how his mother also adamantly refused to consent to the use of Novocain or any other anesthetic when he visited the dentist (despite his pleas and pleas from the dentist) because of her distrust of "chemicals."

There is likely a direct connection between the subject's development of a highly abrasive and uncontrollable on-air persona and the degree to which the subject's control over basic aspects of his life was denied to him throughout his formative years (Casement, 1998; Mitchell & Black, 1995). More specifically, the subject was denied the right to express himself and he was often forced to abide by very conservative rules of proper conduct both in the home and also outside the home, such as by his mother's repeated warning that he was her "representative" outside the home. The self that developed seems to reflect both the explicit absorption of certain ideas from his mother and a transmutation of others into adult tendencies that may be largely functions of his failure to acknowledge his anger over them (Andrews, 1989; Gerrig & Zimbardo, 2008). In that regard, it will be difficult to distinguish neuroses that have been integrated through adaptation from neuroses that reflect the polar opposite mechanics of transmutation (Andrews, 1989; Edinger, 1972), since many of those same behavioral manifestations (such as the overt fear of germs, especially) can arise both ways (Young-Eisendrath & Dawson, 2008).

During his adolescence, the subject violated some of his mother's rules, (such as by using marijuana and various prescription drugs in pill form recreationally), but he did so covertly. He describes himself as "never talking" at home and to "zoning out" in his room to escape interacting with his parents. His father was either absent in any supportive way or highly critical, such as when the subject first expressed his desire to become a radio personality, to which his father responded, "But you don't even know how to talk."

It seems rather straightforward to consider those interactions and family dynamics as having contributed to the adult self of this individual (Schwartz-Salant, 1982). In recent years, he has become much more aware of the extent to which he was oppressed, criticized, and neglected by his parents; however, his current self still reflects his much earlier psychological response. Specifically, it should not be surprising from any Jungian perspective that long before this individual ever became consciously aware of these aspects of his family-of-origin relationships, the child who never stood up for himself in the dentist's office and whose mother was overly controlling in so many intimate ways developed an on-air persona that emphasized talking extemporaneously and mainly about objectionable and offensive topics of humor. Nor should it surprise a Jungian analyst that the subject perpetually oscillates between braggadocio and insecurity or that he admits to deriving great pleasure from instigating and witnessing bitter disputes among his subordinates and that he routinely berates them for relatively minor oversights or mistakes (Bagarozzi & Anderson, 1989; McWilliams, 2004).

Naturally, with respect to these issues, the fundamental goal of Jungian analysis will be to help the patient integrate his early experiences and relationships to reduce their apparent unconscious expression in negative and destructive ways (Jung, 1961; Wyrostok, 1995). In particular, it is anticipated that helping this patient recognize and accept his natural and rightful anger and resentment of some of his parents' treatment will reduce his need to re-enact it unconsciously by taking his parents' role with respect to others while continuing his identification as the inadequate target of excessive criticism by substituting his parents' former attitude toward him in his own psyche, such as through excessive and unrelenting self doubt and fear of failure (Edinger, 1972). Another objective of Jungian therapy would be to address the subject's continuing need to reaffirm his importance by establishing friendships with other famous people, especially those who are even more famous than he is. It would appear that, despite his humor about it on the air, he still denies the role that parental criticism and control played in his psyche; as a result, he has transmuted his emotional on-air humorous treatment of that which caused him tremendous pain earlier in life (Bagarozzi & Anderson, 1989; McWilliams, 2004).

Interestingly, this individual has displayed an unflagging loyalty to one particular on-air coworker despite the fact that a very large segment of his fans consider her tremendously annoying, obnoxious, unfunny, and devoid of any discernable talent of any kind. From a Jungian perspective, it may have been highly significant that the patient once stated in an interview that the way this particular individual laughs always reminded him of the exact same way that his mother used to laugh whenever he said something funny at home. While this obviously exceeds the scope of his therapy, it might be expected that if this patient were to successfully integrate the significance that his failure to achieve his parents' respect or approval as a young man and stop denying his anger at his mother, he might experience a diminution of his loyalty to this particular coworker (Andrews, 1989; Edinger, 1972).

Anima

Prior to his divorce, the subject regularly referenced his extreme frustration at having never had the opportunity to experiment very much sexually, especially after becoming famous since he was married long before becoming successful in his craft. Throughout the portion of his career when he was married, the subject focused very specifically on the sex lives and sexual exploits of his guests and frequently expressed envy of women because of gender-based roles that require men to make the overture and risk humiliating themselves by rejection. On one hand, the subject does not seem to be in denial about his genuine desires in that regard; on the other hand, it might be clinically significant, especially from a Jungian perspective, that much of his humor is homoerotic-based and that he so frequently adopts a female persona in his pre-written radio bits and in various other forms of media, such as his book cover (Young-Eisendrath & Dawson, 2008). In that regard, it is possible that while he acknowledges his envy of women, he is in denial of his anger at always having been perceived as extremely unattractive prior to his fame. If that is the case, that denial could be the source of his excessive feminine personification (Casement, 1998). Therefore, another goal of Jungian therapy would be to integrate any such anger into his conscious self to reduce its expression in the context of anima (Young-Eisendrath & Dawson, 2008).

Introversion

Another significant revelation is that this patient is extremely introverted when he is off the air, preferring virtual social isolation to any activities with others. He does maintain a few close friendships, but throughout the last decade of his first marriage, he often described on the air secreting himself with his computer and his pornographic videos in his locked furnished basement office while his family carried on their lives upstairs and outside. Though extremely vocal and argumentative in his radio persona, in his personal affairs he is extremely reluctant to stick up for himself and is hyper-sensitive about being perceived as being a "trouble-maker" or "nudnik" and will sometimes suffer considerable discomfort instead of requesting special accommodations. On one hand, he describes the appreciation he has for the millions of fans who adore him; on the other hand, he speaks angrily of the burden of fame and of "just wanting to be left alone" by those same fans when they encounter him in person. From the Jungian perspective, his tendency to isolate himself is more clinically significant (Andrews, 1989; Jung, 1961) than his inconsistent reaction to his fame. The objective of therapy in that regard would be to identify the roots of his introversion and then to distinguish the degree to which that reflects transmutation from the degree to which it may simply reflect personal preference (Andrews, 1989; Jung, 1961) for solitary activities (such as playing computer chess) to social activities.

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PaperDue. (2010). Jungian-based psychology concepts and applications. PaperDue. https://www.paperdue.com/essay/jungian-analysis-patient-background-and-11574

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