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    Book Review: Bush on the Couch    
    Thursday, July 29 2004 @ 04:31 PM GMT+4
    Contributed by: cgrotke

    BooksIf I told you I had a friend who wanted to work for you, but he had a few personal problems, would you hire him?

    What if my friend was a self-proclaimed recovering alcoholic that sought no treatment? He's also "born again" but doesn't attend church. He likes to be alone. He's got a temper. And ADHD. He's sadistic - he blew up frogs with firecrackers as a kid and enjoys seeing others put to death - and likes to insult or exact revenge on those who disagree with him.

    He's paranoid, too. You are either with him or against him. He also thinks the world centers around him and that he has been chosen by God to solve the world's problems. He has trouble speaking sometimes and will not admit to mistakes. But he is likeable.

    Is that job still open? No? Okay, then he'll just stick with his current job as President of the United States.

    "Bush On The Couch - Inside the Mind of the President" is a new book by George Washington University psychiatrist Dr. Justin Frank that attempts to put together a psychological profile of the president based soley on available information such as public records, statements, biographies, and televised speeches to the world. He makes the necessary disclaimer that a proper diagnosis could only come from actual sessions with Bush in person, but finds that there is ample material to work with because of his high-profile, public life.

    For those who know psychology, this book is primarily a Freudian and Kleinian analysis of the man. For the rest of us, it is an interesting discussion of child development and how events and actions shape one's life.

    One of the biggest issues for Bush, according to the book, is the early death of his sister Robin and how the family dealt, or did't deal, with the event. They didn't tell him what was going on, didn't grieve, and didn't mourn. It was packed in and left unresolved, leading to a host of problems later in life.

    As one might expect in a Freudian/Kleinian analysis, his mother and father are also discussed. His mother, according to reports, was a cold disciplinarian. His father was absent. Bush was left to deal with the world by himself at an early age and began to develop his own coping mechanisms such as acting out in class, restless anxiety, and seeing the world in simplistic black and white terms.

    Dr. Frank has found that Bush may very well have learning disabilites - from dyslexia and ADHD to thought disorders that prevent him from understanding metaphor and abstract thinking. He also appears to practice "clang association" whereby he listens to and uses words based on their sound. Dr. Frank gives the example of someone hearing a person talk about the "reign" of a queen while picturing "rain" in his/her mind.

    Bush sees the world full of threats, which leads to a diagnosis of paranoia. He insists on loyalty, likes to be left alone, and clings to mistaken ideas well after they have been proven false.

    His problems with his father leads him, the book says, to resolve the unresolvable. He is the enemy of his father's enemies - taking out Saddam more for personal reasons than anything else - yet is driven to outperform his father. This leads him to destructive policies, eliminating much of the policy work his father did as president while taking his father's staff and making them loyal to himself.

    His untreated drinking and self-proclamation of being reformed also puts him in a precarious psychological position. He forces himself to compensate by embracing a simple-minded fundamentalism that relieves him of any responsibility for his actions becuase "we are all sinners." A very recent news story, in fact, suggests that he is being given powerful anti-depressant medication to keep him from exhibiting wild mood swings and angry outbursts. Dr. Franks compares Bush's behavior in meetings to that of a sleeping dog who, at a moments notice, might hop up and bit you if disturbed.

    Ultimately, the diagnosis is meglomania. Bush sees himsefl as the center of the world. External reality is a threat as he tries to overcome his deep insecurity and fears. He feels persecuted and attacked by anyone who disagrees with him. He doesn't exhibit hope for the future, he proclaims what the future will be. He is indifferent to damage he causes and lacks an ability to make reparations when he has done wrong. He cannot admit mistakes for fear of his world view being shattered.

    Dr. Frank says that Bush appears to not care about the lies he tells and the pain he inflicts on others and cannot be properly treated unless he sees a need for treatment himself. His delusions may go untreated for some time. He may remain popular with a percentage of the population that shares his fears and appreciates his lack of deep thought, but he isn't getting better and doesn't want to try.

    In the end, Dr. Frank suggests two helpful paths for the patient - one for us, the nation of enablers allowing him to continue down this path unchecked - and one for him. We should pay attention by using this information to help understand his actions and responses of denial. And we must get over our own denial if we are to help him get over his. And, for the good of the patient, we should remove him from the office that allows him to continue his destructive behavior before it gets worse.

    While the book is centered around Bush, it also has much to say about mental development in children and adults in general. Bush's problems are not unique and many of us share aspects of them. The difference is that Bush doesn't acknowledge his problems and sees no reason to change, instead choosing to act out his fears on the world stage while taking us along for the ride.

    Dr. Frank does a service to us by presenting his professional perspective. The notes to the book are well-documented and he lists a number of colleagues and professionals that helped him on the project.

    The book is getting attention, too, and some from unlikely sources. While I finished reading it, I was told that Cuba's Fidel Castro was reading from it during a speech he gave, broadcast on C-Span last week.

    .....

    "Bush on the Couch - Inside the Mind of the President" by Justin A. Frank, M.D. is published by Regan Books, an imprint of Harper Collins.

     

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  • Book Review: Bush on the Couch | 13 comments | Create New Account
    The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they may say.
    Book Review: Bush on the Couch
    Authored by: dwbarlow on Thursday, July 29 2004 @ 05:03 PM GMT+4
    When I was in Boston, an activist tried to sneak a copy of this book into
    Bill Clinton's car.
    Book Review: Bush on the Couch
    Authored by: Lise on Thursday, July 29 2004 @ 09:13 PM GMT+4
    The article about Bush's mental health referred to above is from Capital Hill Blue, which has been documenting Bush's apparent unraveling in this and another earlier story, both claiming that he gets furious and swears at people. In the most recent article, it was revealed (via anonymous White House aide) that Bush is on heavy antidepressants to control his erratic behavior. Here's the link: Bush Using Drugs to Control Depression, Erratic Behavior.

    Suddenly the remark of a campaign aide that people unhappy with low paying jobs should get new ones or take prozac makes a bit more sense... Remember Colin Powell's quote a while back? "You don't use Ambien? Everybody here uses Ambien." This is one drugged out administration -- although I guess that's nothing new.

    And then there's this one, from CNN about his approach to mountain biking. While I realize a little healthy exercise is a good thing, Bush seems to be taking it to unhealthy extremes, riding like a demon on 18 mile rides, SS in tow. He is quoted as saying that it's the only thing that clears his mind (to exhaust himself on arduous bike rides). Link: Bush shrugs off a crash/

    Book Review: Bush on the Couch
    Authored by: martyjezer on Friday, July 30 2004 @ 06:15 PM GMT+4
    I find this dangerous and unethical. It's the type of stuff the government used to do in the Stalinist Soviet Union, label political opponents as mentally ill, hence not politically credible.

    There are reasons to hate Bush and specific reasons to oppose his politics. But a shrink, no matter how impressive his credentials, has no right to publicly psychoanalyze him --OR ANYONE -- from a distance. This is a misuse of psychoanalytic tools and the shrink/author responsible ought to be censured by the profession.

    The same thing was done in 1964 against Barry Goldwater, one of the straightest shooters in American politics however much his conservative (though not hateful) politics sucked. The American
    Psychological Association, I believe that's who it was, criticized the shrinks who were involved in psychoanalyzing him for a magazine article, without ever meeting him.

    Let's go after G.W. Bush for his actions and his beliefs, not for his dreams and alleged psychological problems. He may have them, but who doesn't?

    It's what he does publicly that counts.


    Marty Jezer
    Book Review: Bush on the Couch
    Authored by: SK-B on Friday, July 30 2004 @ 08:44 PM GMT+4
    Marty, do you really believe that that mental state of a powerful leader can never be a legitimate issue? You mentioned Stalin: Would Stalin's mental condition not have been relevant to his policies and actions?
    SK-B
    Book Review: Bush on the Couch
    Authored by: JOHNDOE#1 on Saturday, July 31 2004 @ 02:58 AM GMT+4
    <<and seeing the world in simplistic black and white terms.>>

    He's perfect for the job.

    <<Dr. Frank has found that Bush may very well have learning disabilites - from dyslexia and ADHD to thought disorders that prevent him from understanding metaphor and abstract thinking.>>

    How does this make him not intellegent enough to fulfil his "duties"? I think he's perfect for his role in history.

    <<He also appears to practice "clang association">>

    However he gets it done is fine with me. He's only a cog in the whole process anyway.

    << whereby he listens to and uses words based on their sound.>>

    That along with body language cues, seems to be how a dog learns doesn't it? I've called him a 'rabid pitbull' before and praised his tenacity. I don't think we're out of the woods with the terrorism thing yet. I think an ultra liberal, money mariing, narcissistic, selfabsorbed, beaten vet who basically spit on his flag is not the right message to show the world right now. This all hinges on how tangible improvements to the global living standard can affect people's lives enough so that they don't see us as a target of their angst. I think we are not out of the period of war ironically necessary as the beginning of the Age of Aquarius. (I'm being serious)

    << Bush sees the world full of threats,>>

    In other words he's being realistic.

    << which leads to a diagnosis of paranoia.>>

    I think his security entourage helps in exascerbating this, leading to his medicated state. I can't imagine his panic attack when he learned it was "zero hour" on 9/11 sitting in that classroom.

    << He insists on loyalty, likes to be left alone, and clings to mistaken ideas well after they have been proven false.>>

    Loyalty is the name of the game in his profession. Look at all the turmoil Tony Soprano faces everyday...

    <<His problems with his father leads him, the book says, to resolve the unresolvable.>>

    Sort of like Homer. Or Oedipus?

    << He is the enemy of his father's enemies - taking out Saddam more for personal reasons than anything else - yet is driven to outperform his father.>>

    That's a combination of the 'loyalty' and 'Oedipal' issues.

    <<His untreated drinking and self-proclamation of being reformed also puts him in a precarious psychological position.>>

    I think we should use this mental state of his for the next four years, then he can have his intervention.

    << He forces himself to compensate by embracing a simple-minded fundamentalism that relieves him of any responsibility for his actions becuase "we are all sinners.">>

    When fighting zealous psychotic fundamentalism, fight fire with fire.

    << A very recent news story, in fact, suggests that he is being given powerful anti-depressant medication to keep him from exhibiting wild mood swings and angry outbursts.>>

    In the current political atmosphere, I can see how this story could be exposed, true or not. There's a book out now called, UNFIT FOR DUTY (or something like that) which slams Kerry's activities and intentions during his tour of Viet Nam. It mentions his staging war scenes with his super 8 camera with the footage later used in his later presidential nomination speech. (good foresight there Herman)

    <<...a sleeping dog who, at a moments notice, might hop up and bit you if disturbed.>>

    rabid pitbull...

    <<Ultimately, the diagnosis is meglomania.>>

    This comes in handy when fighting others of the sort.

    << Bush sees himsefl as the center of the world.>>

    Considering all the Bush hating bumperstickers around here, he seems to be the current center of our attentions.

    << External reality is a threat as he tries to overcome his deep insecurity and fears.>>

    Knowing what he knows, I give him credit for not crumbling into the fetal position.

    << He feels persecuted and attacked by anyone who disagrees with him.>>

    I think he's slightly justified in that respect.

    << He doesn't exhibit hope for the future, he proclaims what the future will be.>>

    That's optimism. All he has right now is his faith and his family. I don't think Laura is crazy enough to be married to someone she feared. She's probably very supportive right now, his rock, his salvation and all that. He's simpleminded and that's the kind of figurehead we need right now.


    <<He cannot admit mistakes for fear of his world view being shattered.>>

    That doesn't make him a bad person. Remember, he was handed 9/11 on a silver platter, he will go down in history for things much more profound than having sex in the oval office. His record is one of having a profound impact on the future of global affairs, this makes for one hell of a world view worth protecting.

    <<Dr. Frank says that Bush appears to not care about the lies he tells and the pain he inflicts on others and cannot be properly treated unless he sees a need for treatment himself.>>

    I think that diagnosis is a bit of a stretch without interactivity with a staff of analysts.

    << His delusions may go untreated for some time.>>

    As long as he doesn't snap within the next four years...

    << He may remain popular with a percentage of the population that shares his fears and appreciates his lack of deep thought,>>

    I think those fears are justified, and I am happy he keeps it simple.

    <<We should pay attention by using this information to help understand his actions and responses of denial.>>

    Many people in this world live in denial while still making a beneficial contribution to society.

    << And we must get over our own denial if we are to help him get over his.>>

    Sort of group therapy, then?

    << And, for the good of the patient, we should remove him from the office that allows him to continue his destructive behavior before it gets worse.>>

    That's a clever segue, the empathy excuse.
    <<While the book is centered around Bush, it also has much to say about mental development in children and adults in general.>>

    Sort of a one stop shopping thing? How much does it cost? Wasn't the doctor's practice earning him enough money?

    << Bush's problems are not unique and many of us share aspects of them.>>

    I agree. Do you think Kerry has any psychosis that could be af detriment to his being president? Maybe he's too idealistic and fanciful for a president during this period in time? Maybe he's too flexible and laisez faire.

    <<Dr. Frank does a service to us by presenting his professional perspective.>>

    I think he's sticking his neck out pretty far, just for a buck.

    <<While I finished reading it, I was told that Cuba's Fidel Castro was reading from it during a speech he gave, broadcast on C-Span last week>>

    Do you think Cubans ever got that much freedom of speech with Fidel?
    Megabucks winners.
    Authored by: JOHNDOE#1 on Saturday, July 31 2004 @ 03:11 AM GMT+4
    There are millions of potential Stalins in this world. It's just that some win the lottery and get into a position of power influential enough to make the history books.

    Sure his mental state is a legitmate issue in deciding who to vote for, but how can we be sure we wouldn't be worse off with Kerry? Besides, it's really the circle of friends running the show, not just Jr. Powell is doing a lot of good work, Cheney is a good crutch for Jr. I don't think Edwards demands respect from world leaders like the incumbent vp. He's a damn ambulance chaser, talk about a bad role model!
    Book Review: Bush on the Couch
    Authored by: JOHNDOE#1 on Saturday, July 31 2004 @ 03:19 AM GMT+4
    Didn't John F Kennedy alledgedly use cocaine? How many successful CEOs and leaders of nations are on some sort of medication or have a drug habit? Why is it so important to single Jr out? I don't think this would necessarily rule out a successful outcome to the path he and his party have lead us on.

    If you do, then why? Why does his chemical state of mind rule out success in world matters?
    Book Review: Bush on the Couch
    Authored by: cbridge on Saturday, July 31 2004 @ 11:16 AM GMT+4
    Marty's point is not that mental state is irrelevant, but that an ethical
    professional has no business whatsoever pronouncing diagnoses on
    someone he's never even met.
    Over the past several decades the practice of declaring all sorts of
    behaviors to be the result of some medical condition has become as
    ubiquitous as it is illegitimate. Professionals should be combatting this
    practice, not jumping on the bandwagon & reving up the motor.
    Book Review: Bush on the Couch
    Authored by: SK-B on Saturday, July 31 2004 @ 02:59 PM GMT+4
    Actually Marty did make the point that Bush's psychological state is irrelevant to the political dialgue. Here is what Marty said:

    "Let's go after G.W. Bush for his actions and his beliefs, not for his dreams and alleged psychological problems. He may have them, but who doesn't?

    It's what he does publicly that counts."

    Book Review: Bush on the Couch
    Authored by: martyjezer on Saturday, July 31 2004 @ 03:23 PM GMT+4
    Obviously one has to understand or know one's "enemy": his or her psychological state as well as the culture (in all its facets) and history that shapes him or her. But that's a different kettle than full blown psychoanalysis based on newspaper headlines. Bush is a product of his experiences and his background. That's important and, in understanding him, it's a lot more credible than distant-Freudian analysis.

    Re: Stalin. An objective analysis of Soviet history would underline its defensive posture. In terms of communism, Stalin's suppression of Trotsky furthered the withdraw-into-itself nationalistic foreign policy (abandoning international revolution for suppressing opposition within and around its borders). Stalin's paranoia reinforced this tendency. We didn't need a psychoanalytic explanations to grasp the evidence of what was happening.

    But then I've little use for Freudian analysis, though I do have much respect for humanist, non-dogmztic psychological counseling. My book (plug!) goes into this topic somewhat. Freudianism is noir psychological poetics, not science.
    But that's another thread.

    Marty
    Bush on the Couch
    Authored by: Floyd on Sunday, August 01 2004 @ 01:56 PM GMT+4
    In the unsubstantiated rumor dept:

    I have been told that there is a Bush cousin living in this area who is a psychiatrist and only reluctantly admits he's related to the currant occupant of the White House. The media were very interested in talking with him a few years ago, but he wasn't interested, although not because he supports Bush's agenda.


    ---
    ~ Citizen Floyd hosts Segue ~
    Monday 8 PM on radio free brattleboro 107.9 FM
    www.rfb.fm
    Bush's Bicycling Style
    Authored by: George Tirebiter on Monday, August 02 2004 @ 09:00 PM GMT+4
    There was a very good article i read just after I read this on the
    Commander in Chief's reckless bicyling style. I think one of the replies in
    this thread mentioned this. Here are some highlights from the article as it
    appeared in the New York Times over the weekend:

    "Mr. Bush likes to ride up into the hills of his Texas ranch and then come
    flying down."

    "But a study posted recently on a New Zealand biking Web site suggests
    that downhill mountain-bike riders, like Mr. Bush, score considerably
    higher than cross-country riders on something called the Sensation Seeking
    Scale. ... Downhill riders are also more likely to drive a car too fast, and
    to have had a brush with the law."

    "On his most recent crash, last week, Mr. Bush executed what is known as
    an "endo" in mountain bike parlance - a sort of reverse wheelie, in which
    the rear tire lifts in the air and the rider sails over the front. Mr. Bush
    landed with the bike on top of him but was unhurt except for a cut on his
    knee. The last time, in May, he scraped his face, hand and both knees.

    At least he didn't hurt his liver, a particularly vulnerable area for mountain
    bikers, according to The Lancet, the medical journal, which has discovered
    that during a fall, the handlebars frequently slam into the rider's right
    side, causing internal bleeding.

    The origins of mountain biking are unrecorded. The sport probably began
    the first time some nut case took a two-wheeler off the road and went
    careering down a too-steep hill."

    Mr. Bush took up mountain biking in February of this year after he stopped
    running due to increasing pain in his knees.

    What this simply tells me is what I have suspected all along. He can't do
    anything in moderation. When he drank, he drank until he was drunk
    every night. When he chooses religion, he goes so far as to believe that
    God has personally called on him to be President. When he campaigned
    for his father, he told him he wasn't aggressive enough and that he had to
    be meaner and tougher. He just doesn't start wars, he rains down
    Apocalypse on a nation and then occupies it with hundreds of thousands of
    troops indefinitely even if they are dying at a rate of 20 per week.

    There have been very few Presidents of the United States that have
    behaved in this way, and I think it has nothing to do with terrorism. There
    has been foriegn terrorism in this country since the 60's. Anti-Castro
    Cuban terrorists planned to bomb the Lincoln Center in New York City
    when the Cuban Ballet performed there in the early 1960's. Hijackings of
    planes increased during the 1970's.

    Mr. Bush needs to stop proving himself. One day he will really fall hard
    and crack his skull and all the king's horses and all the king's men will not
    be able to put him back together again.
    Book Review: Bush on the Couch
    Authored by: cbridge on Tuesday, August 03 2004 @ 03:59 AM GMT+4
    It's what counts for us, because it's what we can know. Sometimes these
    things overlap. For instance, we know he thinks he has been placed in
    office by God, because he says so. We know he acts as if anything he
    does, no matter how destructive or illegal, is virtuous & justified, because
    we see this happening. One may or may not consider this lunacy (I do).
    To presume we can know the pathology behind it is a) presumptuous & b)
    irrelevant. I'm voting against him because his behavior as president has
    been criminal & dangerous on many levels, a judgment made on the basis
    of public words & deeds. Obviously, I think his state of mind does not
    exist in a vacuum, unconnected to all this. But do I care what his dreams
    are, how he feels about his parents, or how he got to be such a twisted
    little git? Not on your nelly.
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