Dave: I’ve been reflecting lately on my experience of being a hard-core family therapist disguised as a child psychiatrist, working in a cultural climate that sees no reason to question the limits of “biological psychiatry”. This includes its promotion of the concept of “chemical imbalance” as a way to explain human emotion and its behavioral concomitants.
At this point in cultural time family therapists who work with families and children can feel vulnerable from several angles. They run the risk of being dismissed both by other mental health practitioners and by families. But additionally– and this was true before biological psychiatry– working with children inevitably touches strong emotional (transference) currents in the self of the therapist.
These feelings, of course, are transference feelings (nonrational relationship responses), fantasies about what will happen to the family, to the child, to us, if we don’t get it right. These feelings and fantasies are not trivial. Transference, whatever it is, runs the world. Transference feelings are intensified in any therapeutic situation, but the voltage increases when working with marriage, increases again when we add children, and goes into the red zone when combining marriage, children and more severe disturbances (depression, OCD, ADHD, eating disorders, bipolar disorders).
The Disconnect Between Family Therapy and Modern Psychiatry:
“Chemical imbalance” is a persuasive metaphor freely used by modern psychiatry to support the use of psychotropic medications in all sorts of clinical situations where children are being disturbing or creating anxiety. This metaphor is also used to shore up the perpetually unsteady image of psychiatry in medicine. The logic of “chemical imbalance” persuades both patients and practitioners that context and subjective experience are not important. But that logic interferes with the task of deciphering the not-enunciated pain behind the pain.
Biological psychiatry’s simplified formulation of human problems is derived from a particular set of knowledge and belief system that underlies medical bioscience. Family therapy
I know that medications can at times be helpful and are sometimes necessary, but rarely sufficient. Relationship is always necessary and sometimes sufficient. I know medication can “work”, I just don’t believe in it. When the chips are down, I don’t trust medication. But I do believe in families and trust the therapeutic process of family therapy.
In the Next Post….More About “Chemical Imbalance”
