Back in September, I blogged about an article by Gary Greenberg published in the August issue of Harper‘s magazine that took aim at the “helping profession.” He cast a critical eye on the history of the field, it’s colorful characters, constantly shifting theoretical landscape, and claims and counterclaims regarding “best practice.” Several paragraphs were devoted to my own work; specifically, research documenting the relatively inconsequential role that particular treatment approaches play in successful treatment and the importance of using ongoing feedback to inform and improve mental health services.
Just this last week, while I was overseas teaching in Romania (more on that trip soon), I received an email from Dr. Dave of ShrinkRapRadio who felt the piece by Greenberg was unfair to the field in general and a mischaracterization of the work by many of the clinicians cited in the article, including me. “I’ve got a blog on the Psychology Today website and I’m planning to take him to task a bit,” he wrote.
If you have not had a chance to read the Greenberg article, you can find it on my original blogpost. It’s a must read, really. As I said then, whatever your opinion about the present state of practice, “Greenberg’s review of current and historical trends is sobering to say the least–challenging mental health professionals to look in the mirror and question what we really know for certain–and a must read for any practitioner hoping to survive and thrive in the current practice environment.” Then, take a moment and read Dr. Dave’s response. With his permission, I’ve posted it below!
Popping The Happiness Bubble: The Backlash Against Positive Psychology
Readers will recall that in Part 1, I suggested that a backlash against the ebullience of the positive psychology movement was probably inevitable. The most visible sign of that rebellion was last year’s best-selling book by Barbara Ehrenreich, Bright-Sided: How The Relentless Promotion of Positive Thinking Has Undermined America. While I found myself in agreement with much of her appraisal of American culture and our historical fascination with “positive thinking,” I thought her critique of positive psychology fell short by equating positive psychology to “positive thinking.” It also seemed to me that she failed to recognize that a huge body of research conducted by an army of independent researchers is emerging on a very diverse range of topics, which have been subsumed under the general heading of positive psychology. And, finally, much of her argument was based on an ad hominem attack on Martin Seligman.
I found further evidence of this backlash in the lead article in the October 2010 issue of Harper’s by psychotherapist Gary Greenberg, “The War on Unhappiness: Goodbye Freud, Hello Positive Thinking.” Greenberg is the author of Manufacturing Depression, a book that came out earlier this year. In addition, he is a prolific writer who has published articles that bridge science, politics, and ethics in a number of leading magazines. So he’s got great credentials both as a psychologist and a writer. Yet, I found this particular article unsatisfying. At least, that was my reaction upon first reading. As I later read it a second time to write about it here, I got a clearer sense of what he was up to and found myself in substantial agreement with his overall thrust.
The stimulus for Greenberg’s piece appears to have been his attendance at the annual Evolution of Psychotherapy Conference in Anaheim earlier this year. He seems to take a pretty dyspeptic view of the whole event: “Wandering the conference, I am acquainted, or reacquainted, with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Ericksonian Hypnosis, Emotionally Focused Therapy, Focusing, Buddhist Psychology, Therapist Sculpting, Facilitating Gene Expression, and Meditative methods.” A forty-year veteran of the California personal-growth/therapy scene, myself, it’s easy to develop a jaundiced eye over time as a panoply of approaches come and go. Yet, I have to say my own view, as a result of over 300 podcast interviews with psychologists across a broad spectrum of orientations, is there is more of a developing consensus and that the differences between many approaches are relatively minor.
By contrast, Greenberg seems to go into despair.
As I say, it took two readings of Greenberg’s article to really get the overall sweep. On first reading, it seems to be a bit of a meander, beginning with some slighting anecdotes about Freud. Then we’re on to the Anaheim conference and some handwringing about the seeming tower of Babel created by the profusion of therapeutic approaches. This segues into a discussion of Rozenzwig’s 1936 “Dodo Bird Effect” which asserts that therapeutic orientation doesn’t matter because all orientations work. As the Dodo pronounces in Alice in Wonderland, “Everyone has won and all must have prizes.” According to Greenberg, the Dodo Bird Effect has been borne out in subsequent studies and the requisite common ingredient for therapeutic success is faith, both the client’s and the therapist’s.
Greenberg goes on to describe several of the presentations, most notably by Otto Kernberg, Scott D. Miller, David Burns, and Martin Seligman. Part of what put me off about this article on my first reading is that I have conducted in-depth interviews with the first three of these gentlemen and I would not have recognized them from Greenberg’s somewhat muddled account.
Otto Kernberg, MD, one of the grand old men of psychoanalysis, is characterized as intoning “the old mumbo jumbo about the Almost Untreatable Narcissistic Patient…” In my opinion, this really slights his lifetime commitment to research, his many contributions to object relations theory, and his role as Director of The Institute for Personality Disorders at the Cornell Medical Center. In my interview with Dr. Kernberg, I was struck by the flexibility of this octogenerian to incorporate the findings of neuroscience, genetics, and even cognitive behavioral therapy in this thinking.
Greenberg seems to use Dr. Scott D. Miller’s research as supporting the Dodo Bird effect. I attended a daylong workshop with Scott Miller a few years ago and it was one of the best presentations I’ve ever seen. I also interviewed him for one of my podcasts. The key takeaway for me from Scott Miller’s work is that the Dodo Bird effect shows up only when therapeutic effectiveness is averaged across therapists. That is, on average, all psychotherapies are moderately effective. However, Miller reports that not all therapists are equally effective and that, if you look at therapists who are consistently rated as effective by their clients vs. therapists who are consistently rated as ineffective, then therapy emerges as a highly worthwhile enterprise.
As Miller said in my interview with him, “If the consumer is able to feed back information to the system about their progress, whether or not progress is being made, those two things together can improve outcomes by as much as 65%.”
As I say, I had difficulty recognizing Miller in Greenberg’s account. Evidently, Greenberg is critical of Miller having developed a standardized set of rating scales for clients to provide feedback to their therapists. Greenberg sees these scales as playing into the hands of managed care and the trend towards “manualized” therapies. However, in my interview with Miller, he is very clearly critical of managed care, at least in terms of their emphasis on particular treatments for particular diagnostic categories. As Miller said in his interview with me, “If there were inter-rater reliability that would be one thing; the major problem with the DSM is that is lacks validity, however. That these groupings of symptoms actually mean anything… and that data is completely lacking… We are clustering symptoms together much the way medicine did in the medieval period: this is the way we treated people and thought about people when we talked about them being phlegmatic for example; or the humors that they had. Essentially they were categorizing illnesses based on clusters of symptoms.”
I also had difficulty recognizing Stanford psychiatry professor, David Burns, from Greenberg’s summary of the session he attended with Burns. In short, Greenberg portrays Burns, who has developed a Therapist’s Toolkit inventory as wishing to replace “open-ended conversation with a five-item test… to take an X-ray of our inner lives.” This runs counter to my experience of Burns who, for example, in my interview with Dr. Burns about his cognitive therapy approach to couples work said, “…cognitive therapy has become probably the most widely practiced and researched form of psychotherapy in the world. But I really don’t consider myself a cognitive therapist or any other school of therapy; I’m in favor of tools, not schools of therapy. I think all the schools of therapy have had important discoveries and important angles, but the problem is they are headed up by gurus who push too hard trying to say cognitive therapy is the answer to everything, or rational emotive therapy is the answer to everything, or psychoanalysis is the answer to everything. And that is reductionism, and kind of foolish thinking to my point of view.” This hardly sounds like someone who thinks he’s invented a paper-and-pencil test that will be the end-all of psychotherapy.
And then Greenberg goes on to skewer positive psychology, which is what drew me to his article in the first place. After all, the title “The War on Unhappiness” seems to promise that. Like Ehrenreich, however, Greenberg’s critique is largely an ad hominem attack on Seligman. For example, referring to his earlier work subjecting dogs to electric shock boxes to study learned helplessness, Greenberg characterizes Seligman as, “More curious about dogs than about the people who tortured them…” He goes on to recount Seligman’s presentation to the CIA on learned helplessness which became the basis for enhanced “interrogation” techniques in Iraq. Now, we are told Seligman is working with the U.S. Army to teach resilience to our troops. In Greenberg’s view, Seligman would have us going his dogs one better by “thriving on the shocks that come our way rather than merely learning to escape them.”
So, it turns out that Greenberg’s attack on positive psychology is rather incidental to his larger concern which turns out to be that clinical psychology has sold its soul to the evidence-based, managed-care lobby in order to feed at the trough of medical reimbursement.
Greenberg’s article is a circular ramble that begins with slighting references to Freud and psychoanalysis and then ends with Freud as the champion of doubt.
It took me two readings to see that Greenberg is essentially using Miller, Burns, and Seligman as foils to attack smug certainty and blind optimism, the enemies of doubt. Of himself, Greenberg concludes, “I’m wondering now why I’ve always put such faith in doubt itself, or, conversely, what it is about certainty that attracts me so much, that I have spent twenty-seven years, thousands of hours, millions of other people’s dollars to repel it.”
Greenberg evidently values the darker side, the questions, the unknown, the mystery. “Even if Freud could not have anticipated the particulars – the therapists-turned-bureaucrats, the gleaming prepackaged stories, the trauma-eating soldiers-he might have deduced that a country dedicated in its infancy to the pursuit of happiness would grow up to make it a compulsion. He might have figured that American ingenuity would soon, maybe within a century, find a way to turn his gloomy appraisal of humanity into a psychology of winners.”
I think I’m in agreement with at least some of Greenberg’s larger argument. My fear, however, is that the general reader will come away with the impression that psychotherapists don’t know what they are doing and that the whole enterprise is a waste of time and money. That would be too bad. Both because I don’t think it’s true and I don’t think Greenberg does either.
I encourage you to find Greenberg’s article and to post your own reactions here in the comments area.
I had planned to stake out my own position on positive psychology in response to the critiques of Ehrenreich and Greenberg. It’s looking like there may need to be a Part 3. Stay tuned!
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