THE PSYCHOLOGY/PSYCHIATRY OF DOING WHAT YOU LOVE by John A. A. Logan
The
Russian, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, has been oft-described as one of the first
“psychological novelists”; followed up, some would say, by the 1890 publication
of HUNGER by the starving, post-tubercular Norwegian, Knut Hamsun.
Tough
books, coming from the toughest of experiences/life stories…nothing precious
about Dostoyevsky or Hamsun.
They
both seemed to set down the facts/details of a decade of suffering and survival
in a first book: Dostoyevsky in HOUSE OF THE DEAD, Hamsun in HUNGER.
But,
this done, they would tend to let the imagination and spirit soar in the
following books…the facts and details of their histories still embedded there
though, felt, sensed, like psychological rock strata, unyielding.
D.
H. Lawrence, the English miner’s son, took on the “psychological” penetration
of that rock strata next, delving deep, fusing the exploration with elements of
impassioned drama and story which brought such a potent mix of public
acclaim/disapprobation.
While,
in Czechoslovakia, almost on the same timeline, Franz Kafka, son of a successful,
hardened businessman (himself the son of a Jewish shochet/ritual slaughterer),
was investigating the same existential meat of the mind, with glorious results.
There
is no doubt that, behind the curtain there, at least to an extent, lay the
joint influence on the European mind, of the founding fathers of modern
psychology, Carl Jung and Sigmund Freud.
This
influence was not confined to an intelligentsia, or any one social/economic
class…the starving artist or miner’s son could be infected by it, just as
surely as by the tuberculosis that also seemed to fell half of the writers in
the first half of the 20th century.
These
things, for good or ill, were just “in the air”…
The
plan to supply universal education to all classes of British society, which
George Bernard Shaw had opposed so vigorously, had gone ahead, and now the
working class had been taught letters en masse, and who knew what
beyond-the-pale literature some of them might end up reading…there were even
libraries for them now…
As
often happens though, following upon the opening of those doors in the first
half of the 20th century, the second half of it saw a sinister
closing of those same doors.
By
the 1970s, the controversial Scottish psychiatrist, R. D. Laing, would insist
that if Franz Kafka were to enter the 1960s Glasgow psychiatric system he would
be instantly diagnosed, even if only on the basis of the texts he had written,
as paranoid schizophrenic, and given the appropriate regimen of drugs and
electric shock therapy to the brain popular in the day.
THE
TRIAL and THE METAMORPHOSIS would no longer have been art/analogy for Kafka in
1960s Glasgow…through chemicals and electricity he would have experienced them
for real.
Slightly
earlier, in 1951, an inmate at Seacliff Lunatic Asylum in New Zealand, a
post-drug and electro-convulsive therapy patient, diagnosed with schizophrenia,
Janet Frame, had recently published her first book with Caxton Press, a short
story collection entitled, THE LAGOON AND OTHER STORIES.
This
did not stop the hospital scheduling her for a lobotomy, though, an operation
to remove part of her brain surgically for “therapeutic” purposes.
But,
as happenstance would have it, Janet Frame’s book won the Hubert Church Memorial Award for fiction
that month, one of New Zealand’s most prestigious literary prizes.
The
hospital therefore had to cancel the lobotomy for public relations reasons, and
they released her from Seacliff Lunatic Asylum only four short years later,
from whence she left New Zealand for England, where a doctor at the Maudsley
hospital in London told her that he believed she had been wrongly diagnosed
with schizophrenia and had never had the condition.
In
1962, Ken Kesey published ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO’S NEST, the result of his
experiences working night shifts at the Menlo Park Veterans’ Hospital in
California (interestingly, he worked night shift there with Gordon Lish, who
would later become Raymond Carver’s editor)…and, of course, in ONE FLEW OVER
THE CUCKOO’S NEST it is Randle P. McMurphy whose antics are finally sorted out
by Nurse Ratched via lobotomy, as the chemically-coshed inmates look on.
Surely,
for acid-fuelled Kesey, this was a case of “There But for the Grace of God Go
I…”
A
sensing in fiction of what societal dangers could lie in wait for the artist’s
mind…if the artist didn’t watch out…
In
1974, Robert Pirsig’s ZEN AND THE ART OF MOTORCYCLE MAINTENANCE was published.
Between
1961 to 1963, Pirsig had been diagnosed as paranoid schizophrenic and
clinically depressed, receiving a great many electric shock treatments to his
brain during those years, which he later wrote about in his book in great
detail.
Finally,
he decided the only way to escape the hospital was to behave as the staff
wished him to behave, speak as the staff wished him to speak.
After
several years of post-hospital recovery, Pirsig then wrote his book, about the
psychiatric profession in part, and his own view of “insanity as the new heresy”,
scientific logic having replaced centuries of religion in the collective
mindset of modern man.
Pirsig
believed that to challenge the mind-set of society was to risk being punished
as a heretic, a modern disbeliever; assent to the societal norms or be punished
by the burning/neutralising/neutering effects of the electricity…the new fire
to which the heretic, out of touch with the logos and mythos of their times or
peers, may be put legally in order to force their recantation.
(Interestingly,
it is not quite true that ZEN AND THE ART OF MOTORCYCLE MAINTENANCE was
rejected by 121 publishers, as Pirsig once noted in an Afterword to an edition
of the book. Later, in an online interview, he gave more detail…a careful man,
having learned not to waste time, he had written only the first few chapters of
the book, early in the morning before his day job, in cafes, and had then sent
this sample out to 122 publishers…out of these, four publishers replied,
expressing interest in seeing the finished book…but only one editor kept in
close contact with Pirsig throughout the four years it took to write the book,
reading it and suggesting revision as the book progressed, and it was this
editor who finally published the book, though he did not believe it would sell
well, and certainly he never anticipated it becoming a 1974 bestseller.)
Recently,
a friend left this link on my Facebook page:
A
3.09 recording of a talk by the philosopher, Alan Watts.
“What
do you desire…what makes you itch? Let’s suppose…What would you like to do if
money were no object? How would you really enjoy spending your life? Let’s go
through with it…what do you want to do? You do that, and forget the money. Better
to have a short life that is full of what you like doing, than a long life
spent in a really miserable way. And, after all, if you do really like what
you’re doing…it doesn’t matter what it is…you can eventually become a master of
it…it’s the only way to become a master of something, to be really with it…and
then you’ll be able to get a good fee for whatever it is…so don’t worry too
much….somebody’s interested in everything…and anything you can be interested
in, you’ll find others will…”
Alan Watts
A
reminder then, for us all, that art has healed minds, and authors’ lives have
been saved, or healed, or prolonged, or made joyous, by the writing of the
books, time and again, not to mention how many untold readers’ lives have been
enriched, healed, saved, and enlightened by those very same books.
The
production of the books being an important act, in and of itself, and a
delightful one.
Comments
There's something in it for everyone - and I ended up switching to study philosophy because of it!
Great post, John.
As re one of the best modern books I know dealing with mental health issues can I put a shout in for Stuart Ayris Tollesbury Time Forever. It's a book everyone should read. Wild, weird and wonderful and available http://www.amazon.co.uk/Tollesbury-Time-Forever-FRUGALITY-ebook/dp/B006TJDJKE/
I totally endorse your final paragraphs but the quotation from Watts is a reminder just how naively gentrified psychoanalysis became in teh 60s and 70s (and the potentially explosive consequences of that naivete). To the person who wishes they could quit their 9 to 5 to write or paint it's a rather unworldly but potentially inspiring piece of cod philosophy. To the person who enjoys torturing animals or having sex with young girls, well, you get my point - and when the goal is the actualisation of desire we lose the ability to say "yes, but I didn't mean tht" (which has always had the whiff of the ridiculous - Watts explicitly says "somebody's interestedin everything"). Now you may well say fair enough, *whatever*it is you want (as too many psyciatrists did in the 60s with disastrous consequences they naively didn't foresee), pursue it for the sake of your happiness, but if we don't want the downside of this then we do have to modify the idealism accordingly.
· The only Zen you find on the tops of mountains is the Zen you bring up there.
But I'm interested by what Cally says too. When I was an RLF a mature student came to see me with a brilliant short story about a man sitting at a desk in front of computers, relentlessly adding up figures. A bear walked into the room, tore, the office apart, and the man didn't even look up. The student said, 'That was me when I worked in Finance.' He'd been in a driven, high-pressure job, considered a success by everyone - and he hated, hated, hated it. Threw it all up and went to University to study English and Creative Writing - partly, I think, to save his sanity.
I suppose there are writers for whom writing is healing, but I'm not one of them. Writing is not something I've always done, it's not something I have to do, and it's not even what I'm necessarily best at. It's more akin to my crossword puzzle of choice.
:)
We still know so little about the human brain. Our two close friends have a daughter - beautiful, talented (ex-Glasgow School of Art) - and schizophrenic. She rejects both counselling and medication, but somehow, recently. she's been slowly making her own way.
John - a very thought-provoking post, as you can tell from the comments.
My view is that basically if we are in tune with our hearts and our souls then our mind will naturally follow. And if you write what is on your mind, in such circumstances, then it is sure to be wonderful. I just haven't worked out a way of doing it without resorting to cheap alcohol. Still. You have to do your bit for the local economy I guess...
What a fascinating post. Yes, it is amazing how many writers had Tuberculosis or consumption as it would have been desecribed in the olden days. Janet Frame certainly had a lucky escape.
Regards
Margaret