More Baths Less Talking (4 page)

JULY/AUGUST 2010

BOOKS BOUGHT:

The Lodger Shakespeare: His Life on Silver Street
—Charles Nicholl

The Birds on the Trees
—Nina Bawden

The Driver's Seat
—Muriel Spark

Peter Pan
—J. M. Barrie

Fire from Heaven
—Mary Renault

Live from New York: An Uncensored History of
Saturday Night Live—Tom Shales and James Andrew Miller

Too many other Muriel Spark novels to mention without embarrassment

BOOKS READ:

Who Is It That Can Tell Me Who I Am?: The Journal of a Psychotherapist
—Jane Haynes

The Birds on the Trees
—Nina Bawden

The Driver's Seat
—Muriel Spark

The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie
—Muriel Spark

A Far Cry from Kensington
—Muriel Spark

I
f you are reading this in the U.S., the presumption over here in the U.K. is that you have either just come out of a session with your shrink or you're just about to go into one, and for reasons best known to ourselves, we disapprove—in the same way that we disapprove of the way you sign up for twelve-step programs at the drop of a hat, just because you're getting through a bottle of vodka every evening after work and throwing up in the street on the way home. “That's just life,” we say. “Deal with it.” (To which you'd probably reply, “We are dealing with it! That's why we've signed up for a twelve-step program!” So we'd go, “Well, deal with
it in a less self-absorbed way.” By which we mean, “Don't deal with it at all! Grin and bear it!” But then, what do we know? We're smashed out of our skulls most of the time.)

Recently I read an interview with a British comic actress, an interesting, clever one, and she articulated, quite neatly, the bizarre assumptions and prejudices of my entire nation when it comes to the subject of the talking cure. “I have serious problems with it… The way I see it is that you're paying someone, so they don't really care about you—they're not listening in the way that someone who loves you does.”

There's a good deal in that little lot to unpack. The assumption that if you give someone money, then, ipso facto, they don't care about you, is a curious one; the chief complaint I have about my dentist is that he cares too much, and as a consequence is always telling me not to eat this or smoke that. According to the actress, he should just be laughing all the way to the bank. And how does she feel about child care? Maybe she can't bring herself to use it, but in our house we're effectively paying someone to love our kids. (Lord knows, it wouldn't happen any other way.) But the real zinger is in that second argument, the one about “not listening in the way that someone who loves you does.” Aaaargh! Der! D'oh! That's the whole point, and to complain that therapists aren't friends is rather like complaining that osteopaths aren't pets.

Other books

Puberty Blues by Gabrielle Carey
Wanted! Belle Starr! by J.T. Edson
Breaking Silence by Linda Castillo
The Final Shortcut by G. Bernard Ray
Shadows on the Train by Melanie Jackson
The First Wives Club by Olivia Goldsmith
An Ember in the Ashes by Sabaa Tahir
Indigo Blue by Cathy Cassidy