Double-Edged Freud
Author: Andrew Comiskey
April 26, 2021
I for one am grateful for
Christ-centered therapists. Who else can care for us like a pastor, attune to
us like a parent, and help unblock passageways in us that frustrate love? I was
honored to address the Catholic Association of Psychotherapists last week, more
to give thanks for the help I have received from these healers than a tribute
to my therapeutic skills.
Sadly, many Christians
eschew ‘therapy’ as godless, Freudian nonsense. Carl Trueman’s remarkable ‘The
Rise and Triumph of the Modern Self’ would seem to support such a stab at the
Viennese instigator of modern psychology; Trueman places Freud smack dab at
center of his case for how sexual identity became politicized, resulting in our
tongue-tied response to ‘gender identities’.

Trueman cites two
interpreters of Freud—Reich and Marcuse—who endowed the good doctor’s take on
child development with Marx’s mandate of ‘the little guy’ to overthrow economic
oppressors. That meant shucking the middle class and its silly moral structures
like monogamy. Trueman claims this intellectual ‘marriage’ of Freud and Marx empowers
our transgender meltdown today. Another story.
While most therapists
today would refuse much of Freud’s orthodoxy, especially his oversexed take on our
development, all good healers of the soul are sourced in his genius: that man
gave sight and language to our deepest conflicts, complex habits of the heart.
In the light of loving non-judgmental caregivers, we can begin to see and feel
what we must, disentangle from false attachments, and begin to make good hard
choices to grow in love. Instead of being driven by demons, we take the wheel.
To me, this is pure gift--Divine Mercy. Given a robust vision of who God made
us to become, a sound psychotherapist is a gift from heaven.
In the right hands,
aspects of Freud that appear cursed become our cure. Caring and godly post-Freudian
interpreters (move over Reich and Marcuse, make way for Laura Haynes, Elizabeth
Moberly, Joseph Nicolosi and many more) have labored for decades to reclaim
Freud from genital fixation and apply his grasp of defense mechanisms to why we
stop receiving (and growing from) the love we need. Rather than eroticize our
reality, able neo-Freudians help us find the solid ground of the emotional
needs underlying sexual development.
This paradox matters: Freud’s
eroticization of reality gives way to understanding real blocks to apprehending
the love we need. Therapy becomes a ‘corrective emotional experience’ that
liberates us from our genital fixations and help us to direct our energies
constructively.
Most helpful to me in
looking at the source of same-sex attraction and the continuum of gender
dysphoria. Here unmet, emotional needs mask as ‘gender identities.’ Moberly
writes: ‘Defensive detachment…is seen as causative of both transsexualism and
homosexuality. In both instances, the normal process of receiving love from,
and hence identifying with, a parental love source of the same-sex, has been
blocked by trauma, especially in the earliest years of life. The resulting
psychodynamic structures of transsexualism and homosexuality is that of
same-sex ambivalence…so-called ‘homosexual’ love actually marks the attempt to
resume the normal developmental process, and thereby to fulfill unmet needs for
same-sex love and identification’ (The Psychology of Self and Other).
Therapy becomes a blessed arm
of identifying this detachment and securing a necessary attachment through
which real needs for love and identification are met. Hail trusted healers who
help us to transform our deserts of false sexualizing into gardens of fruitful
relationships.
Rather than demonize
Freud, we separate wheat from chaff and rightly honor him and his astute interpreters.
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