- Joined
- Mar 23, 2019
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I'm asking because some of the core tenants of psychoanalysis/psychodynamic therapy I find absolutely fascinating. The unconscious mind, defense mechanisms, how humans can repress extreme childhood trauma, and so on. Yet as a Psych undergrad, everywhere I go it seems to be talked down on and attacked. I've heard it's an antiquated and pseudoscientific form of therapy with no evidence of efficacy with a comically overemphasized sexual POV.
Yet when I actually look at the requirements of psychoanalytic institutes as well as the training involved, it seems extremely rigorous, similar to a Psych doctoral program but even more restrictive. They only admit applicants who already have a degree in a mental health field (Licensed Psychologist, Psychiatrist, Psych NP, etc), they must undergo their OWN analysis prior to training (and from what I've seen, at some institutes during training too), it's a mixture of written and clinical work that lasts for a minimum of 4 years before one can become a certified analyst. Could something so restrictive or esoteric really be useless? And these aren't hole in the walls either, to my knowledge. These are institutions in big major coastal cities that are training licensed Psychologists and Psychiatrists.
I've looked on the psychoanalysis subreddit but most there are not analysts or even had any analytic training, they are usually reading psychoanalytic literature at their own leisure/curiosity, whereas I'm much more focused on the clinical relevance/efficacy. Youtube videos ive seen tend to focus on just the history of Freud himself which is neither here nor there, and seeing patients online who have actually undergone this therapy is extremely rare (yet the few experiences I've read about have been positive!)
I know psychotherapy will be incorporated into my career no matter what, I really love the idea of being a psychoanalyst, but first and foremost I want to be an effective clinician that helps people. Is this modality really that much at odds with the data? Is CBT/DBT/other modalities really that superior, particularly for more extreme cases?
Bonus question if anyone knows how it's feasible from a financial perspective to see patients multiple times per week, is it possible to build up a sustaining clientele for the average analyst to make a good living?
Yet when I actually look at the requirements of psychoanalytic institutes as well as the training involved, it seems extremely rigorous, similar to a Psych doctoral program but even more restrictive. They only admit applicants who already have a degree in a mental health field (Licensed Psychologist, Psychiatrist, Psych NP, etc), they must undergo their OWN analysis prior to training (and from what I've seen, at some institutes during training too), it's a mixture of written and clinical work that lasts for a minimum of 4 years before one can become a certified analyst. Could something so restrictive or esoteric really be useless? And these aren't hole in the walls either, to my knowledge. These are institutions in big major coastal cities that are training licensed Psychologists and Psychiatrists.
I've looked on the psychoanalysis subreddit but most there are not analysts or even had any analytic training, they are usually reading psychoanalytic literature at their own leisure/curiosity, whereas I'm much more focused on the clinical relevance/efficacy. Youtube videos ive seen tend to focus on just the history of Freud himself which is neither here nor there, and seeing patients online who have actually undergone this therapy is extremely rare (yet the few experiences I've read about have been positive!)
I know psychotherapy will be incorporated into my career no matter what, I really love the idea of being a psychoanalyst, but first and foremost I want to be an effective clinician that helps people. Is this modality really that much at odds with the data? Is CBT/DBT/other modalities really that superior, particularly for more extreme cases?
Bonus question if anyone knows how it's feasible from a financial perspective to see patients multiple times per week, is it possible to build up a sustaining clientele for the average analyst to make a good living?