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- <text id=93TT0580>
- <link 93TO0114>
- <title>
- Nov. 29, 1993: Lies Of The Mind
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 29, 1993 Is Freud Dead?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- Lies Of The Mind, Page 52
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Repressed-memory therapy is harming patients, devastating families
- and intensifying a backlash against mental-health practitioners
- </p>
- <p>By Leon Jaroff--Reported by Jeanne McDowell/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> Suffering from a prolonged bout of depression and desperate
- for help, Melody Gavigan, 39, a computer specialist from Long
- Beach, California, checked herself into a local psychiatric
- hospital. As Gavigan recalls the experience, her problems were
- just beginning. During five weeks of treatment there, a family
- and marriage counselor repeatedly suggested that her depression
- stemmed from incest during her childhood. While at first Gavigan
- had no recollection of any abuse, the therapist kept prodding.
- "I was so distressed and needed help so desperately, I latched
- on to what he was offering me," she says. "I accepted his answers."
- </p>
- <p> When asked for details, she wrote page after page of what she
- believed were emerging repressed memories. She told about running
- into the yard after being raped in the bathroom. She incorporated
- into another lurid rape scene an actual girlhood incident, in
- which she had dislocated a shoulder. She went on to recall being
- molested by her father when she was only a year old--as her
- diapers were being changed--and sodomized by him at five.
- Following what she says was the therapist's advice, Gavigan
- confronted her father with her accusations, severed her relationship
- with him, moved away and formed an incest survivors' group.
- </p>
- <p> But she remained uneasy. Signing up for a college psychology
- course, she examined her newfound memories more carefully and
- concluded that they were false. Now Gavigan has begged her father's
- forgiveness and filed a lawsuit against the psychiatric hospital
- for the pain that she and her family suffered.
- </p>
- <p> Gavigan is just one victim of a troubling psychological phenomenon
- that is harming patients, devastating families, influencing
- new legislation, taking up courtroom time, stirring fierce controversy
- among experts and intensifying a backlash against all mental-health
- practitioners: the "recovery"--usually while in therapy--of repressed memories of childhood sexual abuse, satanic rituals
- and other bizarre incidents.
- </p>
- <p> "If penis envy made us look dumb, this will make us look totally
- gullible," says psychiatrist Paul McHugh, chairman of the psychiatry
- department at Johns Hopkins University. "This is the biggest
- story in psychiatry in a decade. It is a disaster for orthodox
- psychotherapists who are doing good work."
- </p>
- <p> No one questions that childhood sexual abuse is widespread and
- underreported. The subject, rarely mentioned and then only in
- hushed tones until the 1980s, has become the stuff of talk shows,
- movies and feature articles. Indeed, many, perhaps millions
- of Americans have jarring and humiliating memories of abuse,
- recollections that, painful as they are, have stayed with them
- through the years.
- </p>
- <p> But can memories of repeated incest and other bizarre incidents
- be so repressed that the victim is totally unaware of them until
- they emerge during therapy or as the result of a triggering
- sight, smell or sound?
- </p>
- <p> Across the U.S. in the past several years, literally thousands
- of people--mostly women in their 20s, 30s and 40s--have
- been coming forward with accusations that they were sexually
- abused as children, usually by members of their own family,
- at home or, in many cases, at hidden sites where weird rituals
- were practiced. Says McHugh, "It's reached epidemic proportions."
- </p>
- <p> Unlike the countless adults who have lived for years with painful
- memories of actual childhood sexual abuse, most individuals
- with "recovered memory" initially have no specific recollection
- of incest or molestation. At worst, they have only a vague feeling
- that something may have happened. Others, simply seeking help
- to alleviate depression, eating disorders, marital difficulties
- or other common problems, are informed by unsophisticated therapists
- or pop-psychology books that their symptoms suggest childhood
- sexual abuse, all memories of which have been repressed.
- </p>
- <p> In the course of the therapy, many of these troubled souls conjure
- up exquisitely detailed recollections of sexual abuse by family
- members. Encouraged by their therapists to reach deeper into
- the recesses of their memories--often using techniques such
- as visualization and hypnosis--some go on to describe events
- that sorely strain credulity, particularly tales of their forced
- childhood participation in satanic rituals involving animal
- and infant sacrifices, as well as sexual acts.
- </p>
- <p> In many cases the therapists conclude, and eventually convince
- the patients through suggestion, that the repressed memories
- of childhood abuse have caused them to "dissociate." As a result,
- they appear to develop multiple-personality disorder, the strange
- and, until recently, rare condition brought to wide public attention
- by the 1973 book, Sybil, which describes the condition of a
- woman who develops several strikingly different but interchangeable
- personas.
- </p>
- <p> Legislatures in nearly half the states have responded to the
- widespread public acceptance of recovered memories by applying
- a strange twist to venerable statute-of-limitations laws. In
- general, the new legislation allows alleged victims of child
- abuse to sue the accused perpetrators within three to six years
- after the repressed memories emerge. This means that with little
- more than the recollection of the accuser, a parent or other
- relative can be hauled into court decades after the supposed
- crime.
- </p>
- <p> Taking advantage of the newly enacted legislation, some of the
- supposed victims have successfully brought civil and even criminal
- actions against members of their own families. Juries have awarded
- them damages, and in a few cases the accused parent has been
- sentenced to jail--based entirely on the recovered memory
- of his adult offspring.
- </p>
- <p> To many critics of the recovered-memory movement, the accusations
- and convictions are reminiscent of the 17th century Salem witchcraft
- trials, in which elderly women and an occasional man were condemned
- to death, often on the basis of a single unsubstantiated charge
- that they had demonstrated witchlike behavior.
- </p>
- <p> "Recovered-memory therapy will come to be recognized as the
- quackery of the 20th century," predicts Richard Ofshe, a social
- psychologist at the University of California, Berkeley. And
- in the process, Emory University psychiatry professor George
- Ganaway fears, it may "trigger a backlash against [legitimate
- charges of] child abuse. As these stories are discredited,
- society may end up throwing the baby out with the bath water--and the hard-earned credibility of the child-abuse-survivor
- movement will go down the drain."
- </p>
- <p> The backlash has already begun. In Texas this summer, a woman
- patient won a settlement from two therapists and a psychiatric
- hospital after suing them for therapeutic negligence and fraud.
- She claimed that four years of recovered false memories had
- made her a "walking zombie." It was the first of what some reputable
- therapists fear will be many such rulings that will ultimately
- give their profession a black eye.
- </p>
- <p> An increasing number of recovered-memory accusers have recanted,
- and some have reunited with their families and joined them in
- suing the therapists and clinics they claim led them astray.
- Many of them are among the more than 7,000 individuals and families
- who have sought assistance from the False Memory Syndrome Foundation,
- a Philadelphia-based organization that has taken the lead in
- publicizing the wrongdoings and in helping the victims of recovered-memory
- therapy. Pamela Freyd, who co-founded FMSF in 1992, has yet
- to be reconciled with her accuser daughter.
- </p>
- <p> Growing controversy and concern in the mental-health community
- has led the American Psychological Association to appoint a
- false-memory working group to investigate the phenomenon. At
- a meeting of the American Psychiatric Association last May,
- the issue of false memories was addressed in three sessions
- and heatedly debated by experts on both sides. The American
- Medical Association's house of delegates also indicated its
- discomfort with such memory-enhancement techniques as guided
- imagery, hypnosis and body massage, all of which heighten suggestibility
- and are widely employed by recovered-memory therapists. Use
- of these practices in eliciting accounts of childhood sexual
- abuse, the AMA delegates concluded, was "fraught with problems
- of potential misapplication."
- </p>
- <p> "I wish I could say the debate just involves a few kooks," says
- Stephen Ceci, a Cornell University developmental psychologist
- who is a member of the American Psychological Association's
- work group. "It's much broader than that, happening among the
- cream of the crop of psychiatrists and clinical psychologists."
- The battle could not have come at a worse time, says Ceci; some
- professionals are currently pushing for increased coverage of
- mental health in the President's proposed national health plan.
- "It's not a good time for us to be airing our dirty laundry."
- </p>
- <p> Still, the opposing camps are doing just that, arguing bitterly
- about repressed memories. Critics of recovered-memory therapy
- insist that there is no scientific evidence for the reality
- of repression and that many, if not most, of the recovered-memory
- claims are false. Advocates have no doubts, citing studies on
- amnesia and clinical experience showing that repression is commonplace.
- Given that psychology is an inexact science, any resolution
- of the issue seems distant, at best.
- </p>
- <p> Judie Alpert, a professor of applied psychology at New York
- University, refutes the critics of recovered-memory therapy.
- "There is absolutely no question that some people have repressed
- some memories of early abuse that are just too painful to remember,"
- she says. "In their 20s and 30s some event triggers early memories,
- and slowly they return. The event has been so overwhelming that
- the little girl who is being abused can't tolerate to be there
- in the moment, so she leaves her body, dissociates, as if she
- is up on a bookshelf looking down on the little girl who is
- being abused. Over time, she pushes it deep down because she
- can't integrate the experience."
- </p>
- <p> Christine Courtois, also in the APA work group and a clinical
- director at the Psychiatric Institute in Washington, charges
- that criticism of the recovered-memory phenomenon is part of
- a backlash against society's tardy recognition of widespread
- sexual abuse. The "wholesale degradation of psychotherapy by
- some critics," she says, represents "displaced rage" at therapists
- for bringing the issue to public attention.
- </p>
- <p> That kind of reasoning does not sit well with Margaret Singer,
- a retired professor from the University of California, Berkeley,
- and an expert on cults and influence techniques. She has interviewed
- 50 people who once believed they had recovered repressed memories
- of incest or ritual abuse but now think they were mistaken.
- All 50, Singer emphasizes, were in therapy when they "recovered"
- terrifying memories of abuse. "These people are reporting to
- me that their therapists were far more sure than they were that
- their parents had molested them."
- </p>
- <p> Singer insists that trauma does not cause people to repress
- memories, although bits and pieces of experience can be lost
- through amnesia. In fact, she says, trauma has just the opposite
- effect: people can't forget it. As an example, she cites the
- cases of Vietnam veterans who suffer flashbacks and posttraumatic
- stress disorder.
- </p>
- <p> Psychologist Ofshe is particularly disdainful of the concept
- of what he calls "robust" repression: the instantaneous submergence
- of any memory of sexual abuse. Recovered-memory therapists,
- he says, "have invented a mechanism that supposedly causes a
- child's awareness of sexual assault to be driven entirely from
- consciousness." According to these therapists, Ofshe explains,
- "there is no limit to the number of traumatic events that can
- be repressed, and no limit to the length of time over which
- the series of events can occur." Belief in robust repression,
- he concludes, "can be found only on the lunatic fringes of science
- and the mental-health professions."
- </p>
- <p> "Repression definitions are so loose and varied, so abundant,
- so shifting that it is like trying to shoot a moving target,"
- says Elizabeth Loftus, professor of psychology and law at the
- University of Washington and an authority on cognitive processes,
- long-term memory and eyewitness testimony. "If repression is
- the avoidance in your conscious awareness of unpleasant experiences
- that come back to you, yes, I believe in repression. But if
- it is a blocking out of an endless stream of traumas that occur
- over and over that leave a person with absolutely no awareness
- that these things happen, that make them behave in destructive
- ways and re-emerge decades later in some reliable form, I don't
- see any evidence for it. It flies in the face of everything
- we know about memory."
- </p>
- <p> If such recovered memories are indeed false, where do they originate?
- From two sources, critics say: the popular culture and misguided
- or inept therapy. Sensational tales about recovered memories
- of incest have been grist for celebrity-magazine cover stories.
- And repressed-memory incest and satanic-ritual-abuse victims
- have been featured prominently on Geraldo, Oprah, Sally Jessy
- Raphael and other daytime TV talk shows.
- </p>
- <p> In bookstores, pop-psychology sections are filled with dozens
- of self-help survivor titles. By far the most controversial
- and best selling (more than 700,000 copies) of these books is
- The Courage to Heal by Ellen Bass and Laura Davis. In their
- 1988 publication, considered the bible of the recovered-memory
- movement, they include such dogma as "If you think you were
- abused and your life shows the symptoms, then you were," and
- "If you don't remember your abuse, you are not alone. Many women
- don't have memories...this doesn't mean they weren't abused."
- Like many of the authors of these self-help books, neither Davis
- nor Bass has any academic training in psychology, although Davis
- claims to be an incest survivor. Yet many therapists urge their
- patients to read Courage and other similar volumes.
- </p>
- <p> Many of these books contain laundry lists of symptoms of repressed-memory
- victims. They inform their readers that even though they have
- no memory of the acts, they may have been victims of childhood
- sexual or ritual abuse if they experience some of the following
- conditions: depression, anxiety, loss of appetite or eating
- disorders, sexual problems and difficulty with intimacy. The
- all-inclusive nature of that list, critics say, suggests that
- among the entire U.S. population, only the rare individual has
- managed to escape childhood sexual abuse. That doesn't seem
- to surprise therapist E. Sue Blume. In her book Secret Survivors,
- she writes, "It is not unlikely that more than half of all women
- are survivors of childhood sexual trauma."
- </p>
- <p> Almost any night, in any major American city, adult incest and
- ritual-abuse survivor meetings are held in church basements
- and community rooms. Churches and other institutions also offer
- counseling for dissociative disorders and satanic-ritual-abuse
- victims.
- </p>
- <p> Private psychiatric hospitals, which advertise in medical journals
- and airline magazines, are profiting as well. "We can help you
- remember and heal," promises one ad for ASCA Treatment Centers
- in Compton, California. "Remembering incest and childhood abuse
- is the first step to healing."
- </p>
- <p> The thriving recovered-memory industry dismays psychiatrist
- Ganaway. "In some cases," he says, the hospitals and clinics
- "are memory mills with an almost assembly-line mentality," he
- says. "A patient comes in with no memories but leaves with memories
- of childhood incest or ritual abuse." Yet even some well-trained
- family and marriage counselors, psychologists and psychiatrists
- seem too quick to tie their patients' problems to repressed
- memories of incest and ritual abuse. "That makes psychotherapy
- very easy at first," explains Johns Hopkins' McHugh. "Therapists
- and patients can say, `We found the secret.' The fact that the
- patients and families steadily become more confused, incoherent
- and chaotic is then believed to be an expression of the original
- incest." What is really happening, he says, is that "conflicts
- are being generated by false memories. We have found something
- to make therapy easy."
- </p>
- <p> Some patients now leave their therapist's office convinced that
- they suffer from multiple-personality disorder, which is said
- to stem from repressed memories of early childhood trauma, including
- physical and sexual abuse. Until the publication of Sybil, MPD
- was apparently rare; around the world, only a few hundred cases
- had been documented over the previous three centuries. Since
- then, however, many thousands of supposed cases of MPD have
- been identified in the U.S. alone--most of them incorrectly,
- say critics, by therapists who are looking for an easy solution
- in their search for evidence of childhood sexual abuse or who
- too easily accept the likelihood of the disorder. One problem,
- says Ganaway, is that once these patients have been diagnosed
- with MPD, they are convinced that they have it, tend to exhibit
- what they think are the symptoms and often reinterpret their
- entire life histories accordingly.
- </p>
- <p> Those charges infuriate Dr. Richard Kluft, a Philadelphia psychiatrist,
- who works extensively with MPD patients. "It's an absolute lie
- that MPD is a rare psychiatric disorder," he says. He attributes
- the sharp rise in reported MPD cases to the rise of feminism
- and the resulting willingness of people "to speak out more openly
- on issues of exploitation and abuse."
- </p>
- <p> Another doctor who believes that MPD is fairly common is Bennett
- Braun, medical director of the dissociative-disorders program
- at Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center in Chicago. Braun
- says the number of cases of MPD has risen not for faddish reasons
- but because therapists have become better at recognizing the
- symptoms.
- </p>
- <p> In his 12-bed unit at Rush North Shore Medical Center in Skokie,
- a branch of Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Braun
- treats MPD cases, some of whom think that they are victims of
- satanic-ritual abuse. When he first began to hear the satanic
- stories in 1985, Braun says, he was incredulous. Now, having
- heard similar tales from many people from different states and
- countries and having treated more than 200 of them, he declares,
- "Yes, there is satanic-ritual abuse."
- </p>
- <p> If some of the recovered memories of familial childhood abuse
- sound fanciful, the recollections of satanic-ritual abuse are
- downright bizarre. These tales have proliferated since the publication
- in 1980 of Michelle Remembers, a book about a belatedly aware
- satanic-ritual victim. They describe a massive secret conspiracy
- to abuse children sexually in order to brainwash them into worshipping
- Satan. Victims recall being raped by their parents and then
- by members of a cult who drink blood and sacrifice fetuses.
- More often than not the abusers are pillars of their communities--the mayor, police chief or school superintendent--who come
- out at night and join their parents in terrifying ceremonies.
- </p>
- <p> But could such satanic rituals be that commonplace, let alone
- exist at all? In 1990, a group of researchers at the State University
- of New York at Buffalo conducted a nationwide sample of clinical
- psychologists, asking them if they had encountered claims of
- ritual abuse. Some 800 of the psychologists, about a third of
- the sample, had treated at least one case.
- </p>
- <p> Yet, law-enforcement authorities report that not one shred of
- reliable evidence has turned up to support these claims--no
- documented marks of torture, no bones of sacrificed adults,
- infants or fetuses and no reputable eyewitnesses. Lorraine Stanek,
- a Connecticut rehabilitation counselor for trauma survivors,
- also stresses the lack of evidence. "If you look at the alleged
- number of deaths that would be accounted for," she says, "there
- should be bodies in all our backyards." Still, incest-survivor
- groups are inundated with these claims. Monarch Resources, a
- California referral service for survivors, is said to receive
- more than 5,000 calls annually from people who believe they
- have been victims of satanic abuse. Alleged ritual abuse is
- also involved in about 16% of the calls to Philadelphia's False
- Memory Syndrome Foundation.
- </p>
- <p> Braun demonstrated his belief in satanic rituals during a 1991
- trial, when he testified in behalf of two daughters seeking
- damages from their 76-year-old mother. Recovering childhood
- memories, they had accused her of abusing them in bloody and
- murderous ceremonies. Both claimed that they had developed MPD
- as a result. After Braun told of treating similar cases, the
- jury found in favor of the two daughters.
- </p>
- <p> Now, however, the tables have turned. Braun and the Chicago
- medical center are being sued for negligence by a female patient
- who in two years of in-patient treatment for supposed MPD "recovered"
- memories of involvement in satanic rituals with her father,
- mother and relatives. The rituals supposedly included torture,
- murder and cannibalism of large groups of people--as many
- as 50 on an average weekend. In addition, before growing doubts
- led the woman to terminate Braun's treatment in 1992, she had
- been made to believe she had 300 "alters" or personas, possibly
- setting a new MPD record. According to her lawyer, she is not
- currently undergoing any treatment and is doing well.
- </p>
- <p> The ultimate victim of repressed memory may be the psychotherapeutic
- profession itself. "Therapists are terrified," says MPD specialist
- Kluft. "Many are feeling very hamstrung because they fear any
- time they ask a question, it can result in a lawsuit." Instead
- of seeing a patient "as a person in pain and in need of help,"
- Kluft complains, "the therapist is looking at a potential litigant.
- Some people have discontinued treating trauma patients."
- </p>
- <p> S. Scott Mayers, a psychotherapist in Venice, California, is
- hardly terrified. But he is cautious. "What I do to ensure that
- I don't inflict my agenda or opinion," he says, "is go with
- the patients' presentation and stay with it, using their own
- words, their own scenarios. I'm so cautious because we are all
- very suggestive."
- </p>
- <p> Recovered-memory therapists might do well to heed those guidelines
- before they cause irreparable damage to their profession. For,
- as the public begins to recognize that people have been falsely
- accused by recovered-memory patients, says psychiatrist McHugh,
- it "opens us up to skepticism and dismay about our capacity
- to do things. This is a bubble that is going to burst. We will
- end up having to re-create the trust this country puts in psychotherapy."
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-