A prominent feature of schizophrenia is disorganized speech, also known as loose association. In psychotically disorganized speech, words are not linked together based on the normal rules of language, but are strung together based on sounds, rhyme, puns, or free associations. Although everyone makes speech errors, especially when they’re tired or stressed, psychotically disorganized speech is obviously abnormal, and is difficult or impossible to understand.
Here is a verbatim transcript of a portion of the report of a schizophrenic patient. It's from Albert Rothenberg's book, Creativity and Madness:
"I've never been confused as much as I have been recently. Confusion was nothing to me. It was fun. I loved art. I loved to have my hands in every single thing I could get them in. And when I'm here I don't have the facilities to dig in the garden . . .
. . . and put my feet in the mud and I just can't stand that . . . feeling. I, I need to be free like most of us do, because I feel like a bird when I'm skiing, I feel like I could fly if I really tried but I wouldn't try because -- hee, hee -- it's beyond my power. Maybe someday they'll perfect it so that a person can fly without . . . walking. But they better hurry up! Because there's too many guys on the road right now."
The disorganized speech of the schizophrenic reflects the patient's inability to comprehend abstractions. The schizophrenic's inability to comprehend abstract ideas is also seen in the patient's use of concrete thinking.
Concrete thinking is a problem associated with various psychiatric disorders such as schizophrenia. It is defined as the inability to think in abstract terms. Abstractions and symbols are interpreted superficially without fact, finesse or any awareness of nuance. The person is unable to free himself from what the words literally mean. In the process, the patient's thinking excludes more abstract ideas.
In Creativity: The Magic Synthesis, the late Silvano Arieti, M.D., an expert in schizophrenia and creativity studies, wrote: "One patient had the delusion that his wife put poison in his food. He actually used to think that his wife "poisoned" his life. The abstract poisoning then became a concrete and specific one; a concept was transformed into an object, a chemical poison. In this respect the schizophrenic is similar to the dreamer, the fine artist, and the poet, all of whom transform abstract concepts into perceptual images. It is not implied that in the fine artist, the dreamer, or even the schizophrenic, the capacity to think abstractly is lost. The schizophrenic uses the concrete representation as a psychological defense, the creative person . . . uses it for aesthetic or scientific purposes."
Even an experienced mental health professional can misdiagnose a creative person's word usage with that of the schizophrenic. The psychoanalyst Carl Jung, for example, was convinced, after reading Ulysses, that James Joyce had schizophrenia. In Ulysses, Joyce employs stream of consciousness, parody, jokes, and virtually every other established literary technique to present his characters.
Joyce's method of stream of consciousness, literary allusions and free dream associations was pushed to the limit in Finnegans Wake, which abandoned all conventions of plot and character construction and is written in a peculiar and obscure language, based mainly on complex multi-level puns. This approach is similar to, but far more extensive than that used by Lewis Carroll in Jabberwocky. This has led many readers and critics to apply Joyce's oft-quoted description in the Wake of Ulysses as his "usylessly unreadable Blue Book of Eccles" to the Wake itself. However, readers have been able to reach a consensus about the central cast of characters and general plot.
The ability to navigate the potential clang and confusion posed by abstract concepts and perceptual images is also seen in the psychoanalyst who attributes a tentative meaning to the puns and word associations communicated in the patient's psychoanalytic narrative.
A French patient in analysis (who no doubt spoke more than four words of French) reported the following dream: "My father and I are in a garden. I pick some flowers and offer him a bouquet of six roses." The analyst, in an attempt to bring out the patient's ambivalent feelings toward his father, tried to combine the positive connotations of the gift with the negative feelings he may have had about the fact that the father had died of alcoholism. He took advantage of the phonetic similarity between the six roses of the dream and the father's fatal illness--cirrhosis of the liver (the similarity in sound connecting six roses and cirrhosis is particularly evident in French)--and made the following reply: "Six roses or cirrhosis?"
At a superficial level the analyst's observation is indistinguishable from the schizophrenic's use of (and mis-interpretation of other people's apparent use of) word play as well as his inability to appreciate abstract ideas. In reality, the analyst's observation reflects his sophisticated appreciation of the use of word play by the patient to evade the censorship of forbidden thoughts. The analyst's interpretation is not a product of cognitive impairment, but rather an expression of his highly-developed cognitive skills repertoire. In addition, the analyst's attribution of a tentative meaning to the patient's narrative does not reflect cognitive impairment; rather, it is a product of the analyst's ability to defer judgment, a cognitive skill lacking in the schizophrenic.
Message for David Gregory:
ReplyDeletePresident Bush Garden Rides:
http://www.cityprofile.com/forum/attachments/florida/7621-tampa-loc7_450.jpg
"This sucker is going down!"
Freud's most famous dream interpretation was "The Dream of the Botanical Garden."
ReplyDeleteErik Erikson wrote a famous paper about that dream interpretation.
http://apa.sagepub.com/content/2/1/5.extract
My former psychiatrist Stanley R. Palombo, MD and Harold Blum, MD (Director of the Sigmund Freud Archives) tabled a discussion on Erikson's paper in about 1994.
Freud's dream interpretation begins:
ReplyDeleteDream 1
Dream-content: I have written a monograph upon a certain (indeterminate) species of plant. The book lies before me. I am just turning over a folded coloured plate. A dried specimen of the plant is bound up in this copy, as in a herbarium.
The most prominent element of this dream is the botanical monograph. This is derived from the impressions of the dream-day; I had actually seen a monograph on the genus Cyclamen in a bookseller's window. The mention of this genus is lacking in the dream-content; only the monograph and its relation to botany have remained. The 'botanical monograph' immediately reveals its relation to the work on cocaine which I once wrote; from cocaine the train of thought proceeds on the one hand to a Festschrift, and on the other to my friend, the oculist, Dr Königstein, who was partly responsible for the introduction of cocaine as a local anaesthetic. Moreover, Dr Königstein is connected with the recollection of an interrupted conversation I had had with him on the previous evening, and with all sorts of ideas relating to the remuneration of medical and surgical services among colleagues. This conversation, then, is the actual dream-stimulus; the monograph on cyclamen is also a real incident, but one of an indifferent nature; as I now see, the 'botanical monograph' of the dream proves to be a common mean between the two experiences of the day, taken over unchanged from an indifferent impression, and bound up with the psychically significant experience by means of the most copious associations.
Not only the combined idea of the botanical monograph, however, but also each of its separate elements, 'botanical' and 'monograph', penetrates farther and farther, by manifold associations, into the confused tangle of the dream-thoughts. To botanical belong the recollections of the person of Professor Gärtner (German: Gärtner = gardener), of his blooming wife, of my patient, whose name is Flora, and of a lady concerning whom I told the story of the forgotten flowers. Gärtner, again, leads me to the laboratory and the conversation with Königstein; and the allusion to the two female patients belongs to the same conversation. From the lady with the flowers a train of thoughts branches off to the favourite flowers of my wife, whose other branch leads to the title of the hastily seen monograph. Further, botanical recalls an episode at the 'Gymnasium', and a university examination; and a fresh subject -- that of my hobbies -- which was broached in the abovementioned conversation, is linked up, by means of what is humorously called my favourite flower, the artichoke, with the train of thoughts proceeding from the forgotten flowers; behind 'artichoke' there lies, on the one hand, a recollection of Italy, and on the other a reminiscence of a scene of my childhood, in which I first formed an acquaintance -- which has since then grown so intimate -- with books. Botanical, then, is a veritable nucleus, and, for the dream, the meeting-point of many trains of thought; which, I can testify, had all really been brought into connection by the conversation referred to. Here we find ourselves in a thought-factory, in which, as in The Weaver's Masterpiece:
The little shuttles to and fro
Fly, and the threads unnoted flow;
One throw links up a thousand threads.
Monograph in the dream, again, touches two themes: the one-sided nature of my studies, and the costliness of my hobbies.
Thus, the title of this blog post has multiple meanings: "Jardin Botanique: Deux Mots Français -- or Dew on the Grass, Mow or Wait?"
ReplyDeleteFreud
Mental Illness
Psychoanalysts
French
Botanical Garden
Defer judgment ("wait") or jump to conclusions ("mow now")
etc.
Oh, yea. "Deux mots" (two words) is a reference to you, Mr. Gregory!
ReplyDelete"Mow now"
ReplyDeleteThat's what SHE said!!
"Six roses or cirrhosis?"
ReplyDelete"July or Jew Lie?"
The Importance of Context
ReplyDeletePresident Bush: "This sucker is going down."
President Clinton: "This sucker is going down."
Incidentally, the president (principal) of my high school when I entered in the 9th grade was "Mr. Gregory." (William Gregory) Central High School doesn't have a principal; it has a President.
ReplyDeleteMr. Gregory was succeeded by Howard Carlisle (born Herman Irvin Cohen) -- whatever that means.
What was my motive in writing this series of blog posts. I had none:
ReplyDeleteThere is no "message." Its "truth" is simply what it is.
Philip T. Barford, Beethoven's Last Sonata.