Quote:
Originally Posted by iota
There are several jokes about what PhD stands for. One thing is "Piled High and Deep." But my favorite is "knowing more and more about less and less until you know everything about nothing."
And I have a PhD and was a professor surrounded by others with all these peacock feathers.
I guess I'm just suspicious of the whole game of it. Do your credentials really say what kind of therapist you are or might be for me in particular? I don't think so.
Currently I see someone who has substantial credentials in several areas, and yet he is one of the most humble and humane people I've ever met. At times he has poked a little fun at people who want to be called "DR." or have some sort of notion that they are experts in this or that. His credentials hardly mattered when I first chose him; I only became aware of them afterwards. And they actually don't really influence how the therapy goes.
Perhaps because he is an MD as well as an analyst so a PsyD too as well as being a former professor at Stanford med, he just feels really comfortable in his own skin and doesn't feel he has to prove anything to anyone. He has at time joked about how uptight psychologists can be in some ways, compared with psychiatrists and analysts. He still works with psychologists and respects them, but there is a sense that something goes wrong during that type of training, that doesn't necessarily translate into good therapy.
|
"He still works with psychologists and respects them, but there is a sense that something goes wrong during that type of training, that doesn't necessarily translate into good therapy."
I find that idea and sentence extremely odd.
And truly the best I have seen was a Ph.D who practiced psychodynamic therapy.
With that said, most psychologists I have seen find pdocs to be weird, and I can relate to THAT completely. I don't get them in the most part at all. They are like prescription-pumping machines..."alot" (that I have seen or my friends have seen ) hardly ever get to know you; the appts are 20 mins long, at best. And the 3 most "uptight" people I have met (on this wonderful psychological journey) were psychiatrists...I almost threw a pillow at one to see if I could make his face move.