CHAPTER ONE SOCIAL WORK AND
PSYCHOTHERAPY IN THE
AMERICAN COMMUNITY
Let us begin this book with a game called âFind the faith healerâfind the social workerâfind the psychotherapist.â Here are seven brief portraits of helping professionals. See if you can pick out which is which.
Carol Newhouse does psychic reading of past lives. She writes that this is helpful with âinsights into relationship entanglements, life purpose, job creativity, addictive behavior, psychic/spiritual growth.â She works from âher experience with womenâs spirituality/goddess religion spirit-channeling/trance-dancing, Buddhist/Taoist philosophy and meditation, and Native American astrology.â1
At a recent conference Frances Brown, Alexandra Nathanson, and Charlotte Riley gave a workshop, âNarcissistic Impairment in Men Clients Treated by Women Therapists: A Study of Transference, Countertransference, and Cultural Reality.â Following is their summary of the workshop content: âNarcissistic disturbance presents special challenges to the female therapist in her work with male clients. In this session, the transference-countertransference dialogue in this treatment situation will be examined.â2
Cecile Marie writes: âI work with people who need to reacquaint themselves with and polish their own tools, listen more carefully to the dialogue within, separate fact from fiction and synthesize the dissonance. This process is what I call unfolding your wings.â3
Patricia Bland holds sessions on âAwakening: Rosen Method Body Work.â She describes this as follows: âThe Sleeping State: When we hold back feelings, we simultaneously tighten muscles. Continued long enough, the holding becomes automatic. A part of us falls asleep and our capacity for emotional and creative expression diminishes.
âThe Awaken Process: When I touch the sleeping muscles, gently and deeply, with patience, they begin to awaken. Your body and breath subtly change, and my hands and my words respond.â4
At another conference, Jean Sanville gave the keynote address: âTheories, Therapies, Therapists: Their Transformations.â She spoke of âthe intricacies in understanding the patient from a developmental point of view.â She views the analyst/patient interchange as âa kind of âplayâ which facilitates the patientâs development.â5
Joyce M. Lavey teaches âMaking Money Doing What You Love.â She writes that âyour Higher Self knows your purpose in the universe and how to create work you truly love. Empower yourself by combining your talents and skills with dynamic techniques which unleash your creativity and stimulate your intuition.â6
Roberta Godbe tells potential clients that âtogether, we will explore deep levels of being, restructuring subconscious patterns and releasing emotional pain at a cellular level. This type of work involves an honest commitment to transformation which moves beyond mere personal change.â Her approach, she says, incorporates âpowerful transformational tools to assist in this process including conscious breathwork, hypnotherapy, past life regressions, process work, subtle energy technology, and the healing of conception, birth and prenatal trauma.â7
Difficult to sort out? Not at all. Although some of these people appear to be faith healers and psychotherapists, all are social workers. They have their masterâs degrees from schools of social work (M.S.W.) and most of them are licensed to practice clinical social work (L.C.S.W.).8 All of them are in private practice.
Many readers probably think that social workers are professionals who help poor people and deal with problems of homelessness, child abuse and neglect, and care of the mentally ill and the frail aged, There are many social workers who do work with these kinds of problems. The following are examples:
Mary Longwood is a social worker from a family service agency. She attends a senior recreation center two days a week to help members with their problems. Approximately 250 aged people use the center each day, primarily for the hot midday meal. Mary encourages all members to apply for social and health benefits for which they may be eligible, such as social security or Medicaid. When appropriate, she helps members to get household help so that they can continue to live independently in the community as long as possible. Members sometimes need help in obtaining nursing home care or convalescent hospital care. She frequently meets with the children and grandchildren of these aged people to help their families plan for their care.
Betty Carr is a social worker for a foster care and adoption agency that deals with hard-to-place children. Many of these are older children with emotional problems and children with birth defects, drug addictions, and AIDS. Carr helps potential adoptive parents and foster parents to understand the problems, emotional burdens, and responsibilities they will have in raising these children. Once the children are placed, she continues to oversee the placement and to advise and support the parents.9
What makes these social workers different from the first ones we mentioned is that their concern is enabling people to make use of social and community resources: their families, voluntary associations, public services, friends, and so forth. In contrast, psychotherapists are concerned primarily with helping patients deal with problems that are intimately related to their selves. The psychotherapist helps the patient to increase self-esteemâto have higher regard for the self and to care for and protect the self in dealings with other people.
This book tells the story of social work and the psychotherapies, two significant professions that have emerged in the twentieth century. It is not our intention to inform people about how to do either social work or psychotherapy. Scores of other writers have described one or another kind of social work or psychotherapy, and the world will not be made richer by yet one more book on those subjects. Nor is it our primary intention to knock or champion either social work or psychotherapy. Scores of other volumes recount achievements and failures, and the evils and blessings, of both. Little can be said to change the balance of views in these matters.
Although we are dubious about the efficacy of psychotherapy in general and strongly opposed to its use as the major mode of social work practice, we begin with the assumption that both social work and psychotherapy serve important functions in modern life, although neither is fulfilling these functions very well. We believe that social work has abandoned its mission to help the poor and oppressed and to build communality. Instead, many social workers are devoting their energies and talents to careers in psychotherapy. A significant proportion of social work professionalsâabout 40 percentâare in private practice, serving middle-class clients., ,
We begin the argument with discussion of the question: Why should Americans care about what becomes of the profession of social work?
WHO SHOULD CARE?
Why arenât there any newspaper headlines about the possibility of social workâs becoming a profession devoted to the private practice of psychotherapy? Why arenât people writing to their congressional representatives about it and complaining to the universities about misuse of funds in social work education? The fact is that very few people care about what social workers do and what happens to social work. They should, but they do not, and that is one of the reasons that so many social workers have headed to private practice.
Americans are fair and generous people, responsive to appeals for charity, especially when they are presented with portraits of individuals in need: newspaper and television stories about a family that needs assistance to tend to their child who has a rare disease, natural disasters, organizations of poor people pulling themselves up by their own bootstraps, and others. These personalized stories of heroism in the face of travail frequently elicit enthusiastic public support, and people willingly contribute funds, especially when they can see positive results quickly. But, paradoxically perhaps, Americans turn away from relentless, enduring, grinding, persistent need. Witness the backlash against the homeless, the stinginess of grants to families with dependent children, and public unwillingness to support programs for chronically dependent populations.
Social workers have been societyâs unwelcome messengers. They have brought unpleasant news about distasteful needs and problems, and society has treated them accordinglyâwith ambivalence. On the one hand, there is appreciation and applause for the selfless and altruistic spirit of social work. On the other hand, though, and evidence to the contrary notwithstanding, there is an unrelenting suspicion that the welfare benefits and the services and programs provided by professional social workers place a great and unnecessary expense on taxpayers. There is, too, a muted but persistent worry that all of these benefits and services may encourage indolence and dependency.10 Thus, support for social work and social welfare services is and always has been unwilling and reluctant.
The story with psychotherapy is different. Americans, ever hopeful of finding the philosopherâs stone that will turn their leaden feelings into lilting passions and their gloomy present into golden tomorrows, have always been suckers for new psychological elixirs. From phrenology to spiritualism, from Mesmer to Freud, and from Aimee Simple McPherson to Bridie Murphy and Shirley MacLaine, there has always been a healthy market for theories, serious and half-baked, about how to achieve happiness and peace of mind, and more recently, how to raise self-esteem. Professionals in the personal happiness business are well received and well paid.
Therefore, it is no wonder that social workersâif they are paid badly enough, treated with sufficient ill regard, and given the worst of working conditionsâwill want to open stalls in the psychotherapeutic marketplace. This option was not available to them earlier in the century, but it is now, and they are flocking to that marketplace in droves.
Few of us are not touched in important ways by social work and psychotherapy. The social work professionâs continuing growth of interest in psychotherapy is, in large part, a reflection of the psychotherapy market. A growing proportion of Americans seek and can pay for psychotherapy. It was estimated in 1976 that 26 percent of all Americans had been engaged at some time in some form of psychotherapeutic counseling (compared to only 14 percent in 1957); in that 1976 study it was estimated that an additional 11 percent of Americans perceived of themselves as potentially benefiting from psychotherapeutic counseling (compared to only 9 percent in 1957).11 These percentages are probably even larger today. The proportion of people who report that they believed they could handle problems by themselves declined from 41 percent in 1957 to 35 percent in 1976. Bernie Zilbergeld, author of The Shrinking of America, estimates that the proportion of Americans who consulted a mental health expert more than tripled between 1957 and 1976.12
The numbers of people touched by social work and social welfare are large too. In 1990, almost 40 million Americansâapproximately 15 percent of the populationâreceived some kind of social security benefit. Another 6 percent received some other kind of federally supported aid.13 There is no count of the population using social services, but in 1984, approximately 5 â
million (20 percent) of people sixty-five years of age and older made use of a community service.14
The professional legions involved in providing these various kinds of services and benefits constitute a significant part of the work force. Recent estimates range from a low of 100,000 licensed psychotherapists to as many as 250,000 psychotherapists and counselors in the United States.15
In 1986 between 365,000 and 500,000 people were counted in the U.S. Census as being engaged in occupations classified as social work.16 The aged, physically handicapped, financially dependent, developmentally disabled, mentally ill, chemically addicted, sexually abused, and those who have aged parents, children, and other disabled and dependent relatives in need of care are very likely to turn, at some time, to one or another of these professionals for assistance in dealing with their problems.
Social work and psychotherapy emerged in the United States over the past 150 years, and it is important for Americans to understand their significance and meaning. Moreover, the public ought to understand the functions that social work and psychotherapy perform so that they are able to exercise some choice over the roles these professions will play in community life. Whether there is more or less social work and more or less psychotherapy is a significant question for public discussion, and that question can be answered only if the public understands the functions of social work and psychotherapy in modern society.
Both professions represent the best that the twentieth century has been able to offer as ways of dealing with the confounding and perplexing social and emotional problems of living in an advanced industrial society. Psychotherapy, which has its origins in the early nineteenth century, encompasses a profound belief in the perfectibility of the individual. It involves such ideas as: if we think the right thoughts, learn to control and direct our impulses and desires, come to appreciate the beauty of our inner selves, love wisely, protect our self-interests, and so forth, each of us can achieve our personal emotional paradise. These ideas have a dark side too: that most suffering is a matter of personal responsibility.
Social work, a somewhat younger profession, was founded on a strong belief in the perfectibility of society. It involves such ideas as: with proper social engineering of the environment, provision to all people of adequate nutrition, good housing, sufficient income, knowledge of sexual hygiene, quality education, nurturing parents, stimulating recreation, and so on, we can make of our community, at once, utopia, Shangri-la, and the City Beautiful. Social workâs original objective was to enable people to create and use a healthful and nurturing social environment. Social workers believed this to be the means to prevent and cure the great social ills of poverty, alcoholism, mental illness, family breakdown, crime, and corruption.
Neither social work nor psychotherapy has come close to achieving these goals. The poor and homeless are still with us; chemical abuse is epidemic; single-parent families are more prevalent than ever before; and, according to the report from a national study by the National Institute of Mental Health done between 1980 and 1984, mental and emotional disturbance plagues at least 40 percent of the population.17 Thus, social work and psychotherapy are imperfect, their claims to success are dubious, and they are costly. But they are needed and they are used because there are no substantial alternatives to them.
There probably will be alternatives to social work and psychotherapy developed over the next one hundred years, and we will take a stab at formulating an alternative vision for social work later in this book. But for the moment, social work and psychotherapy are the most promising options available for solving the emotional and social problems of living in a highly unpredictable society.
Finally, it is important to tell the story of social work and psychotherapy now, before social work is consumed on one side by psychotherapy and eroded on its other side by neoconservatism. In increasing numbers, social workers are flocking to psychotherapeutic pastures, hanging out their shingles to advertise themselves as psychotherapists just as quickly as licensing laws will permit. For the most part, professional associations of social workers and schools of social work are active participants in the great transformation of social work from a professional corps concerned with helping people deal with their social problems to a major platoon in the psychotherapeutic armies. At the same time, the Reagan and Bush administrations reduced considerably governmental supports for various social services, such as food stamps, school lunches, and child care. More serious, they undermined whatever fragile beliefs Americans have in the values of communality and the importance of providing quality ca...