Meeting recently at a popular local coffee house, Regular Beans/Regular BM's, my monthly bookclub de-constructed Dr. Seuss' "The Cat In the Hat", our book-of-the-month selection. The discussion became heated as several Revisionists attempted to present this post-modern children's classic as an examination of Neo-Freudian psychoanalytic theory. I interjected in my best Strother Martin impression that I considered the Cat to be 'one mean som-a-bitch'. Sitting there I was reminded of what Melville is rumoured to have slurred when asked about "Moby Dick". 'Hell of a fish tale!', he had hiccupped as he staggered back to his cubicle at the Patent Office.
Having not read Freud since the summer between grades 4 and 5 , when "Interpretation of Dreams" was on the mandatory summer reading list, I was loathe to join the debate. Come to think of it I was in my Latent Stage at that time and may have been out skateboarding or playing ball that summer of 1967. (That was not me in the back row of the balcony of the cinema having a wank at the image of Raquel Welch in a fur bikini in the film, One Million Years BC) If I had read "Dreams" I don't remember. It occurs to me now the genius of Freud lay in his recognition of the "unconscious".
Viennese woman began to come to his home with various unexplained physical ailments. Paralysis being the most common. Under hypnosis these women told of the incestuous abuse they had experienced from their fathers, brothers, uncles. Freud's initial reaction was disgust and disbelief. He could not wrap his Victorian morality around what his patients were telling him. Even today, incest remains one of those dirty little family secrets. The damage it has caused untold millions of adults who live with the unresolved conflicts sexual abuse causes is monumental. This trauma colours and taints relationships. No child who has experienced being victimized by a relative lives as an healthy adult without proper mental health care.
The idea of the "unconscious" is Freud's greatest contribution. It is perhaps one of the greatest concepts to emerge from the 19th century. A professor of mine had a favourite exercise for lecture on this topic. He would place his hand in his trouser's pocket and rattle what was there. He would ask, "What's in my hand?" We students would call out answers. He would shake his head and withdraw his keys. He would then ask, "Where are my keys now?" Again, we would say various innane things and he would smile and say "They are in my un-pocket". Like cyberspace, the unconscious exists but we can't see it or touch it. It dictates what we do, what we think. What we aren't conscious of about ourselves; our actions and reactions, is what causes us so much distress.
My bookclub's selection for next month is Maurice Sendak's, "Where The Wild Things Are". I've enough anger of my own these days I really don't need to read about someone elses. I may skip the next get together.