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Why did the Foundation undertake this study?
The Foundation saw the treatment program as a wonderful opportunity to learn about how creative people, their work, and their relationships change as a result of participating in psychoanalysis. By conducting the research - a longitudinal study of the lives of creative people - we hope that we can help people and also learn about the process of psychoanalytic psychotherapy.
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Why are you studying creative people?
We are working with creative people because of the vision of our founder, Lucy Daniels. Lucy believes that creative people have something essential to contribute to society. There is something interesting about their flexibility and newness of thought. Our first grantees were creative writers. They were not required to be geniuses or famous; however, we want to be sure that we are actually studying people who are putting something new into the world. So we made it a policy only to accept writers whose work had been published or performed. Beginning in spring 2004, we began recruiting visual artists for a similar program of treatment and research. Eventually we hope to be able to offer treatment to other types of creative people - performing artists, scientists, perhaps even creative community leaders or entrepreneurs.
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How many people are in your treatment program?
We have supported treatment for approximately eight creative individuals at a time through grants to help pay for the cost of psychoanalysis. We limit treatment to eight creative individuals at a time because the cost of long-term, intensive treatment is expensive. At this time we are not accepting applications for treatment.
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What is a typical course of treatment?
In our study, individuals are seen four times per week in psychoanalysis with an experienced psychoanalyst. Treatment often continues for several years.
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What is transference?
Working with transference is central to any psychoanalytic therapy. Transference is the map of relationships created in early childhood in which there is a view of the self and of the other person and of how they interact with each other. This way of experiencing self, other, and relationship is replayed with the analyst. Through observing and understanding the transference within the unique analytic relationship, early models of relating can be reworked.
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Are the grantees you choose mentally ill? Are they depressed?
Psychoanalysis is dependent upon individuals' capacity to talk about and reflect on their thoughts and feelings with another person. They are not psychotic, manic-depressive, or incapable of having relationships. Rather, they often have long term troubles with how they feel about themselves and with their relationships. They may also engage in behaviors that undermine or limit their creative work or other aspects of their lives.
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Why did you select psychoanalysis as the treatment method?
At the Lucy Daniels Foundation, we believe that psychoanalysis goes deep enough and is thorough enough to bring about fundamental changes in how people relate to themselves, others, and their work. If you want to alter transference maps and distorted views of the self, then this kind of intensive treatment might be beneficial. In Lucy Daniels' experience, psychoanalysis transformed and saved her life. At the Foundation, we want other creative people to have the opportunity to explore whether psychoanalysis might benefit them in similar or different ways.
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What is the analytic orientation of your work?
We practice a contemporary form of psychoanalysis that builds on a core Freudian framework. We have incorporated new developments in psychoanalytic theory, for example, in the areas of female psychology, the development of the self, and the importance of early patterns of attachment in relationships. We have integrated changes in analytic technique so that we view the analytic relationship as central to the quality and outcome of the therapy. The "classical" analytic technique, in which the analyst says little and is almost invisible, has been replaced by one that is more engaging.
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What makes this research project unique?
The project at the Foundation is unique; it is not replicated any place else. It is the only longitudinal study of creative people who have been in psychoanalysis and who are followed for the duration of their lives. We are assembling an archive of data that we hope will be tapped by carefully selected researchers in the future. But to really examine this data carefully will take significant funding and staffing. The costs of transcribing and data entry, and the cost of using expert judges make empirical research very expensive.
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What can we learn from creative people and their responses to life?
Creative people have a way of mastering psychic trauma through their creative work. They take the bad things that happen to them and actively reshape painful experiences into something else - a book or a painting or a composition.