Harry M. Tiebout, M.D.
The Importance of a
Positive Attitude
The Act of Surrender
One Man's Story
What Happened ?
Breaking Down The Act
Of Surrender
Internal Qualities
Defiance
Grandiosity
Defiance and
Grandiosity at Work in the Alcoholic
External Circumstances
The Positive Phase
The Difference Between
Submission and Surrender
Relating The Act Of
Surrender To The Therapeutic Process
Differing acts of
surrender
Recognizing the
Surrender Reaction
Resistance
Breaking through
resistance
Conclusion
INTRODUCTION:
The Importance of a
Positive Attitude
A year and a half ago,
I wrote a paper in which I discussed a phenomenon which I labeled
"conversion." In that paper I broadened the concept of
conversion to cover any major switch from negative to positive
thinking and feeling irrespective of a possible religious component.
Two points stood out to me as important: first, the fact that the
positive frame of mind could appear under a given set of
circumstances without special help, psychiatric or otherwise; and
second, that the new state of mind had a decidedly healthier tone to
its thinking and feeling than that which prevailed when the negative
tone was uppermost. Without saying so, I then believed that the
positive frame of mind could become a legitimate aim in therapy as,
once it was brought about, the individual's attitudes and responses
were much healthier.
While I no longer
believe that therapy is simply a matter of reaching a positive
relationship with reality, I remain convinced that the creation of a
positive attitude is one of the essential features in a successful
therapeutic program, and that any experience that brings about such
an attitude or frame of mind deserves careful study for the light it
may throw on treatment in general. Consequently, I continued my
observations on the conversion experience and have arrived at the
conclusion that the key to an understanding of that experience may be
found in the act of surrender which, in my opinion, sets in motion
the conversion switch. My paper will therefore consist of (1) a
discussion of the act of surrender, and (2) an endeavor to relate it
to the therapeutic process as a whole.
Before I go ahead, it
may be wise to recapitulate the contents of my previous paper. In it
I described how, with the conversion switch, many aspects of the
patient's attitudes underwent profound and often remarkable
alterations. I pointed out how, in eight major ways, the individual
switched or changed. Rather than go through the whole list again, I
can sum up these changes briefly by saying that the person who has
achieved the positive frame of mind has lost his or her tense,
aggressive, demanding, conscience-ridden self that feels isolated and
at odds with the world and has become a relaxed, natural, more
realistic individual who can dwell in the world on a Live and Let
Live basis. The difference in the before and after state of these
people is very real and represents, I believe, a fundamental psychic
occurrence.
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The Act of Surrender
With respect to the act
of surrender, let me emphasize this point: it is an unconscious
event, not willed by the patient even if he or she should desire to
do so. It can occur only when an individual with certain traits in
his or her unconscious mind becomes involved in a certain set of
circumstances. Then the act of surrender can be anticipated with
considerable accuracy, as I shall soon show. It cannot be defined in
direct conscious terminology but must be understood in all its
unconscious ramifications before its true inner meaning can be
glimpsed. The simplest way to picture what is involved in the act of
surrender is to present a case in which there was a conversion
experience that seemed to follow an act of surrender..
One Man's Story
The patient is a man in
his early fifties, very successful in business, and referred to by
his associates as Napoleon because of his autocratic methods when he
was stirred up. For years, heavy drinking to the point of frequent
intoxication was present, interfering to some extent with his
efficiency, but never to the degree that his business really
suffered. My first contact came some six or seven years ago when he
came to Blythewood to dry out. Pursuant to our policy of trying
slowly and from time to time to educate patients about the danger of
their condition, we permitted this man to remain just for the drying
out, at the same time telling him that, in our eyes, he was headed
for trouble if he continued on his present trend. Without putting any
pressure on him and thus arousing his resistance, we placed the facts
before him and let it go.
We continued the policy
of letting him come and go pretty much as he pleased, always,
however, keeping uppermost before him the need to do something about
his drinking, and always making it evident that we were not
interested in drying him out, but in the real problem of helping him
stop his drinking. Later on and in retrospect, the patient, in
referring to these tactics, said, "I used to like to come here;
you didn't always argue with me. I always knew just where you stood
and knew I wasn't fooling you any."
During all this time,
however, I was working on his life situation so that ultimately it
would provide the necessary dynamite to jar him loose from his whirl
of self-centeredness. Gradually, his wife gave up her protectiveness
and, before the time of this last admission nearly two years ago, she
had determined to leave him if his drinking continued. Moreover, as a
result of some discussion with me, his business partner had decided
that he, with several key members of the firm, would tender their
resignations if the patient did not make a real effort to mend his
ways.
After a particularly
severe bout, the patient was induced again to enter Blythewood. This
time, however, I told him flatly that he would sign himself in for
thirty days or he would go elsewhere; we were through with him
running his case once and for all. He looked startled, picked up his
hat, fiddled with it, and then put it on his head, saying, "Where's
your pen? I'll go to Hilltop where I belong," referring to the
cottage where he had dried out on previous occasions. Within three or
four days he was off the liquor and thinking reasonably straight. He
was then informed of his wife's decision and, instead of ranting
around and making it clear where she could go, he discussed for the
first time the real hell he had put her through and really seemed
regretful. By the end of the first week, quite prepared for trouble,
the partner told him of the pending resignations if the drinking
persisted, only to be surprised and pleased with the patient's quiet
acceptance of their decision and an acknowledgment of his own real
wish to be different. He soon joined A.A. and is now an active member
of that organization in his home community. The patient has stayed
sober.
What Happened ?
Recently in discussing
his experience the man in the story explained, "You did
something to me when you made me sign that card. I knew you meant
business. I knew my wife was getting sore and that Bill his partner
was fed up, but when you showed me you were through fooling, that was
a clincher. I knew I needed help and couldn't get out of it myself.
So I signed the card and felt better right off for doing it. I made
up my mind that I wasn't going to run my own case any longer but was
going to take orders. Then later I talked with Chris his wife and
learned how she felt, and then Bill came along and I knew deep inside
my heart they were right. But, I didn't mind. I didn't get angry and
want to argue like I used to. I kind of surprised myself by agreeing
with them. It sure was nice not to have to fight. I felt calmer and
quieter inside and have ever since, although I know I'm not out of
the woods yet."
Here is the story of a
patient who has been through a conversion experience and is still in
the positive phase. His own account of what happened stresses the
signing of the card as the turning point in his experience, and I am
also convinced that he is right. We can sum this man's experience up
by saying that after trying to run his own case to his own ruination,
he gave up the battle and surrendered to the need for help, after
which he entered a new state of mind that has enabled him to remain
sober.
Breaking Down: The Act
Of Surrender
This man's experience,
which is not limited to alcoholics, raises three questions:
What qualities were
there in his nature that so long resisted help and finally were
forced to give in?
What were the
circumstances that brought about the final act of surrender?
Why does a positive
phase follow the surrender experience?
My answers to these
questions are derived primarily from my studies of alcoholics, but
not entirely, as I have witnessed surrender with a typical aftermath
in at least four cases among the students at Sarah Lawrence. I hope
through my discussion in reply to these questions not only to define
the act of surrender, but also to give you some feeling for it as a
psychological entity or event.
Internal Qualities
To turn then to the
first question, "What are the qualities in a patient's nature
that make him or her put up such a battle before finally
surrendering?" In the alcoholic, my observations have led me to
see that the two qualities that Sillman selected as characteristic --
defiant individuality and grandiosity -- may very well explain that
the alcoholic is typically resistant to the point of being
unreasonable and stubborn about seeking help or being able to accept
help even when he or she seeks it. Defiant individuality and
grandiosity operate in the unconscious layers of the mind and their
influence must be understood if one is to see what probably goes on
at the time of surrender.
Defiance
Defiance may be defined
as a quality that permits an individual to snap his fingers in the
face of reality and live on unperturbed. It has two special values
for handling life situations. In the first place, defiance, certainly
with alcoholics, is a surprisingly effective tool for managing
anxiety or reality, both of which are so often a source of anxiety.
If you defy a fact and say it is not so and can succeed in doing so
unconsciously, you can drink to the day of your death, forever
denying the imminence of that fate. As one patient phrased it, "My
defiance was a cloak of armor." And so it was a most trustworthy
shield against the truth and all its pressures.
In the second place,
defiance masquerades as a very real and reliable source of inner
strength and self-confidence, since it says in essence, Nothing can
happen to me because I can and do defy it.
With people who meet
reality on this basis, life is always a battle with the spoils going
to the strong. Much can be said in favor of defiance as a method of
meeting life. It is the main resource of the chin-up and unafraid
type of adjustment and, as a temporary measure, it helps people over
many rough spots.
Grandiosity
Grandiosity, the second
quality noted by Sillman, permeates widely throughout the reactions
of the alcoholic. Differing from defiance -- which seems almost
uniquely structuralized in the psyche of the alcoholic -- grandiosity
springs from the persisting infantile ego. As in other neurotic
states, grandiosity characteristically fills a person with feelings
of omnipotence, demands for direct gratification of wishes, and a
proneness to interpret frustration as evidence of rejection and lack
of love. The effect of this persistence in the alcoholic is not a bit
different from the effect of any other neurotic. Perhaps in the
alcoholic the typical arrogance and sense of superior worth are kept
nearer the surface by the associated defiance that feeds the childish
ego constantly by its succession of victories. By and large, however,
there is nothing in the alcoholic's grandiosity that distinguishes
him or her from the neurotic, whose infantile ego survives to become
a significant factor in adult life; it is part of the typical
egocentricity of that group, and its presence is confirmed by any
careful study of them.
Defiance and
Grandiosity at Work in the Alcoholic
We are now in a
position to discuss how these qualities operate in alcoholics. On the
one side, the defiance says, It is not true that I can't manage
drinking . On the other side, the facts speak loudly and with
increasing insistence to the contrary. Again, on the one side,
grandiosity claims, there is nothing I cannot master and control, and
on the other side, the facts demonstrate unmistakably the opposite.
The dilemma of the alcoholic is now obvious: the unconscious mind
rejects -- through its capacity for defiance and grandiosity -- what
the conscious mind perceives. Hence, realistically, the individual is
frightened by his or her drinking and at the same time is prevented
from doing anything about It by the unconscious activity that can and
does ignore or override the conscious mind.
Let us see how this
clash between the conscious and unconscious response manifests itself
in the clinical setting. A stimulus from reality, such as a
recognition of the downhill pattern of the drinking, impinges upon
the conscious mind and creates acute anxiety which, for the moment,
dominates the conscious processes and is recorded as worry, distress,
fear, and concern. The patient, in this state, is fired with a desire
to quit and eagerly grabs at any kind of help. He or she is in a
state of crisis and suffering.
In the meantime,
however, the stimulus of reality is hitting the unconscious layers of
the mind and is stirring up the reactions of defiance and
grandiosity. Since, characteristically, it takes a certain amount of
time before the unconscious responses are sufficiently mobilized to
influence conscious mental activity, there is always an appreciable
lag before the conscious mind evidences signs of the underlying
unconscious activity. Then slowly and gradually these attitudes
supervene. Patients express less concern about their drinking,
complain that they were rushed into seeking help, that they're no
worse than anybody else, and that the worry of others is silly and a
gratuitous invasion of their rights. Finally, the memory of their own
acute period of anxiety is swallowed up by the defiance and
grandiosity. Thus the patient loses the effectiveness of the anxiety
as a stimulus to create suffering and a desire for change. This cycle
will go on repeating itself as long as the defiance and the
grandiosity continue to function with unimpaired vigor.
External Circumstances
We now come to the
second question: "What were the circumstances that made that
patient give in and sign that card?" Let me review them for you
briefly. He had been drinking for years, and he knew his drinking was
getting worse in the eyes of family and friends. However, he knew
that his condition had reached the point where both his wife and his
business associates were leaving him and thereby withdrawing their
support and protection. He was threatened with the task of managing
himself and his condition entirely on his own, so he sought my help
and protection to dry him out and thus allow him once more to resume
his role of successful defiance and grandiosity. This time, however,
I refused to follow my previous role. I had established myself as not
arbitrary, not willing to fit what he needed. But when I asked him to
sign the card, I knew that his other circumstances were different and
that I represented the one way for him. When I told him, in essence,
that he was not running his case or me anymore, his last prop was
thus removed. He had no place to take his defiance and his
grandiosity; nor could he become defiant with me: someone who stood
for his last bit of hope and who actually had become established as
an ultimate resource when he was in difficulty. So he staged a brief
inward debate and then signed the card.
In short, the patient
signed the card, first, when all support was withdrawn; second, when
he could not in anger defy those who withdrew their support because
he knew they had been patient and long-suffering; and third, when he
found himself desperately needing help and had no grandiose ideas
left about being able to drink like non-alcoholics. He had neither
unconscious defiance nor grandiosity left to fight with. He was
licked, and he both knew it and felt it.
The Positive Phase
We now reach the third
question, "Why does the positive phase follow?" Here, we
frankly reach speculation. I know the positive phase comes, but not
just why. Surrender means cessation of a fight, and cessation of a
fight seems logically to be followed by internal peace and quiet.
That point seems fairly obvious, but why the whole feeling tone
switches from negative to positive without all the concomitant
changes is not so clear. Nevertheless, despite my inability to
explain the phenomenon, there is no question that the changes do take
place and that they may be initiated by an act of surrender.
THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SUBMISSION AND
SURRENDER
One fact must be kept
in mind, namely, the need to distinguish between submission and
surrender . In submission, an individual accepts reality consciously,
but not unconsciously. He or she accepts as a practical fact that he
or she cannot at that moment lick reality, but lurking in the
unconscious is the feeling, there'll come a day , which implies no
real acceptance and demonstrates conclusively that the struggle is
still on. With submission, which at best is a superficial yielding,
tension continues.
When an individual
surrenders, the ability to accept reality functions on the
unconscious level, and there is no residual of battle; relaxation
with freedom from strain and conflict ensues. In fact, it is
perfectly possible to ascertain how much acceptance of reality is on
the unconscious level by the degree of relaxation that develops. The
greater the relaxation, the greater the inner acceptance of reality.
We can now be more
precise in our definition of an act of surrender. It is to be viewed
as a moment when the unconscious forces of defiance and grandiosity
actually cease to function effectively. When that happens, the
individual is wide open to reality; he or she can listen and learn
without conflict and fighting back. He or she is receptive to life,
not antagonistic. The person senses a feeling of relatedness and
at-oneness that becomes the source of an inner peace and serenity,
the possession of which frees the individual from the compulsion to
drink. In other words, an act of surrender is an occasion wherein the
individual no longer fights life, but accepts it.
Having defined an act
of surrender as a moment of accepting reality on the unconscious
level, it is now possible to define the emotional state of surrender
as a state in which there is a persisting capacity to accept reality.
In this definition, the capacity to accept reality must not be
conceived of in a passive sense, but in the active sense of reality
being a place where one can live and function as a person
acknowledging one's responsibilities and feeling free to make that
reality more livable for oneself and others. There is no sense of
"must"; nor is there any sense of fatalism. With true
unconscious surrender, the acceptance of reality means the individual
can work in it and with it. The state of surrender is really positive
and creative.
To sum up, my
observations have led me to conclude that an act of surrender is
inevitably followed by a state of surrender that is actually the
positive state in the conversion picture. Because of the two always
being associated, I believe they represent a single phenomenon to
which I attach the term "surrender reaction."
RELATING THE ACT OF
SURRENDER TO THE THERAPEUTIC
PROCESS
Having at last made as
clear as I could my use of the term "surrender," I must now
try to relate that concept to the therapeutic process. While, a
recognition of the dynamic force of the event has proven enlightening
in many directions, it has been particularly helpful in understanding
the fluctuations in moods of patients and in certain aspects of
therapy.
The following patient's
problem took on meaning for me when I grasped the fact that he had
experienced an act of surrender at the time he attended his first
A.A. meeting. A man in his middle thirties, he tells his story this
way:
"I was licked. I'd
tried everything, and nothing had worked. My wife was packing to leave me; my
job was going to blow up in my face. I was desperate when I went to my first A.A.
meeting. When I got there, something happened. I don't know to this day a year
later what it was, but I took a look at the men and women there and I knew they had
something I needed, so I said to myself, I'll listen to what they
have to tell me. From that
time on, things have been different. I go to meetings, work with other drunks, and
study all I can about alcoholism. I know I'm an alcoholic, and I never let that fact
escape me."
Now, if you stop and
review this man's account, you will note the statement, "I'll
listen to what they have to tell me." In that comment to
himself, the patient initiated his act of surrender. There was no
lip-service in his willingness to listen; he really wanted help.
There was no defiance or grandiosity available at the moment to
dilute his listening. He was accepting, without inner reservation or
conflict, the reality of his condition and the need for help. And,
significantly enough, at this point he goes on to say, "From
that time on, things have been different." Subsequent events
clearly indicate that this man did experience the typical change I
have been calling conversion , and from that time on "things
were different." His wife, commenting on this change, said
feelingly, "It's the most remarkable thing I ever could imagine.
The only trouble is that I still have to keep my fingers crossed
because it still doesn't make any sense to me."
The patient, however,
consulted me because he "didn't like the way things were going."
By that, he meant that he was finding himself cranky at home and
irritable in business, signs that his A.A. experience had taught him
were ominous. When I asked him why he gave up drinking, he replied
that he had made up his mind to quit so he, did, although he had to
admit that A.A. was helpful. A little surprised at this simple
assertion and doubting it somewhat, I plied him with further
questions and got the real story, which showed to me that he had a
typical surrender experience, followed by a typical positive
aftermath. But I also saw that the change did not last and that,
after several months in which the patient had lived in a state of
surrender, he slowly reverted to his former attitudes and ways of
feeling. In other words, the surrender reaction did not fix itself
into his personality and thus allowed the return of his previous
state of mind.
Differing acts of
surrender
The fate of the
surrender reaction is in itself an interesting study. With some, the
surrender experience is the start of genuine growth and maturation.
With others, the surrender phase is the only one ever reached, so
that they never lose the need to attend meetings and to follow the
program assiduously, apparently relying on the constant reminders in
their daily existence to supply the necessary impetus to the
surrender feeling, at least insofar as alcohol is concerned. For a
few, there seems to occur a phenomenon of what might be called
selective surrender . After the effects of the initial surrender
experience have worn away, the individual returns to pretty much the
same person he or she was before, except for the fact that the person
doesn't drink. His surrender is not to life as a person, but to
alcohol as an alcoholic. Many other differing aftermaths undoubtedly
occur, but a study of any or all of them would, I am sure, disclose
the same basic fact: the surrender experience is followed by a phase
of positive thinking and feeling that undergoes various vicissitudes
before it becomes established in some form or other in the psyche --
or it is lost completely, becoming merely a memory and a mirage.
Recognizing the
Surrender Reaction
From the standpoint of
therapy, recognition of the surrender reaction throws a challenging
light upon many clinical phenomena that are generally held to be of
significance in the process of getting better. For instance, in
catharsis it is not what is revealed but the act of surrender (that
preceded and permitted the revealing to come to light) that, in my
opinion, produces the characteristic afterglow of positive feeling.
It also explains its temporary effect just as with the conversion
experience of the alcoholic. Again, the frequent unexpected lifts
derived from seemingly ordinary first interviews, while they may be
considered transference phenomena, seem to me more in the nature of
"surrender reactions" based upon the fact that the client
found the interview palatable, and the client made a decision to
continue, which by implication means "surrender", to the
psychiatrist. The very decision to come to a psychiatrist, through
its surrender significance, often has an ameliorating influence and
certainly accounts for the remark of a patient who said, "Once I
rang your doorbell, I felt 75 percent better". The phenomenon of
release, which makes people realize that, in losing their lives they
are finding them, becomes explicable if one sees that the surrender
that preceded the sense of release stills the inner fight and
hostility, thus permitting the spontaneous creative elements of the
Inner Self outlet for expression.
Resistance
It is in the area of
resistance, however, that an understanding of the surrender reaction
sheds the greatest light on the therapeutic process. Regularly,
therapy goes ahead by fits and starts. For a while there is a period
of resistance that is worked through, permitting progress, insight,
and awareness of the emotional interplays in the unconscious life.
Then another point of resistance is encountered, and again it must be
ferreted out and dissolved before further constructive steps may be
taken. Meeting resistance and working it through are the everyday
tasks of therapy.
Breaking Through
Resistance
Where before the
patient has been in full resistance -- bucking treatment, difficult
to manage, getting nowhere -- suddenly there is a marked change,
almost like the sun bursting through the clouds, bringing everything
into focus and making what was once a confused jumble take on form,
significance, and meaning. For the time being, the resistances have
disappeared and the treatment proceeds apace.
We have been accustomed
to saying that the patient has a flash of insight and understanding
that brought clarification and a greater awareness of his or her
individual emotional makeup. Actually, if you examine the state of
mind that breaks through when the resistance melts, you will find it
is strikingly parallel to the positive state of mind an individual
may have after a conversion experience. In fact, the parallel is so
striking that I am more and more becoming convinced that the two are
identical. In other words, I now believe that the giving up of
resistance during treatment is in reality an act of surrender that
typically, as in the conversion experience, is followed by a positive
state of mind where elements of resistance are no longer present.
This "giving in" may be sudden, causing the patient to
enter the positive phase so rapidly as to constitute a sudden
turnover with dramatic results. Generally, as in the conversion
change, the change is slower, but the alteration is in exactly the
same direction.
CONCLUSION
No one recognizes more
than I do the sweeping nature of any such observations. No one is
more aware than I am of the need to substantiate these observations
with clinical material. Someday I may be able to support more
conclusively my present hypothesis with case material. I can point
out, however, that the positive aftermath of the so-called
"successful interpretations" is no more lasting than the
positive phase of the so-called "conversion experience".
They are both temporary; they are both slowly supplanted by a new
crop of resistances or negative feelings. Also, they both require
further change in the unconscious mind before the act of surrender
becomes a settled state of surrender in which defiance and
grandiosity no longer raise havoc with adjustment, serenity, and the
capacity to function as a human being.
To recapitulate, my
studies of the conversion experience have led me to see that:
It is the act of
surrender that initiates the switch from negative to positive
behavior.
It occurs when the
unconscious defiance and grandiosity are for the time being rendered
completely powerless by force of circumstance or reality.
The act of surrender
and the change that follows are inseparable since it is safe to
assume that if there is no change, there has been no surrender.
The positive phase is
really a state of surrender that follows the surrender act.
In several places, as
in catharsis, the so-called improvement or feeling better is actually
a state of surrender induced by an act of surrender.
The state of surrender,
if maintained, supplies an emotional tone to all thinking and feeling
that does insure healthy adjustment.
I have tried in this
paper to establish the fact that there is such a psychic event as
surrender and that once the fact is appreciated in all its
ramifications, it is illuminating clinically and provides a basis for
understanding much that goes on in the therapeutic process.
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