The Cost of Emotional Illiteracy in the Age of the Mad King
Fetch error
Hmmm there seems to be a problem fetching this series right now. Last successful fetch was on January 23, 2022 02:02 ()
What now? This series will be checked again in the next day. If you believe it should be working, please verify the publisher's feed link below is valid and includes actual episode links. You can contact support to request the feed be immediately fetched.
Manage episode 274393582 series 2792777
Episode #2 in a 6-episode exclusive series. This podcast began as treatment notes on election night in 2016. Without knowing much about Donald Trump, I knew some of what we as a nation could expect based on his public behaviors for decades; after all the best predictor of future behavior is past and current behavior.
What's clear from decades of direct observation of Trump is that he has a rigid idiosyncratic behavior pattern. It is predictable and it is avoidable. I thought it was clear as day, but yet this was and is not obvious to everyone -- regardless of party.
This is not about party. This is about psychology and in this case, abnormal psychology. As our culture increasingly promotes narcissism through social media and technology, this could really happen to anyone. I took it for granted before the election that obviously everyone saw what I saw; it was directly observable, but apparently not.
And over the past three and a half years, we've had to suffer as a nation. My hope in this podcast is to help you develop your own integrated psychological lens, just like in therapy, to gain insight and awareness, maybe a new perspective, a tool and grow our shared consciousness.
In this episode, we discuss the costs of emotional illiteracy. What is emotional illiteracy and what are the real costs? We'll increase our EQ by hearing from two experts to who will teach us what to look for in order to spot these types, these traits, these psychological malignancies that are identifiable, predictable and absolutely avoidable.
GUESTS:
Dr. Cynthia Lermond is a Licensed Psychologist and Community Program Director specializing in Forensic Psychology. She is an experienced professional whose skills and interests include: forensic evaluations and expert witness testimony; clinical oversight and program development of multi-disciplinary treatment teams; psychotherapy, risk assessment, crisis intervention, and treatment planning in forensic settings; and training, education and clinical supervision of staff, students and interns.
John Snibbe, Ph.D. is a retired Clinical Psychologist who began the journey called retirement in March on 2012 after 40+ years of working. He has served in variety of clinical operations like psychiatric hospitals, a psychotherapy clinics and emergency services. He has also worked with LAPD and the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department. He has authored or edited four books and many research articles. His pre-retirement assignment was managing 24/7 Psychiatric Emergency Services for the southern half of Los Angeles County. Like many professionals who have worked in high-octane environments, coming to the tipping point of unlimited leisure and infinite horizons was seductive and frightening. Finding meaning in later life has been a complex learning process requiring persistence, exploration and flexibility.
Mentioned in this episode:
My Grandmother's Hands
Snakes in Suits
Client 9: Rise and Fall of Elliott Spitzer
Greater Good Science Center
7 episodi