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Word: lindners (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...best known through the Army's technique of using drugs to get battle-shocked soldiers to spit out their troubles (TIME, Feb. 7). Many psychiatrists fear that apparently speedy cures may really have little effect, leave permanent psychic damage. The same objection has been raised to hypnoanalysis (Lindner's example was finished in 46 hourly sessions). But hypnoanalysis also has respectable support: it has been used by the Menninger Clinic in Topeka, Kan., by famed Psychiatrist Milton H. Erickson, of Michigan's Eloise Hospital...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Hypnoanalysis | 8/28/1944 | See Source »

Light in Darkness. Lindner's subject is Harold, 21, serving a long term for a serious, unnamed crime. Harold, the son of a bull-tempered Polish laborer who speaks no English, has been in trouble with the police, mostly for pilfering, since the age of twelve. His most conspicuous psychopathic symptom was a constant blinking of his eyes...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Hypnoanalysis | 8/28/1944 | See Source »

...Lindner began in orthodox analytic fashion by having the boy lie on a couch and encouraging him to talk freely. (Lindner got his transcript via a microphone concealed in the couch. Told about this at the end of the analysis, Harold himself urged the analyst to publish the record.) Without much hesitation, Harold gave the details of a hair-raising career of gun-toting, stealing, vandalism, fornication. Like all psychopaths, Harold was "a rebel without a cause, a revolutionary without a program," a grownup infant with no self-restraint and a craving for instant satisfactions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Hypnoanalysis | 8/28/1944 | See Source »

...thirty-second session, the analyst had gathered that: 1) Harold's eye trouble began before the age of two ; 2 ) his difficulties seemed to have their roots in relations between his mother (whom he loved) and his father (whom he hated). Then Lindner ran into a stone wall of resistance; there were hints of a terrible experience which the boy could not remember...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Hypnoanalysis | 8/28/1944 | See Source »

...Lindner thereupon placed Harold in a deep hypnotic trance, suggested his baby hood : "You are getting smaller and younger. ... You are very small now, a very small baby ... in the cradle. . . . Why did you first start to blink your eyes?" Harold then related, in sharp detail, two frightening experiences apparently at the age of about six or eight months: 1) sitting in his mother's lap at the movies, he was terrified by a picture of a "wolf" (probably Rin-Tin-Tin, says Lindner); 2) next morning, waking early in his cradle, he saw that his father, looking wolfish...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Hypnoanalysis | 8/28/1944 | See Source »

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