Today is the birthday of Nelle Harper Lee. She is 87
years old and the author of the Pulitzer Prize winning, autobiographical novel To Kill A Mockingbird (1960). Her only
novel was published when she was thirty four years old.  Her story is told through the eyes of a young
girl (6-9 years old) Scout Finch, who refused to be boxed into dresses and etiquette
by her aunt, and who often spoke first with her fists as she righted school
yard injustices. Scout understands the injustice of racism, which turns human
beings into the Other, a not me.
Sunday, April 28, 2013
Happy Birthday. Harper Lee
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Lycia Alexander-Guerra, M.D.
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6:20 AM
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Saturday, April 27, 2013
Starting out, for the beginning therapist
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Lycia Alexander-Guerra, M.D.
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3:57 PM
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Saturday, April 20, 2013
War Photojournalist and psychoanalyst of like minds
 Two years ago today, war
photojournalist Tim Hetherington, who, along with journalist and co-director
Sebastian Junger, was nominated for a 2011 Oscar for their 2010 documentary Restrepo about American soldiers in
Afghanistan, was killed in Misrata, Libya, during the civil war, having bled to
death at the age of 40 after a mortar exploded.  In recounting, on NPR’s Morning Edition on April 18, 2013, a conversation Hetherington had
with his father, Junger said that Hetherington defined “rich” as having “the
power to determine your future.”  This
got me to thinking about what psychoanalysts strive toward, that is,
facilitating people toward greater freedom to determine their emerging lives.
In covering war, Junger notes a “moral awareness” in making a living telling
stories about people dying, which sometimes weighed heavily. Therapists, too,
have a ‘moral awareness’ that we make our livings off the suffering of others.
War correspondents can comfort themselves that stories must be told, just as we
therapists can. Additionally, I think, and as the brave survivors of Monday's Boston Marathon proved, running toward suffering is the best
hope to relieve it.
Two years ago today, war
photojournalist Tim Hetherington, who, along with journalist and co-director
Sebastian Junger, was nominated for a 2011 Oscar for their 2010 documentary Restrepo about American soldiers in
Afghanistan, was killed in Misrata, Libya, during the civil war, having bled to
death at the age of 40 after a mortar exploded.  In recounting, on NPR’s Morning Edition on April 18, 2013, a conversation Hetherington had
with his father, Junger said that Hetherington defined “rich” as having “the
power to determine your future.”  This
got me to thinking about what psychoanalysts strive toward, that is,
facilitating people toward greater freedom to determine their emerging lives.
In covering war, Junger notes a “moral awareness” in making a living telling
stories about people dying, which sometimes weighed heavily. Therapists, too,
have a ‘moral awareness’ that we make our livings off the suffering of others.
War correspondents can comfort themselves that stories must be told, just as we
therapists can. Additionally, I think, and as the brave survivors of Monday's Boston Marathon proved, running toward suffering is the best
hope to relieve it.
Posted by
Lycia Alexander-Guerra, M.D.
at
8:01 AM
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Wednesday, April 17, 2013
Christianity and Psychoanalysis
Max Harris discussed, over dinner, some interesting and
intersecting antipathies within religion and within psychoanalysis. He stated
that the battle waging within modern Christianity is over who we are: Are we
defined by what was put into us, that is, original sin, as many evangelicals
believe, or is who we are in relation to God defined by a process we co-create
with God, where we are ‘lured’ into a relationship with God through love?  The latter, thus, incurs upon us a certain
responsibility in our moment to moment actions.
Nonetheless, both the endeavor of psychoanalysis and that of a relationship with the Christian Jesus require a leap of faith: that we are in this together no matter what, and that an abiding love means we are accepted for who we are, no matter what, imperfections and all. And as Max, a psychoanalyst and former minister, noted, his calling was the saving of souls, just no longer through the ministry.
Posted by
Lycia Alexander-Guerra, M.D.
at
3:26 PM
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Monday, April 15, 2013
Neuroscience and Psychoanalytic therapy
Posted by
Lycia Alexander-Guerra, M.D.
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8:30 AM
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Monday, April 1, 2013
Survival, then gratitude in a Thank you Poem
Posted by
Lycia Alexander-Guerra, M.D.
at
6:34 AM
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