Books

The Celle Seminars_page 464

George Vithoulkas

(A.7): He catapults himself into taking drastic, violent action, although judging from his appearance, you would think that he is calm and reasonable. I would say that underneath this seemingly calm person there is an explosive personality hiding.
(G.V.): The contradiction we have here is between what we hear about his former life—drinking, racing cars, perhaps having a lot of women and sex—and what we observe now: a person who looks like an angel, very calm, sweet, not aggressive. I can imagine how he must have been before the accidents and the operation, the wildness that nothing could stop. I see him now and I see a big contradiction in his change. I could imagine a very drastic change in his character, but all his aggression and sexual instincts have been reduced to the point where he presents a childish picture. We could say, »Okay, he does not understand.« True, he does not understand certain things and he behaves like a child. This means that certain things are perceived in a particular way, in pieces, not as a whole. He seems not to perceive the entire story. He is too naive for his age and the experiences he must have had.

VIDEO

(M.P.): I only had this trouble for a few days. But after the operation I lost my memory for four or five months. (G. V.): Except for your memory, how was your mental state otherwise?
(M.P.): (thinks) (G.V.): You can’t remember? (M.P.): I don’t remember. (G. V.): Are you sure? Try.
(M.P.): I don’t know. My memory was gone and I wasn’t really living in reality.
(G. V.): I think his therapist knows a little bit about the situation. (Therapist): As far as I know, at first, after the accident, he did not want to think about what had happened, what he had done. He could not accept the blame. After the accident, he said he

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