INTRODUCTION
The ideas herein presented
stem, for the most part, from my day-to-day clinical work with patients as they
struggled to avoid or to gain ever greater levels of maturity.
Consequently, this book contains portions of many actual case histories.
Confidentiality is essential to psychiatric practice, and all case descriptions, therefore, have been altered in name and in other particulars so as to preserve the anonymity of my patients without distorting the essential reality of our experience with each other.
There may, however, be some distortion by virtue of the brevity of the case presentations. Psychotherapy is seldom a brief process, but since I have, of necessity, focused on the highlights of a case, the reader may be left with the impression that the process is one of drama and clarity.
The drama is real and clarity may eventually be achieved, but it should be remembered that in the interest of readability, accounts of the lengthy periods of confusion and frustration inherent in most therapy have been omitted from these case descriptions.
I would also like to apologize for continually referring to God in the traditionally masculine image, but I have done so in the interest of simplicity rather than from any rigidly held concept as to gender.
As a psychiatrist, I feel it is important to mention at the outset two assumptions that underlie this book. One is that I make no distinction between the mind and the spirit, and therefore no distinction between the process of achieving spiritual growth and achieving mental growth. They are one and the same.
The other assumption is that this process is a complex, arduous and lifelong task. Psychotherapy, if it is to provide substantial assistance to the process of mental and spiritual growth, is not a quick or simple procedure. I do not belong to any particular school of psychiatry or psychotherapy; I am not simply a Freudian or Jungian or Adlerian or behaviorist or gestaltist. I do not believe there are any single easy answers.
I believe that brief forms
of psychotherapy may be helpful and are not to be decried, but the help they
provide is inevitably superficial.
The journey of spiritual growth is a long one. I would like to thank those of my patients who have given me the privilege of accompanying them for major portions of their journey.
For their journey has also been mine, and much of what is presented here is what we have learned together. I would also like to thank many of my teachers and colleagues. Principal among them is my wife, Lily. She has been so giving that it is hardly possible to distinguish her wisdom as a spouse, parent, psychotherapist, and person from my own.
M. Scott Peck, M.D.
DR.DENNIS EKWEDIKE: The author emphatically stated that he did not believe that there are any single answers and this touched me . The journey of spiritual growth is a long one. In the book,no distinction between the mind and the spirit was made likewise the process of achieving spiritual growth and mental growth !
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteLife happens in diverse ways
DeleteThere is no one answer that fits all of life's questions
There is no distinction between the process of achieving spiritual growth and achieving mental growth. It is a long journey and everyone at his or her own pace regardless of what is happening around you or what people tend to think or believe.
ReplyDeleteChukwuebuka Asadu
They are intertwined
Delete1.The journey of spiritual growth is a long one.
ReplyDelete2.Confidentiality is a critical component of human relationship.
3.The process achieving spiritual growth and achieving mental growth is the same.
The road to spiritual enlightenment is not a short one at all
Delete