From Chapter
One, Moreno's Philosophical System:
Let
us start with time, one of the great universals. What has happened
with the function of time in the course of psychotherapy in our century?
I do not speak of time as a philosophical, mystical, or phenomenological
concept, but as a therapeutic concept. From the point of view of therapeutic
procedures, to what extent does the time dimension enter into and
function in psychotherapeutic settings? Man lives in time—past,
present, and future. He may suffer from a pathology related to each.
The problem is how to integrate all three dimensions into significant
therapeutic operations. It is not sufficient that they figure as “abstract”
references; they must be made alive within treatment modalities. The
psychological aspect of time must reappear in toto.
Let
us look first at psychoanalysis. When I speak of psychoanalysis, I
refer to the orthodox Freudian position. Time, in the psychotherapeutic
doctrine, is emphasized in terms of the past. Freud, an exponent of
genetic psychology and psychobiology, found going back and trying
to find the causes of things of particular interest. Often the farther
back he went, the more he thought he would find something which is
worthwhile as a causation. And soon, psychoanalysts began to go farther
and farther back, into the womb, and if possible, even beyond that,
until they got tired of the futile “recherche du temps perdu,”
and began to come back.
However
important that past is as a dimension of time, it is a one-sided position,
a “reduced time,” which neglects and distorts the total
influence which time has upon the psyche. Here we come to my first
conflict with the Freudian view. I have pointed out that time has
other phases which are important. One of them is the present, the
dynamics of the present, of the Here and Now, hic et nunc. The experiences
which take place continuously in the context of the Here and Now have
been overlooked, distorted, or entirely forgotten. Therefore, early
in my writings began to emphasize the moment, the dynamics of the
moment, the warming up to the moment, the dynamics of the present,
the Here and Now, and all its immediate personal, social, and cultural
implications. But again, I considered these not only from the point
of view of philosophy and phenomenology, but from the viewpoint of
the therapeutic process as it takes place in connection with patients
and in patient groups—the encounter. The encounter is a telic
phenomenon. The fundamental process of tele is reciprocity—reciprocity
of attraction, reciprocity of rejection, reciprocity of excitation,
reciprocity of inhibition, reciprocity of indifference, reciprocity
of distortion.
A
meeting of two: eye to eye, face to face.
And when you are near I will tear your eyes out
and place them instead of mine,
and you will tear my eyes out
and will place them instead of yours,
then I will look at you with your eyes
and you will look at me with mine
There
is another dimension of therapeutic time which has been neglected
until recently—the future. Yet it is an important aspect of
living, for we certainly live more in the future than in the past.
Since early this morning, I have been concerned with being on time
to meet you. But it is one thing to consider the expectancies of future
happenings in our own minds and another thing to “simulate”
them, to construct techniques which enable us to live in the future,
to act as if the future is at hand, right here, “à la
recherche du temps de l’avenir.” For instance, via our
therapeutic future techniques, I can act out a situation which I expect
to happen tomorrow, with a new friend, or an appointment with a prospective
employer, to simulate the morrow as concretely as possible, so as
to predict it, or perhaps to be better prepared for it.
I have
often had clients who suffered from an employment neurosis or an unemployment
neurosis, who are anxious about getting a job, or having an interview
with a boss to ask for higher wages. Often we rehearse such a client
a week in advance of what may happen; it is a sort of “rehearsal
for life.” This rehearsal for life technique is also effective
with clients concerned about an affair of the heart—whether
it be a prospective marriage, divorce, new baby, or whatever. The
problem is how to integrate these expectancies and concerns of the
client into the therapeutic operation as actualities, so as to be
of value for both client and therapist.
The
importance of the future as a perception and as a dynamic meaning
has been emphasized by others—for instance, Adler, Horney, and
Sullivan. But the special configuration around and inside the future
situation remained unstructured and impersonal.
Thus
all three dimensions of time—past, present, and future are brought
together in psychodrama, as they are in life, from the point of view
of functional therapy.