Episode 2 - Closed Stories of Open Gestalts
Podcast Episode 2 -
“There is an ecstasy that marks the summit of life, the highest tension of vital forces. And paradoxically, this ecstasy is the fullness of sensing life and, at the same time, a complete forgetting of oneself and everything around.”
— Jack London, The Call of the Wild
I am a Doctor of psychotherapy science, with twenty years of experience and practice around the world. These are my stories — stories that can happen anywhere and to anyone.
(All characters and stories are fictional and represent composite images rather than anyone’s private life.)
Andrew remembered with absolute clarity the very moment when something in his life went wrong. That day, he could not yet imagine how the events that would unfold would affect the rest of his life—or rather, most of it.
He enters my office hesitantly, and it is immediately clear that deciding to come was not easy for him. Andrew is a middle-aged man, in good physical shape, with a boyish smile on his face. He sinks into the armchair opposite me, almost disappearing into it under his own weight. The smile that never leaves his face is, of course, a defense against the serious conversation ahead of us.
His life has split into two halves: one in which he is a successful businessman and family man, and another in which, at the first call, he runs to her. At first glance, a socially acceptable scenario—one where he has both a wife and a mistress. Such men come for help extremely rarely, and most often at the insistence of either the wife or the mistress. Wives—in an attempt to save the marriage; mistresses—to finally understand when he will leave her (the wife).
But Andrew came on his own, because he was unbearably tormented by the situation in which he could not leave his wife, and yet, when he seemed to have parted with Lara for good, he would once again run to her at the first call whenever she was in trouble. It is worth noting that Lara was in trouble almost constantly. She was completely incapable of opening a can, doing grocery shopping for the week, holding a job, or dealing with everyday matters. She was a fragile, ethereal creature who required constant care simply to sustain life.
Andrew had been a rescuer since childhood—or almost since childhood. When his parents were divorcing, he bravely took responsibility for his mother and saved her as best he could from gloom and depression, until a stepfather appeared in their lives. Though, from the stepfather, he saved his mother no less—whenever he felt the stepfather was in the wrong. Perhaps his need to rescue was no less developed than his mother’s need to be rescued. Until about the age of twenty, he desperately saved his mother.
Then university ended, and he moved from Connecticut to New York. In New York, life became both more dynamic and calmer. He no longer needed to rush to his mother’s place at three in the morning when she thought she was “about to have a heart attack.” He soothed her over the phone and lived his own life. Probably for the first time in a long while, he felt free from rescuing others—and he enjoyed his solitude.
He met Jane at work. She was a girl from a well-to-do family, a graduate of Columbia University, with a clear professional trajectory. A lawyer by training, she advanced quickly and climbed the career ladder. They bumped into each other in the lobby, and while riding up in the elevator he asked for her phone number. He called almost immediately, practically that same evening. Jane was easy to talk to, well-read, curious, and quite self-sufficient. At first, he liked the fact that she did not need saving. She could save anyone herself. Jane, as she was now addressed—was completely independent and possessed enviable connections. She took an active part in her company’s life and often traveled on business, as she worked in international law.
Her independence and self-sufficiency were both exciting and repelling. He felt a desire to conquer her, to prove that he, too, was capable of something. And so he pushed himself to grow and develop in order to measure up. In a sense, in this simple way Jane turned Andrew into a successful businessman who built a respectable fortune over the years of their life together.
By twenty-five they were married, and by thirty they had children. With the arrival of the children, Jane partially stepped back from work, and Andrew once again felt like a rescuer, running at every call of his little ones, who so desperately needed daddy’s saving.
His relationship with Jane carried more of a friendly, familial meaning than a romantic or passionate one. He had long stopped competing with her, and since there was no need to rescue her, sexual desire did not arise either. The children grew up and, approaching fourteen, needed his attention less and less. Of course, he continued to save his mother—but that same year she died of heart failure. She passed quickly, and he never managed to speak everything through with her. He experienced her loss deeply, yet did not dare to voice all that remained unsaid to Jane.
And then he met her.
Lara—he could not call her anything else—seemed as if she were from another planet. A petite, fragile girl from a good family. She almost ran under his car simply because she failed to notice that the traffic light had already changed. She was carrying a violin, and although it was impossible to determine her exact age, he knew she studied at the Conservatory. Lara resembled Chopin’s music—the Piano Sonata No. 3 in B minor. She burst into Andrew’s life like a hurricane, and he could no longer live without her. Desperately, as he once had with his mother, he rescued her from misfortunes and protected her from the outside world, while she gifted him a world of music and poetry. Her half-closed eyes and curls casually scattered on the pillow did not distract him—on the contrary, they beckoned him to immerse himself in a world completely unknown to him. Her favorite poem, which she dedicated to him, was written by Sofia Parnok:
In barren soil no seed will rise,
But who has not believed in miracle in cruel hours?—
What will Pushkin’s lines foretell to me?
Beloved pages I will open once again.
Again, again “The stormy day has faded,”
Torn by the piercing “but if only”!
Is not my soul, is not my whole world
Now trembling within these two short words?
The hotter the blood, the colder grows the heart;
You love not with the heart, but with hot blood.
In the eternity promised by love,
I will not count too many days.
Seek no cheerfulness within my eyes:
That third one already stands between us as a shadow.
No tender glow will flare within your soul,
The pledge of love’s unchanging vow—
In barren soil no seed will rise,
But who has not believed in miracle in cruel hours?—
What will Pushkin’s lines foretell to me?
Beloved pages I will open once again.
They cried and parted, again and again. She knew he would never leave Jane; he knew it too—and this knowledge made it bitter for them both. Then everything unfolded according to a familiar script: Lara emotionally blackmailed Andrew through misfortune, and he ran to her at the first call, time and again.
Andrew loved Lara. He was fully aware that Jane was the woman beside whom he became better—but also more insecure. His libido suffered because of this. He worshiped her ability to solve any task placed before her. He considered her ideal. Lara was the embodiment of his childhood traumas, of the violated boundaries with his mother, who died without giving him the chance to work everything through. Lara was the very epicenter of his so-called unclosed childhood gestalts, and Andrew was in a codependent relationship with her.
It was precisely these unclosed childhood stories, boundaries, and the accompanying self-confidence that Andrew worked on. In the process, he made discoveries about himself, found new facets of his Self, and, as much as he could, shared all of this with Lara.
Time passed. Anndrew began to care for Lara in a more friendly way and even rejoiced in her achievements—both professional and personal. A year later, Andrew wrote to say that he and Jane had had their third child. Apparently, she never learned about Lara, about her husband’s long journey back home. And only a new wave of passion in their relationship spoke of the work he had done on himself.
This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit drlenafeygin.substack.com [https://drlenafeygin.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]