Max Kuzkin

Add friend
Sign in to Goodreads to learn more about Max.

https://connect.cloudblue.com
https://www.goodreads.com/maxkuzkin

Ina May's Guide t...
Rate this book
Clear rating

 
Why Does He Do Th...
Rate this book
Clear rating

 
See all 6 books that Max is reading…
Loading...
Allan H. Ropper
“The Brits call this sort of thing Functional Neurological Symptoms, or FNS, the psychiatrists call it conversion disorder, and almost everyone else just calls it hysteria. There are three generally acknowledged, albeit uncodified, strategies for dealing with it. The Irish strategy is the most emphatic, and is epitomized by Matt O’Keefe, with whom I rounded a few years back on a stint in Ireland. “What are you going to do?” I asked him about a young woman with pseudoseizures. “What am I going to do?” he said. “I’ll tell you what I’m goin’ to do. I’m going to get her, and her family, and her husband, and the children, and even the feckin’ dog in a room, and tell ’em that they’re wasting my feckin’ time. I want ’em all to hear it so that there is enough feckin’ shame and guilt there that it’ll keep her the feck away from me. It might not cure her, but so what? As long as I get rid of them.” This approach has its adherents even on these shores. It is an approach that Elliott aspires to, as he often tells me, but can never quite marshal the umbrage, the nerve, or a sufficiently convincing accent, to pull off. The English strategy is less caustic, and can best be summarized by a popular slogan of World War II vintage currently enjoying a revival: “Keep Calm and Carry On.” It is dry, not overly explanatory, not psychological, and does not blame the patient: “Yes, you have something,” it says. “This is what it is [insert technical term here], but we will not be expending our time or a psychiatrist’s time on it. You will have to deal with it.” Predictably, the American strategy holds no one accountable, involves a brain-centered euphemistic explanation coupled with some touchy-feely stuff, and ends with a recommendation for a therapeutic program that, very often, the patient will ignore. In its abdication of responsibility, motivated by the fear of a lawsuit, it closely mirrors the beginning of the end of a doomed relationship: “It’s not you, it’s … no wait, it’s not me, either. It just is what it is.” Not surprisingly, estimates of recurrence of symptoms range from a half to two-thirds of all cases, making this one of the most common conditions that a neurologist will face, again and again.”
Allan H. Ropper

year in books
Eugene ...
152 books | 19 friends

Alex
371 books | 112 friends

Aleksee...
16 books | 10 friends

Oleg Me...
1,036 books | 128 friends

Evgeny ...
139 books | 71 friends

Mike Ok...
298 books | 24 friends

Ricky
184 books | 63 friends

Olga
36 books | 25 friends

More friends…

Favorite Genres



Polls voted on by Max

Lists liked by Max