Close encounter of a personal kind, three
So there I was in the part of Kilburn that now calls itself Brondesbury, with a plate of barbecue and a glass of red wine. Listening to the conversation around me, I realised that I was surrounded by a partyfull of psychoanalysts.
Which led me to thinking about what might be the correct collective noun for psychoanalysts. Not a partyfull, that’s for sure. The thought of a roomful of them dancing to, say, mid-period grime or deep crunk is not an enticing one.
(What would be their collective musical taste? Bach, mostly, I reckon, and for the pop pickers among them, I guess late Bob Marley. Oh, and I’m sure nearly all of them have a copy of the Buena Vista Social Club.)
So, if it’s a murder of crows, what is it of analysts? An anxiety? A doubt? A neurosis? A regression?
I fell to talking about this with the woman sitting next to me. She was an analyst, of course. One or other of us suggested a couch of analysts.
She asked me about myself. I told her I was doing the MSc course. She knew all about it. I added that all I had left to do was my dissertation.
‘It’s due sometime in mid-August,’ I added.
‘August 14,’ she said.
How could she know the exact date when I couldn’t remember it myself? The question must have been clear on my face. She told me the answer: one of her patients was one of my fellow students.
A listen of analysts?
(To be honest, I wasn’t sure how I felt. Was she betraying a confidence? She didn’t tell me who it was but still . . .)
Next up Work, love, dissertation
Tuesday, 13 October 2009
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3 comments:
a complex of analysts?
an overdetermination of analysts?
A Tavistock?
Given that in any gathering of 20 analysts each one will recognise a former student from a training analysis, a current patient, or a supervisor, the collection is as incestuous as a Norfolk village. A Fakenham?
Otherwise I'd go with Scoop: simple, elegant, witty.
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