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We should protest the abuse, distortion, and exploitation of Holocaust memory.
Psychiatric aid should not be the first kind of assistance on a trauma scene.
It is not shared history withpatients, but rather variety and quality of experience that determine how successful psychotherapistscan be.
Holocaust memory is about our search into memory--an attempt to make contact, in our own souls, with the reality and immensity of what was lost.
To be openly in touch with one’s feelings is today held up as a personal ideal. Older virtues associated with a stoical and more reticent attitude toward life are sometimes looked upon as obstacles to self-healing, self-discovery, and self-esteem. But is being aware of and expressing one’s feelings really...
Ledeenpays tribute toPeter Malchin--the man who caught AdolphEichmann andperhaps the greatest undercover agent ever--who died this week.
A growing body of evidence suggests that repressing one’s feelings may have greater psychological benefits than expressing them.
Christina Hoff Sommers and Sally Satel discuss the rise of "therapism" in America.



