04 May 2019

Shrink Unwrapped by Joel L.Schwartz


 photo Shrink Unwrapped_zpsrwiir7jj.jpg
Humor Fiction
Publisher: IP Books

 photo add-to-goodreads-button_zpsc7b3c634.png

To treat patients using psychoanalysis, psychiatrists must first undergo their own analysis. And Dr. Jacob Fink plans to coast through his own stint on the shrink's couch as quickly as possible. After all, there's nothing wrong with him! But soon, his fortyfive minute sessions unearth longburied struggles that are both profound and profane.

Can a threeyearold who was unable to sit still on his carpet square in nursery school and constantly joked his way through his schooling ever be successful in life?

Can listening to a weather forecast be dangerous to your health?

Can a boy get a venereal disease just by thinking about girls?

How can you get fresh semen stains out of white linen pants and beat a traffic ticket?

Jacob is on his way to a breakthrough when something unthinkable happens and he now has to dig deep to unwrap the last of his inner struggles and finally grow into the therapist he knows he can be.


Excerpt

Chapter 1

So You Want To Be an Analyst



My life was programmed for me.

As far back as I can remember, my parents repeatedly said

“I don’t care what you do when you grow up as long as you go to college,

then medical school, and become a doctor.”



For my birthday, my father gave me a stethoscope. My mother

gave me a white coat and a ticket to a medical insurance seminar in Las

Vegas. The package included airfare, two days, three nights at the

glamorous Golden Unicorn Hotel, breakfast every morning, one buffet

dinner, and tickets to the Folies Bergères Revue I was thankful, but

didn’t know what to do with it. I was only three.



It should be no surprise that I followed the path that had been set

out for me.



Often, people asked me why, after graduating medical school, I

chose the specialty of psychiatry. I jokingly said, “I’m uncoordinated,

afraid of the sight of blood, and generally dislike human touch. What

other specialty would fit those limitations?”



My friends, always looking for an edge, misunderstood my choice

and thought I was a psychic. “Tell me what I’m thinking right now!”

“How much change do I have in my pocket?” or “What’s in store for

me in the future?”



The response from my family to my choice of specialty was one of

embarrassment, not support:



My grandmother, loving but outspoken, said “I’ll tell everyone my

grandson is a doctor! I’ll leave out the embarrassing psychiatrist part.”

My dermatologist father, always questioning, asked, “Do psychiatrists

ever get their patients better?” I replied, somewhat annoyed,



“Do dermatologists ever get their patients better?” End of discussion.

My mother, always the realist, probably had the best response. “Why

in the world would my hyperactive son pick a specialty where he had to

sit still in one place for 45 minutes? How are you going to do that?”

I looked at her knowingly, “With difficulty,” I replied.



I have always been hyperactive. I was born three weeks early.



My mother, ever-ready to comment, insisted it was because I couldn’t

wait to get moving. I never walked. I ran, jumped, rocked, twirled,

rolled, and twisted my way through childhood. “Harnessing his boundless

energy was impossible. It was exhausting,” freely admitted my

mother. “I just couldn’t keep up with him.”



In an effort to preserve what was left of her physical strength and

emotional sanity, I was enrolled in the “Little Friends” nursery school

at age two. That lasted only three months. I was expelled because I

couldn’t sit still on my assigned carpet square, which was a requirement

for continued enrollment. The headmaster never did explain to my parents

how sitting on a piece of carpet was supposed to prepare me for the

future. One could speculate, however, that sitting still in a confined

space for an extended period of time might groom someone to become

one of the statues people see in Times Square in New York City. But

that was not what my parents had in mind for my future, so my departure

was not considered a major setback.



Despite a disheartening streak of failed nursery school interviews,

my mom never gave up. But, after my fifth rejection, she decided

she needed some help. Before the next interview, at the suggestion

of her doctor husband, she doped me up with a tiny dose of

a minor tranquilizer. Since I was not driving or operating any heavy

machinery, this tranquilizer would hopefully just slow me down

enough. However, when I kept nodding off during the interview, she

gave the headmaster some cock-and-bull story that I hadn’t slept

well the night before because I was so excited about coming to the

school. Half awake, and successfully slowed down, I was admitted

to the Oak Ridge Day Nursery . . . where I spent the next 3.5 years.

During that time, I was personally responsible for driving seven

early childhood specialists into other fields, none of which had to

do with children.



Since I started out as the youngest child ever in the school by far, it

was difficult for me to understand why many of the kids left to go on to

kindergarten at the end of the year, yet I remained in the school. Each

year, as May approached with the impending departure of my friends, I

would become sullen, brooding, bad-tempered, and ill-humored. My

teachers tried to tell me that in a few years (then in a couple of years, and

finally next year), I would go to kindergarten, but that didn’t help. Time

for a child is a nebulous concept; for a hyperactive child, it is the equivalent

of forever.



In a last-ditch attempt to bolster my spirits, I was given the roll of

Tiny Tim in the school’s Christmas play. I had one line “God bless us,

every one!” Excited about my role in the play, I practiced my line continuously

day and night. “God bless us, every one!” “God bless us,

every one!” While my gloomy mood had dissolved, the school had

inadvertently created a monster. My “God bless us, every one!” was

like the unstoppable brooms in the Sorcerer’s Apprentice scene in

Fantasia, an Oscar winning animated film from Disney Studios. The

school, my parents and even God counted down the days until the play.

“God bless us, every one!”



Thirty people attended the Christmas play that year. Of the 30, 16

were there for me: My mom, my grandparents, two uncles, two aunts,

and four neighbors and their wives.



You should have been there. The atmosphere was electric. The

crowd was hushed in anticipation when it was time for me to deliver my

lines. My theatrical debut was upon us. There was silence. Then more

silence. You could hear his teacher off stage whispering “God bless us,

every one!” “God bless us, every one!”



The silence was deafening. And then I began “God bless us, every

one! God bless my mom and my father in Texas, my grandparents,

Uncle Marshall and Aunt Elaine, Uncle George and Aunt Barbara, the

Fishers, the Kantros, the Rondos, and all the other people that came to

see me whose names I didn’t know. God bless us, every one! God bless

us, every one!”



I bowed to the audience and then to the people backstage, and

skipped off the stage. A star or a reasonable facsimile thereof was born.

Fast forward to today! Somehow—and there are several speculations

how—I was able to transform and harness my hyperactivity into

productivity as I zoomed through high school, college, medical school,

and psychiatric training. The speculations were lost somewhere along

the way. I had a successful private practice, did some teaching of medical

students, and supervised psychiatric residents.



All of this was somewhat fulfilling, but something was missing.

I wanted to be more than just a simple pill-pushing professional. I

wanted to go where no ordinary psychiatrist dared to go. I wanted to

talk to my patients, to probe the depths of their minds, to uncover

insights that trapped emotions and prevented meaningful relationships.

When a patient presented a dream where a hot dog was chasing a

doughnut wearing a garter belt and fishnet stockings through a tunnel

filled with yellow daisies, I wanted to be able to uncover its hidden

meaning. I wanted to be a Freudian analyst. That was my dream.

However, to be an analyst, two things had to happen. First, you

had to choose an analyst from a small group of specially trained analysts

called, not-so-surprisingly, training analysts. Second, you have

to undergo a personal analysis with one of them, a fairly long process.

Initially, the training analyst would perform a “psycho-colonoscopy”

to discover your inner problems, followed by a long slow “mental

enema” to purge you of the emotional shit inside that would interfere

with your treating others.



To begin the process, I had compiled the resumes of 10 training

analysts. Who should I go to see first? I needed expert guidance. This

was a very important decision and I knew exactly the one to turn to. It

was Anna, my six-year-old female Jack Russell Terrier (named after

Sigmund Freud’s daughter), who had guided me successfully in the

past. Anna had picked five consecutive Super Bowl winners. Anna had

found my car keys in the bottom of my closet when they accidentally

dropped out of my pants pocket as I hung them up. Most recently, Anna

had helped me pick out the perfect fragrance for my wife for our

anniversary.



I placed the 10 résumés side by side on the floor of the family

room. “Anna,” I yelled, “Come!” The rhythmic clinking of her dog tags

announced her arrival from the kitchen where she had just finished getting

a drink of water. “Anna,” said I. “I need your help making an

important decision. Look over these resumes and pick the training analyst

I should interview . . . ”



Anna scratched her left ear with her left hind paw before walking

over to the papers on the floor. She stared at the first résumé and slowly

sniffed herself laterally to look over each one. She looked carefully

at the training analysts’ ages, their experience, their gender, and what

books they liked to read. When she got to the next to the last résumé

she lifted her leg and peed on it. Turns out this analyst lost his license

10 years later because of sleeping with one, maybe two of his patients.

How did Anna know?



Nine to go. With her nose, she pushed off to the side the résumés

of the analysts who were older than 65 years, who had been divorced,

and who had no interests outside of psychiatry, as well as those who

followed the Chicago Cubs. She made a separate pile for those who

had pets and further eliminated some who weren’t named for famous

analysts. When all the sniffing and pawing was done the analyst left

standing was Dr. Herman Hermann, a 60-year-old, who had been a

training analyst for 22 years and married to the same woman for 40. He

was an avid golfer with a 10 handicap. The thing that sealed the deal

for Anna was that he had a German Shepherd named Sigmund and she

loved German Shepherds, especially if they were named for her father.

I immediately picked up the phone and scheduled an appointment

with Dr. Hermann for next week.



I patted Anna on the head and thanked her for her help. I imagined

Anna thinking “I can’t believe he thinks I have special telepathic powers

when in reality I picked that particular resume because the paper

smelled like a dog I met in the park last week.” I often had crazy

thoughts like this. It made life interesting.



About the Author

 photo Shrink Unwrapped author Joel L. Schwartz_zps3q2gldf4.jpg

Dr. Joel Schwartz is the published author of 7 middle grade novels, including Upchuck Summer (Yearling, 1983), which sold over 150,000 copies, He is the Emeritus Chair of Psychiatry at Abington Memorial Hospital, and a board certified adult and child psychiatrist/psychoanalyst. He is also a professional speaker, and works with organizations to improve workplace dynamics. In addition, he is an amateur standup comic and wishful golfer.



Contact Links



Purchase Link


RABT Book Tours & PR