The Cancellation

Another day, another call or email: a couple whose first appointment was scheduled for later this week has cancelled. They have “found a doctor who takes our insurance.” That would be fine but for one detail: the appointment was for marriage counseling.

This could create a dilemma for the doctor who “takes our insurance,” if the clients turn out to be shopping for marriage/relationship counseling. This is because unless one member of the couple is diagnosed with a mental disorder, and the treatment rendered in those conjoint appointments comprise empirically supported treatments for that disorder, it is probably not covered by their insurance, whether the doctor “takes it” or not. No doubt this will be part of the discussion during their first appointment, when they inform the doctor that the problem is not helping Partner A cope with depression or anxiety (or some other mental disorder diagnosis), but rather some sort of relationship problem. Now, if Partner A is depressed, and the treatment involves communication skills combined with cognitive-behavioral therapy, or another empirically supported form of therapy that can involve the spouse as a coach/partner in healing, that’s excellent and ethical practice; not so for relationship problems.

At least I found out in advance, sparing the mutual aggravation of patients who imagined somehow that their marriage counseling needs are someone else’s financial responsibility and of a psychotherapist who expects to be paid for services.

This sort of retraction prior to a first appointment happens sometimes in my practice. “I found someone who takes my insurance.” This, despite my spending 10-15 minutes on the phone before setting that appointment and providing this information about my practice. I don’t contract with health insurance companies: it’s clearly stated on my website, and I tell people during that first, free, fifteen-minute consult.

Why bother mentioning it? There are ethical issues at hand.

To be perfectly frank: health insurance is for health problems.

It ought not to be used to get a discounted rate, subsidized by every other person paying premiums to that health insurance company, for marriage counseling, or premarital counseling, or vocational counseling, or any other normal, problem-of-living, life phase process.

My website clearly states my position on health insurance: I don’t contract with insurers because the bulk of what I do is not billable. I do not want my work with couples to be tainted by ethically questionable gymnastics in which we justify treating the relationship because it will indirectly help with a mental disorder. I will not label children with a brain disease because their grownups are getting divorced and upsetting the children, resulting in a custody evaluator referring the children to me. I will not participate in diagnosing people when I am concerned it is not in their best interest – a position supported, as it happens, by the American Counseling Association.

So, no, I don’t “take” insurance. Insurance cards are not debit or credit cards, anyhow: there’s no “taking.” There’s submitting paperwork and hoping one is eventually paid, or being denied payment and then having to bill the client, who may have been discharged months ago.

I don’t diagnose people for the sake of billing. If a client meets criteria for a diagnosis, what we’re doing is aimed at treating the symptoms of that diagnosis and, after being provided information about the process, the client chooses to submit the information to his/her insurance company, I will provide the appropriate form for the client to try to be reimbursed.

I work with human beings who are having problems in their lives (provided they are in Florida, where I am dually licensed for mental health counseling, and marriage and family therapy), and who want life to be better. They want better relationships and a hopeful outlook; they wish to live with purpose and meaning.

Those are not mental disorders. They are signs of health and hope.

 

Dr. Lori Puterbaugh, LMHC, LMFT, NCC

© 2016

Posts are for information and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed to be therapeutic advice. If you are in need of mental health assistance, please contact a licensed professional in your area.

Oh, the drama!

It’s about 2/3 of the way through the spring term, so it’s time again for my intro psychology students to learn about the various personality disorders, as defined by the American Psychiatric Association. One interesting one – and not necessarily in a good way – is Histrionic Personality Disorder (HPD).

Traditionally, HPD was estimated to occur in perhaps 2-3% of the population. You know these folks; you’ve known them all your life. They’re exciting, intense, and fun; the life of the party, the center of attention…and they can’t turn it “off” when appropriate. It’s the “friend” who wears a very well-fitted white dress to your wedding; the family member who always has to make it “about them,” when it’s very, very much about someone else; the middle-aged parent who is trying to compete with a teenaged child to the point of embarrassment (for the child, that is). They lack empathy for anyone but themselves, but can emote with the best of them. Recent studies indicate that incidence of HPD is exploding – with some estimates as high as 27% of the young adult (under 35) population now meeting criteria for the psychiatric diagnosis. It’s thought that the two-generation long emphasis on having high self-esteem absent any achievement of good character or performance might be involved, as well as the current culture that elevates attention (any attention) as better than just chugging along, living your life happily with the people you love.

Which of our grandparents would ever, in million years, have imagined everyday people talking about how many “followers” they have, as if they were Jesus?

Like almost all psychiatric diagnoses, HPD is defined by a checklist; meet enough criteria according to the clinician holding the checklist, and you’ve earned the label. Of course, someone with HPD isn’t coming for therapy for help with HPD. Others may come for help with them, or it may become apparent within the context of counseling for some other issue: relationships, work conflicts, etc.   It’s sad, really, that it can be so difficult to realize one needs help, because at the root of this is a small child, still jumping up and down crying out, “Mommy! Watch this! Mommy – look at me!” and that small child in the unconscious just doesn’t realize that all the jumping up and down cannot make them feel “seen,” and they need to find other ways – more adult, meaningful ways – to feel connected and recognized. After all, everyone wants to be seen by eyes that love them; didn’t the film Avatar touch on that well, where the most intimate thing people could say to another living being was, “I see you”?

Like some of the other personality disorders, particularly Antisocial Personality Disorder, Borderline Personality Disorder, and Narcissistic Personality Disorder, the person with Histrionic Personality Disorder will seem fine…in fact, better than fine. All four can be very charming, interesting, and fun. They can seem special and their attention can make the next victim caught in their vortex feel special until all heck breaks loose.

Be compassionate but beware. No matter how wonderful, loving and patient you are, healing the wounded heart under HPD is not a one-man or one-woman task.

Dr. Lori Puterbaugh

© 2016

Posts are for information and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed to be therapeutic advice. If you are in need of mental health assistance, please contact a licensed professional in your area.

Toxic Myths, revisited

A lot of people ask about toxic myths: what does that mean? Why “myths?” (I’d like to say, well, buy the book, and sometimes do).

The toxic myths are examples of lies dressed up as truths. Our culture is seething with them, but in Toxic Mythology, I only addressed a few.

For example, consider the myth that people can compartmentalize their lives. Someone can, within this myth, be an absolute scoundrel in their personal life but supposedly be capable of being completely trustworthy and honorable in their public/vocational role.   Conversely, they can (per the myth, at least) be a sociopath in their professional life but be kind, tender and good in private.

So…if you buy this myth, you have to be willing to:

Vote for someone who swears to uphold a particular principle while having a personal and/or professional life littered with betrayals and a habit of acting on expediency, not principle;

Believe your child who promises she didn’t really cheat on that exam or plagiarize on the paper (despite the software evidence) after same child was grounded for “borrowing” money out of your wallet without permission.

Keep on an employee whom you overhear lie to customers because you haven’t caught that employee lying to you.

Convince yourself that your gossipy acquaintance never, ever would talk about YOU behind your back.

Does any of that sound reasonable? Of course not; these are, however, the toxic myth in action. Our culture tells us that it’s perfectly reasonable to believe that compartmentalization of character is possible and (further) that we should be “judgmental.” That’s another myth for another day.

 

Dr. Lori Puterbaugh

© 2016

Posts are for information and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed to be therapeutic advice. If you are in need of mental health assistance, please contact a licensed professional in your area.

Review: The Collapse of Parenting: How We Hurt Our Kids When We Treat Them Like Grownups, by Leonard Sax, M.D., Ph.D.

A friend recommended this book and this past weekend I read a large portion of it. It’s aimed at parents and others who are directly involved in raising children, and cites some pretty striking research about the negative outcomes of giving children more freedom and flexibility than they can handle. Children being given the control over their lives that ought to be reserved for responsible adults are far more likely to develop anxiety, depression and obesity; they have less attachment to their families and adults in general, and are more likely to turn to peers for advice. Their peers, of course, are not apt to know any more than them about making wise choices about life.

It’s a conundrum for some: after all, kids have to learn how to make choices, but they can’t handle the full variety of options that many parents want to give them. Learning how to present a narrow, fair range of choices is, apparently, a challenge for parents who are desperate to be liked. This craving for their children’s approval underlies a lot of dysfunctional, but seemingly well-intended, parenting. I described a parent’s style as a “democracy” (the children are school age) and the parent took it as a compliment…as if being democratic with children, where no one is really in charge and knows best, was a good plan.

Do kids need choices? Absolutely. Do they need – or can they even handle – the full range of options that an adult might handle? Absolutely not.

For parents, teachers, grandparents and others who work with children, this book is a friendly, accessible but thoroughly footnoted guide.

Dr. Lori Puterbaugh

© 2016

Posts are for information and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed to be therapeutic advice. If you are in need of mental health assistance, please contact a licensed professional in your area.

Way 29/Day 29: Make it a great year: Get better at recognizing trouble

In Toxic Mythology (© 2015), I spent one chapter discussing the difference between someone being “antisocial” and someone being introverted, quiet, or reserved. The terms are used interchangeably in non-psychology circles. Someone wants to stay home with a book instead of going out to a party, and their friends or family accuse them of being, “antisocial,” or, perhaps worse, a “Loner,” as if being naturally quiet was a dangerous character flaw leading, ineluctably, to pathology and dysfunction. Not so much.

As many of you know, “antisocial” is the newer term for what used to be called sociopathy or psychopathy. It means a person who is against (anti) society. The antisocial person (ASP, for short, here) feels no remorse or empathy and views others as merely a means to the ASP’s ends. Quiet/introverted people usually have very close relationships – with a few people. They like people, and they recharge their batteries via quiet times and discussions with one or a few, rather than many. An extrovert recharges by being around people. These traits are on a continuum; on one end is the rare, very highly introverted person; on the other, the rare, extremely extroverted person. We find most people closer to the middle, with a preference in one direct or the other. This is a biological trait, not something people pick.

Because ASPs can be charming, outgoing and generally fun to be around, a lot of people get fooled – and burned. Do some homework; learn to identify the warning signs that someone may be not as nice as they seem, and learn to differentiate between the kind, quiet person in your world and the person who is troubled and, possibly, troublesome.

That could make it a very, very good year!

Dr. Lori Puterbaugh

© 2016

Posts are for information and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed to be therapeutic advice. If you are in need of mental health assistance, please contact a licensed professional in your area.

Way 25/Day 25: Make it a great year: Follow your own advice (or keep quiet)

Many people are really, really good at giving advice. (That doesn’t meant they are necessarily good at giving good advice, though!) Some of them keep their advice to themselves, but most people have pretty strong opinions about what other people ought to do –the way they drive, how to handle relationships, how to overcome bad habits…you name it.

If you think about the pattern of advice you either give or keep to yourself, you might notice a particular pattern, or a couple of patterns, are dominant. “Lighten up,” you grumble inside about a cranky boss, a whiny coworker or perpetually dissatisfied family member. “Get over it and move on; it’s probably for the best,” you urge the friend with the broken heart, the family member who didn’t get a promotion…

Maybe the advice is meant for you.

Often the traits that drive us craziest about others are the things we struggle against within ourselves.

Make it a great year; reflect on your own (perhaps silent) advice for others and how it fits something you need to take of within yourself.

Dr. Lori Puterbaugh

© 2016

Posts are for information and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed to be therapeutic advice. If you are in need of mental health assistance, please contact a licensed professional in your area.

Way 23/Day 23: Make it simple.

Make it a great year – simplify…something.

People like to have things complicated. Oh, we say we don’t – we read “Real Simple” and make anti-clutter books bestsellers and have all sorts of gadgets with all kinds of apps that are supposed to make things simpler. It seems, though, that a lot of the time we’re putting a lot of complication on top of what could be simple.

Pick something and just make it simple. Maybe it’s your breakfast routine, maybe it’s streamlining housework. Really simplify it – don’t just incorporate a lot of gimmicks. Experiment. Be flexible. Check to see how simplifying in that particular realm works for you. If having the same menu every week for the work nights makes life easier and no one is crying over having to suffer through pizza every Friday, well…does it make things from grocery shopping to planning the evening a bit simpler? Maybe you’re not going to be Steve Jobs or Mark Zuckerberg and adopt a personal uniform to wear every day, but on the other hand…is there an opportunity there to make things simpler?

Every decision takes mental energy. Our brains automatically seek to put things on “auto-pilot” to reserve focus for critical issues. Find ways to cooperate with that survival-friendly function and free up energy, deliberately, for something more compelling than “What to wear?” or, “Gee, what do we feel like eating?”

Dr. Lori Puterbaugh

© 2016

Posts are for information and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed to be therapeutic advice. If you are in need of mental health assistance, please contact a licensed professional in your area.

Way 18/Day 18: Realize that sometimes YOU know better

In the film Love and Mercy, based on portions of Beach Boy Brian Wilson’s life, it is apparent that early in the Beach Boys’ success, when the stress of performing, producing, writing – and a history of abuse – were weighing heavily on Brian, that he knew what he needed. He knew and struggled to express to those around him that he needed to pull back – to reduce external stressors and focus on what was most critical. The pressures from others – his family, investors, hangers-on, his manipulative and exploitative father, and, later, the unethical therapist who became a sort of Svengali/mooch, all professed to “know better” what he needed – led to increasingly intense psychological suffering.

(I don’t know how accurately the film represents any of the characters and am describing the characters as portrayed in Love and Mercy, not on the real people)

Sometimes we know better than other people. It’s hard to discern, sometimes, the voices of those who really have our best interest at heart and those who have their own agendas foremost. Too, some people are well-intentioned and, knowing what would be best for them, presume that it must also be best for others.

Seek wise guidance. Perhaps the greatness of the year comes from careful discernment on what is actually right for you.

Dr. Lori Puterbaugh

© 2016

Posts are for information and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed to be therapeutic advice. If you are in need of mental health assistance, please contact a licensed professional in your area.

Way 11/Day 11: Make it a great year – play.

Have fun. Play. Every day.

Go down the sliding board. Get on the seesaw. Play tag with your retriever and let your cat chase you while you scamper around dragging a piece of ribbon on the floor like prey. Do things where the end result isn’t anything in particular so you can let go of being focused on producing something “worthwhile.” A laugh that makes your belly hurt is worthwhile.

Playing means: enjoying an activity for the fun of it, not for the end result. That makes “play” different from sticking religiously to an exercise routine, or letting your competitive side take over and turn a game of kickball into some sort of gladiator blood-sport. It’s doing stuff – so watching other people “play” a sport for money isn’t play. It might be fun, but it’s not play.

If you have a pet or a child in your world, it’s easier. Follow their lead for five minutes or a whole lot more.

Go have fun. Go out and play.

Dr. Lori Puterbaugh

© 2016

Posts are for information and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed to be therapeutic advice. If you are in need of mental health assistance, please contact a licensed professional in your area.

Way 10/Day 10: Make it a great year – give stuff away.

Most people in the US are blessed with having more than we need. Much more. So much more that we invest in fancy containers to hold it in new ways, rent special places away from our home to use as vacation homes for our extra stuff – and yet many of the people who do these things also continue to shop as a form of recreation.

Consider adopting, at least for a while, one or more of these approaches to your surfeit stuff:

  1. For each new non-perishable item you bring home, select something else to give to charity. You may start considering purchases carefully in light of figuring out what goes into the pile for AmVets when you put the new thing away.
  2. Try to select one item per day for a set number of days to give away. One author did this for a year; you might practice it for the 40 days of Lent.
  3. Have a 30-day list. If a non-essential still seems like a very good idea in a month, then you can decide to make the purchase.

If, on the other hand, your problem is an addiction to shopping, recognize that shopping is meeting one or more emotional needs in an unhealthy way, and find a better way to meet those needs. If you are in debt and out of space because of a shopping addiction, consider seeking professional guidance. You may be struggling to sedate emotional pain with the short-term rush of attention and gratification that shopping can provide.

Dr. Lori Puterbaugh

© 2016

Posts are for information and entertainment purposes only and should not be construed to be therapeutic advice. If you are in need of mental health assistance, please contact a licensed professional in your area.