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From: H-Net Staff via H-REVIEW <[email protected]>
Date: Fri, Oct 2, 2020 at 12:55 AM
Subject: H-Net Review [H-Buddhism]: Segall on Helderman, 'Prescribing the
Dharma: Psychotherapists, Buddhist Traditions, and Defining Religion'
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Cc: H-Net Staff <[email protected]>


Ira Helderman.  Prescribing the Dharma: Psychotherapists, Buddhist
Traditions, and Defining Religion.  Chapel Hill  University of North
Carolina Press, 2019.  328 pp.  $29.95 (paper), ISBN
978-1-4696-4852-1; $90.00 (cloth), ISBN 978-1-4696-4851-4.

Reviewed by Seth Zuiho Segall (Independent Scholar)
Published on H-Buddhism (October, 2020)
Commissioned by Ben Van Overmeire

William James may have been the first psychologist to take an
interest in Buddhism, but he certainly was not the last. In
_Prescribing the Dharma: Psychotherapists, Buddhist Traditions, and
Defining Religion_, psychotherapist and religious studies scholar Ira
Helderman explores the history and current status of the ongoing
relationship between the American psychotherapeutic community and
Buddhist traditions--at least the Buddhist traditions as transmitted
by Asian modernizers and as practiced within predominantly
European-descent Buddhist "convert" communities. His approach is
based both on a participant-observer ethnological analysis (he
attends professional psychological conferences devoted to Buddhist
themes and interviews presenters and attendees) and on textual
analyses of the writings of major figures, living and historical, who
have played key roles in the unfolding relationship between Buddhism
and Western psychology.

His is not a straightforward story either of the secularization,
subversion, and cultural appropriation of Buddhist tradition by
therapists, or of the stealth transmission of Buddhist ideas into
American culture. As Helderman points out, "psychotherapy" and
"Buddhism" are socially constructed categories and, therefore, are
not entities that can engage in dialogue. There are only individual
clinicians making pragmatic decisions about how to treat individual
clients while negotiating the boundaries set by organizations and
agencies that police their profession and responding to the
influences of multiple impinging historical and cultural forces and
professional imperatives. These clinicians often occupy multiple and
somewhat conflicting roles as scientists, healers, and religious
practitioners. They need to negotiate a variety of socially
constructed categories that necessarily inform their decisions,
including the definitional categories of religion, secularity,
spirituality, science, medicine, and therapy, and what the
relationship between these categories ought to be. They also need to
consider the essential aims of both therapy and Buddhist
practice--whether they are consonant or disparate--and their
relationship to more broadly construed conceptions of "wellness" and
"the good life."

Helderman defines six major approaches clinicians take with regard to
Buddhism: therapizing, filtering, translating, personalizing,
adopting, and integrating. In the chapters that follow the
introductory chapters, Helderman examines each of these approaches
and the work of psychotherapists who typify each approach. At the
same time, he is clear that these approaches are not pure types and
that the clinicians he reads and talks to often adopt multiple and,
at times, conflicting approaches, sometimes emphasizing different
approaches depending on the audience they are addressing. Therapizing
means explicating Buddhism in the language of psychological
discourse, as when Franz Alexander explicates the goal of Buddhist
practice as a narcissistic rechanneling of libidinal energies away
from the external world and onto the self. Filtering involves picking
and choosing Buddhist ideas according to how consonant they are with
modern Western science. Therapizers and filterers both view
psychology and science as the final arbiters of truth. Translating
involves restating Buddhist practices in biomedical terms, as when
meditation is described as "attentional training practice" or "the
relaxation response." Personalizing involves a private personal
commitment to Buddhism, while keeping it in a separate silo from
one's clinical practice. Adopting means reformulating psychotherapy
in Buddhist terms. Adopters see Buddhism as the final arbiter of
truth. Finally, integrating involves finding ways Buddhist and
psychotherapeutic ideas can mutually assimilate and accommodate to
each other, where neither is seen as being necessarily privileged
over the other. As Helderman reviews these approaches, he explores
the work of such clinicians and theorists as Carl Jung, Franz
Alexander, Abraham Maslow, Erich Fromm, Karen Horney, Jon Kabat-Zinn,
Jeffrey Rubin, Polly Young-Eisendrath, Barry Magid, Steve Hayes, Mark
Epstein, Marsha Linehan, Paul Cooper, Harvey Aronson, Paul Fulton,
Jack Engler, Jack Kornfeld, Joseph Loizzo, Pilar Jennings, Jan
Surrey, Jeremy Safran, Christopher Germer, Gay Watson, Karen Kissel
Wegela, Ken Wilber, and others.

Many of the clinicians described are unhappy with the conventional
boundaries of what constitutes religion and what constitutes
secularity. They often try to redefine the terms or blur their
boundaries, but their influence is inescapable. Helderman explains
this is the case because of the pervasive influence of training and
certification authorities, third-party payors, hospital accreditation
organizations, first amendment considerations, and malpractice case
law; the long cultural history of how ideas are transmitted to us;
clinicians' self-identifications with their own therapeutic lineages
and the internalization of their norms; and religious scholars'
critiques, which, for clinicians, often help define the authenticity
of their understandings of Buddhist teachings. Helderman argues that
the boundaries clinicians redraw between what is religious, secular,
spiritual, medical, and psychotherapeutic are inherently unstable and
riddled with internal inconsistencies, and thus subject to constant
critique and revision.

Helderman views clinicians' relationship with Buddhism against the
larger background of what Eugene Taylor has called psychology's
"shadow culture" (_Shadow Culture: Psychology and Spirituality in
America _[1999]). While American psychology is often trifurcated into
the three twentieth-century mainstreams of psychoanalysis,
behaviorism, and humanistic psychology, Taylor described a "fourth
stream" of alternative healing methods from Swedenborgianism,
homeopathy, mesmerism, Christian Science, and New Thought, down to
today's mindfulness. Taylor described how this fourth stream
periodically emerges, is repressed, and then makes an inevitable
return because the division between scientific/medical and
religious/spiritual aspects of healing is always unstable. Are
Buddhist-oriented psychologists mixing science and religion? Or if
psychotherapy is a substitute for the religious dimension of life in
a secularized age, are therapists really mixing two different types
of spiritual traditions? Psychotherapists have always occupied a kind
of liminal space between science, art, medicine, and spirituality,
and Buddhism--or at least Western Buddhist modernism--can be seen as
the newest import into this space.

Helderman is primarily a religious studies scholar, and he makes good
use of both religious studies broadly considered and modern Buddhist
scholarship in particular. One theme he revisits a number of times is
the degree to which modern Western psychotherapists' usage and
understanding of Buddhism can be compared to the process of
sinicization and the way the medieval Chinese understood and made
sense of Buddhism. This is, of course, a claim that Buddhist-oriented
psychologists make themselves in order to help legitimate their work.
Is Buddhism, like the fabled Ship of Theseus, something that
undergoes constant transformation yet remains, somehow, the same
ship, or at some point is it no longer Buddhism? Are karma,
reincarnation, merit-making, and celestial bodhisattvas necessary
parts of any Buddhism, or can a Buddhism without them still be a
Buddhism? Who gets to decide whether something is still a form of
Buddhism, or whether it is crypto-Buddhism or simply New Age
nonsense? These are questions Helderman raises, presenting arguments
on both sides, but leaves essentially unresolved. Helderman
emphasizes that these questions are not mere idle questions. There is
something important at stake here. At the heart of these disputes is
a clinician struggling with how best to help a seriously disturbed
patient who has not been helped by the usual and customary
therapeutic measures--a therapist who, in the midst of uncertainty
and controversy, must make a decision about whether and how to make
use of something he learned at a conference, in a zendo, or from a
book that he thinks might be helpful but is not sure will be
universally applauded. Helderman thinks we ought to have some real
sympathy for this clinician, but he also thinks that in order to do
their work well, clinicians need to formulate and clarify their own
considered answers as to what is health and well-being, what kind of
endeavor therapy is, and to what degree religion can and ought to be
included in this mix.

Helderman has written a book that is admirable in terms of its
comprehensiveness, depth, and nuance. The clinicians included in this
study are a good representation of thought leaders--psychoanalytic,
cognitive-behavioral, and humanistic/transpersonal--in the field. His
historical coverage of seminal figures, such as Jung, Alexander,
Maslow, and Fromm, is excellent. He makes good use of the work of
contemporary Buddhist scholars, such as Stephen Bokenkamp, José
Cabezón, Francisca Cho, Rupert Gethin, Jay Garfield, Luis Gomez,
Janet Gyatso, Donald Lopez Jr., David McMahan, John McRae, Ann Gleig,
Robert Campany, and Robert Sharf, among many others, as well as
scholars of contemporary religion and spirituality. Helderman's book
is the most accurate, complete, and in-depth exploration of how
Western psychotherapists therapize, filter, translate, personalize,
adopt, and integrate Buddhism into their theories, lives, and
practices yet written, and is likely to remain a classic for years to
come. It has implications not only for how clinicians construe their
practice but also in understanding the largest vector for either
(depending on one's viewpoint) the transmission of Buddhism into
American culture or its secularization and diminishment.

Citation: Seth Zuiho Segall. Review of Helderman, Ira, _Prescribing
the Dharma: Psychotherapists, Buddhist Traditions, and Defining
Religion_. H-Buddhism, H-Net Reviews. October, 2020.
URL: https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=55545

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons
Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States
License.




-- 
Best regards,

Andrew Stewart


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