There were six Therapists regularly scheduled in Ward 3A: Therapist Hard Stare, Therapist Chipmunk, Therapist Verdigris, Therapist Congolais, Therapist Barbie, and Therapist Hawaiian Shirt. I think I've only mentioned the first three so far, but I've had interactions with them all.
Therapists in the ward are different from The Doctors. For every shift, you were assigned a different Nurse and Therapist, but one's Doctor stayed the same from day to day. You meet with your Doctor once every day at an unpredictable time, usually for about a half-hour, and The Doctor prescribes meds. Therapists help the Nurses, lead group sessions, and have one-on-one talks with the patients (when they're not too busy, which was more often than not). Therapists, here, are for "working through your issues." The Doctors are for meds and wheedling out permission for discharge. The Doctors are more like what you'd find in a therapist or psychologist or psychiatrist outside a hospital; in fact, most of The Doctors actually had their own private practices outside the hospital, hence the general wonky nature of their schedules. The Therapists are creatures found only in an environment like this, since their primary job is to lead group sessions, and there are only a few specific places in this world that have the torture that is group therapy.
Let me say a few words about each of The Therapists on 3A.
Therapist Hard Stare
Cropped from a Scott Cunningham
I'll always associate Therapist Hard Stare with the need to watch Patient X, as it always seemed to be Therapist Hard Stare who was saddled with that job, mostly because he was the only Therapist tough enough to exert even an ounce of control over Patient X's antics. (He was the one who would say things like "Down, boy!")
He tended to run loud group sessions, as he brought out a noticeable argumentativeness in the patients, and he wasn't above raising his voice to try to regain control. Dealing with psych patients is sort of like dealing with children, so I'd say his "parenting" method was exerting control through displays of power. He'd try to reason with the patients, as all the Therapists would try to do, but he'd have a stronger voice as he did it.
Even though it's hard for The Therapists to spend much one-on-one time with the patients because of the ward being so greatly understaffed, Therapist Hard Stare still often found some time to seek me out, as he noticed (and at least once remarked upon the fact) that I wasn't one to speak readily during group sessions. I'm just not... good at that sort of thing. Talk about how I'm feeling, I mean. Especially in front of a group.
Whenever he would talk to me outside of group sessions, he always emphasized the importance of working on communication skills -- emotional communication, which is something I've come to realize that I do need to work on. I can communicate effectively in normal situations, but ask me to talk about my feelings and I suddenly lose all my words. I appreciated that he would never use his Control Voice on me, but then again I don't think he needed to. Talking too much or arguing with him wasn't my problem. Saying anything at all, that was my problem. He would soften around me, trying to coax me into at least
trying to say how I felt, but I never failed to be intimidated by the intensity of his eyes; when he looked at you, he really
looked at you. Hence the moniker I've assigned to him.
He's also the Therapist who said on the Day of the Great Understaffing, "I'm not paid to do two people's jobs." See Therapist Congolais (below) for the exact opposite of that mentality.
Therapist Chipmunk
Therapist Chipmunk once told me that she specialized in art therapy. Then why did we never
have any art therpy, huh? I don't know. Whatever. Anyway, Therapist Chipmunk typically had the mid-morning shift, so she always ran Education Groups. Therefore, as a Therapist, she didn't have to lead a discussion. She just had to deliver an hour-long monologue, assisted by writing nearly everything she said on the whiteboard in the kitchen area. The day we talked about Affirmations, she even encouraged us to take notes. (I indeed took notes, but not on affirmations.) All in all, she bugged the crap out of me. Perhaps I wouldn't think of her so unkindly if she hadn't woken me up from a nap that one time I skipped her precious Education Group, but I take my sleep very seriously. Deprive me of sleep, and you are dead to me.
Why do I call her Therapist Chipmunk, you ask? ...Well. She looked like a chipmunk. Plain and simple.
Therapist Verdigris
I call her "Therapist Verdigris" because, for at least three days, I was sure that her name was "Patina". Seriously. (It's not actually "Patina".) She would wear funky jewelry, chic glasses, men's shoes, and a pleasant but slightly vacant smile. The vapidness of the smile probably arises from trying to be pleasant to absolutely everyone all of the time. (And therefore she can't keep control of a group session the way Therapist Hard Stare can.) She was very nice, though. While I never had a one-on-one therapy-esque talk with her, she always said hello to me when we crossed paths and she never had to ask me what my name was. She always knew.
I'll always remember her specifically for the time when Patient X took his pants off in the TV room. When I told her about it, all she did was lose that pasted-on smile for a moment and sigh, "Again?"
Therapist Congolais
the Democratic Republic of the Congo
Therapist Congolais (
Debout Congolais!) was my favorite of all the Therapists, not because he did anything specific, but because days were made more bearable by his genuine pleasantness. That, and I loved listening to his accent. It was so soothing. Comforting. He was always so sincerely kind to every patient, even if a patient was being Difficult that day (or every day). He once spent most of a morning Community Meeting giving a speech about how the staff was there to "serve" all of us, which I thought was weird at the time. It took me a while to understand that that was honestly how he felt about his job, that he was there to serve us. He was so devoted to that sense of service that when, on the Day of the Great Understaffing, he found out that we hadn't had a Process Group that afternoon, he immediately held one the moment his shift started -- at 7:00 pm (some three-to-four hours late).
He, more than any other Therapist, made an effort to have one-on-one talks with the patients outside of group sessions. He sought me out specifically at least three times, usually to talk about self-esteem. He would give me assignments to do (making lists, writing journal entries, etc.) and honestly wanted me to give him the finished product. Patient L would give him her journal to read every time he came in, and, bless him, he'd read all of it and then talk to her about it.
Unfortunately for me and the rest of the patients, he had to leave the hospital about half-way through my stay because he was going to start working on his PhD full-time at George Mason University. We all wished him good luck, but were sorry to see him go.
Therapist Barbie
She can only be described through this picture:
This is actually an (altered by me) advertisement for CEO Barbie, but that's as close to psychology as Barbie has ever come in her career choices.
Seriously. She looked like a Barbie doll.
She was also kind of a bitch. Just sayin'.
Therapist Hawaiian Shirt
I only met Therapist Hawaiian Shirt once, and that was at my very first Process Group, but I am assured that, yes, he
does wear Hawaiian shirts every day. The particular shirt I saw was a black background with large orange tropical flowers on it. When asked why he wore Hawaiian shirts, he replied that Therapists were required to wear collared shirts, and these were the most comfortable collared shirts he could find. Fair enough.
(I eventually noticed that all the staff, both Therapists and Nurses, would always dress in bright, cheerful colors, so a Hawaiian shirt was not all that far-fetched. I'm not sure if that dress code is supposed to cheer up the patients or what, but that much visual stimulation was a little too much to take at eight o'clock in the morning.)
He was very Freudian in his approach to group therapy, always encouraging patients to seek what happened in their childhood that might have led them to their current mental state. "Everything comes from something," he would say. I'd thought that particular outlook went out of style with Freud, but he was proof to the contrary. It wasn't exactly a way to ease me into the world of group therapy, being forced to delve into the untapped pains of my childhood in front of a group of strangers, but he made me feel as if the delving were actually productive. It made me cry, after all. And two other female patients cried with me out of sympathy. He nodded a lot, urging me on, then told me afterward that I was already finding some real issues to work on, so good for me! (Maybe that sentence calls for a "?" instead of a "!"...)
I never had another Process Meeting that intense. Some tears in others, yes, but not with that amount of emotional anguish. I'm not sure how he got me to talk that much in the first place. Something about the way he guided you with questions, bringing the thoughts out piece by piece. It was effective at any rate.
So that's it. The A-Team. Trained mental health professionals, there to "serve" us.
That's all. Goodnight.