The Viennese physician (1842-1925) has a unique and prominent place in the history of psychotherapy. From 1880-82, while treating a patient known as Anna O., Breuer developed the cathartic method, or , for treating nervous disorders. As a result of that treatment, he formulated many of the key concepts that laid the foundation for modern psychotherapy. This month marked the 90th anniversary of Breuer’s death, offering an opportunity to reflect on the value of his contributions.
Breuer is best known for his collaboration with Sigmund Freud and for introducing Freud to the case of Anna O. (whose real name was ). The ideas emerging from that case so fascinated Freud that he devoted the rest of his career to developing them, in the form of psychoanalysis. The two men co-authored , published in 1895, which is considered the founding text of psychoanalysis. However, the significance of Breuer’s contributions goes well beyond his role as Freud’s mentor and collaborator. In fact, Breuer laid the groundwork for modern talk therapy by, for example, considering all aspects of his patients's life and personality and focusing on emotional expression as opposed to the Freudian emphasis on insight and interpretation.
Credit:I wanted to learn how to elicit those types of experiences consistently and began to explore techniques such as hypnosis, mindfulness and , all of which involve subtle shifts in the client’s state of awareness. While studying the literature to understand the nature of these changes, I was led to Breuer’s description of the cathartic method and his work with Anna O. in . Breuer’s ideas were strikingly relevant to modern views of therapy, and my work with clients, and I was surprised they were not more widely known.
According to Breuer’s theory of hysteria, the illness begins when someone is exposed to psychic trauma, which he defined as any situation with a risk of serious physical or emotional injury. If the individual is unable to feel and express the emotions related to the traumatic experience, they are dissociated, that is, isolated in a separate state of consciousness that is inaccessible to ordinary awareness. Here, Breuer acknowledged and built on the pioneering work of French psychiatrist, , who was the first to assert the importance of dissociation in mental illness. Breuer called this altered state of consciousness the , owing to its similarity to the state induced by hypnosis. Recovery and healing require accessing and expressing the dissociated emotions, through catharsis, and integrating them with the ideas in normal consciousness, a process he called associative correction.
A large and growing body of evidence, compiled by researchers such as , points to the central role of trauma in the origin of psychopathology. Understanding the effects of trauma is now a major focus of medical research, driven by the urgent need to find effective . Breuer’s work is also highly relevant to clinical practice. His concept of the hypnoid state, for example, is remarkably similar to, and provides a unifying link between, techniques such as mindfulness, focusing, neurofeedback and (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing) that are of importance in therapy today.
Sigmund Freud.Wikimedia CommonsThe publication of marked the end of the Breuer-Freud collaboration. Freud increasingly grew to believe that conflicts related to sexuality played an essential role in all cases of hysteria. Breuer acknowledged the importance of sexuality but considered it only one of many factors. Instead, Breuer asserted the phenomenon of dissociation due to trauma, which was implicit in his theory of hypnoid states, was more fundamental.
In a letter to the Swiss psychiatrist Auguste Forel in 1907, Breuer wrote, “this immersion in the sexual in theory and practice is not to my taste.” He went on to write, “Freud is a man given to absolute and exclusive formulations: this is a psychical need, which in my opinion, leads to excessive generalization.” Freud for his part was skeptical of the whole concept of hypnoid states. In , he wrote that “Breuer's theory of 'hypnoid states' turned out to be impeding and unnecessary, and it has been dropped by psycho-analysis today.”
Freud also promoted the idea that Breuer was too cautious and conservative to recognize the true importance of sexuality. To support this view, Freud claimed Breuer had abruptly terminated his work with Anna O., and resolved never to work with hysterical patients again, because she developed strong sexual feelings towards him. This view was asserted as fact by Freud’s biographer, Ernest Jones, and came to define the conventional view of the matter.
However, there is no reliable basis for Freud’s claim. Psychoanalyst and Freud biographer writes: “Freud’s version of what happened is simply not true. It is an example of the “resistance” argument that he later used to dismiss everyone who raised questions about his theory of sexuality: They could not accept it because it was too personally threatening.” Freud would later use a similar argument with many of his followers who disagreed with him, including Carl Jung, Alfred Adler, Sandor Ferenczi and Otto Rank. Breger goes on to assert: “The truth is that Breuer did not flee from Bertha but remained involved with her treatment for several years.”
It is notable that Breuer had been more than a collaborator to Freud, who was 14 years younger, lending him money, referring patients to his practice, and welcoming him into his home. Yale historian , in his biography of Freud, wrote, “His disagreeable grumbling about Breuer in the 1890s is a classic case of ingratitude, the resentment of a proud debtor against his benefactor.”
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