White house seeks to still criticism of mrs. Clinton

Latimes

White house seeks to still criticism of mrs. Clinton"


Play all audios:

Loading...

WASHINGTON — Published reports that First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton had consulted with Jean Houston, a psychological counselor, and had imaginary conversations with the late Eleanor


Roosevelt have kindled new heartburn inside the White House. White House officials expressed concern privately Monday that--coupled with Whitewater, the developing controversy over White


House use of FBI files and other problems--the news might be used by critics to hold the Clintons up to ridicule. They relied on two allies Monday: psychotherapists and the first lady


herself. Mrs. Clinton opened her remarks at a Nashville, Tenn., conference on family issues by joking that she had just had an imaginary talk with First Lady Roosevelt, “and she thinks this


is a terrific idea.” The audience laughed. In a statement issued Monday, Mrs. Clinton described the meetings with Houston and others as an “intellectual exercise.” She said: “The bottom line


is, I have no spiritual advisors or any other alternatives to my deeply held Methodist faith and traditions on which I have relied since childhood.” Psychologists and psychiatrists


indicated Monday that Mrs. Clinton’s activity, while differing from traditional psychotherapy, appears to fall well within the wider bounds of contemporary therapeutic techniques. And some


strongly disagreed with those who sought to draw parallels to former First Lady Nancy Reagan’s reliance on astrologers. Dr. Glen Gabbard, a psychiatrist at the Menninger Clinic in Topeka,


Kan., and a leading expert on treatment methods, said in an interview that, while he was not familiar with Houston, the technique of encouraging individuals to delve into their feelings by


having imaginary conversations with someone is “certainly within the standards of reasonable practice.” Stuart Vyse, a psychologist at Connecticut College in New London, said: “This seems to


be a mental exercise for the purpose of gaining some insight or inspiration, and when that is the goal, this kind of technique can be quite useful. Imagery technique can be quite


mainstream. It’s not unlike the athlete who imagines a successful performance before participating in the event.” There was no suggestion that Mrs. Clinton believed she was literally


communing with Mrs. Roosevelt’s spirit--only that she was imagining what might have occurred if she had been able to discuss her painful experiences in the White House with someone who she


felt had faced similar difficulties. * Such techniques were developed in what is known as Gestalt therapy. Dr. Francis Lu, a professor of clinical psychiatry at UC San Francisco, said the


technique is a tool used in humanistic psychology to evoke intuitive responses and flesh out the understanding of feelings. An account of Mrs. Clinton’s imaginary conversations with Mrs.


Roosevelt, as well as with Mahatma Gandhi, first appeared Sunday in the Washington Post in an excerpt from a forthcoming book by Bob Woodward, the newspaper’s assistant managing editor. In


late 1994, according to Woodward, Mrs. Clinton met with a wide range of psychologists and other counselors in an effort to regain her balance and sense of direction after the defeat of the


administration’s health care reform plan and the massive Republican victory in congressional elections. Among those Mrs. Clinton consulted was Houston, a protege of the late Margaret Mead


and prominent leader of the human potential movement from the 1970s. It was Mrs. Houston who suggested Mrs. Clinton try to imagine meeting Eleanor Roosevelt and talking to her about the


pressures and pains of being an activist first lady. On two or more occasions, Mrs. Clinton apparently held such conversations, though Woodward said she turned aside a suggestion from


Houston that she imagine herself talking to Jesus. The first lady and the president first talked with Houston and with Mary Catherine Bateson, daughter of Margaret Mead and herself a


professor of anthropology at George Mason University in Virginia, and with several other “popular self-help authors,” Woodward wrote, at a meeting at Camp David during the 1994 New Year’s


Eve weekend. The session was organized, Woodward reported, to help the Clintons “dissect what had happened in the first two years of the presidency and to search for a way back from the


Democrats’ devastating loss” of the House and Senate the previous month. Later, in a meeting in the residential quarters of the White House, Houston suggested that Mrs. Clinton close her


eyes and imagine an encounter with Mrs. Roosevelt in the presidential residence. As Mrs. Clinton did so, Houston said, she “needed to see and understand that Mrs. Roosevelt was not just a


historic figure but was someone who also was hurt by all that happened to her. And yet she went on with her work,” according to Woodward. “Hillary needed to unleash the same potential in


herself,” she said. * The White House hopes to defuse any controversy from the encounter by distancing Mrs. Clinton from Houston’s New Age thinking. In her book “The Possible Human,” Houston


wrote: “The high actualizers I have known, the pragmatic saints and world-making mystics, have been essentially of that genre: They have allowed their body-minds to become fields of


space-time from which can be harvested the formings of the Farm. Their will and intentionality have become macrophase and consonant with the primary order. Of course they get the job done.”


There is no sign that Houston and Mrs. Clinton ventured down any psychic paths in their meetings. Houston has defenders. She is not in the same category as “witches, wackos and psychos,”


said Amy Morse, a massage therapist, healer and entrepreneur from Manhasset, N.Y. Morse, a former Wall Street broker, made a career change with Houston’s encouragement after losing her job


in a corporate downsizing. Times staff writer David Lamb contributed to this story. MORE TO READ


Trending News

Doing their parts for actors - Los Angeles Times

So much for close-ups. Performing at the Pantages Theater, actors read the “Sunset Boulevard” screenplay with grit and g...

A strategy for testing of chemicals for genotoxicity

Guidance A STRATEGY FOR TESTING OF CHEMICALS FOR GENOTOXICITY Five guidance statements on testing chemicals with no or i...

Voa: prompt payment data april 2024 to march 2025

* Valuation Office Agency Transparency data VOA: PROMPT PAYMENT DATA APRIL 2024 TO MARCH 2025 Updated 30 April 2025 CONT...

The page you were looking for doesn't exist.

You may have mistyped the address or the page may have moved.By proceeding, you agree to our Terms & Conditions and our ...

Price comparison sites used by millions to save money

Critics say aggregator sites encourage customers to buy on price rather than quality, while high commission charges make...

Latests News

White house seeks to still criticism of mrs. Clinton

WASHINGTON — Published reports that First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton had consulted with Jean Houston, a psychological c...

Is Australia ‘giving away’ its natural resources?

Diane Kraal ne travaille pas, ne conseille pas, ne possède pas de parts, ne reçoit pas de fonds d'une organisation qui p...

A special election preview : coastal : irvine voters to rule on direct election of mayor

Irvine voters will decide Tuesday whether to directly elect their mayor, while residents in Costa Mesa choose between re...

Katya jones split: neil jones acknowledges 'people make mistakes'

The Strictly Come Dancing stars shared a joint statement announcing their breakup last month, where they said they will ...

Human-induced activities led to landslide: geologists

Excessive tree felling in the hill areas makes the soil unstable and rains turn the soill into mud leading to such slide...

Top