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Pulling The Thread with Elise Loehnen

The Psychology of the Body (Olivia Laing)

Pulling The Thread with Elise Loehnen

Lemonada Media

Education, Self-improvement

4.81.2K Ratings

🗓️ 17 February 2022

⏱️ 45 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

That's what I think is so funny about this is like a hundred years on these things that he's talking about remain as live as ever as sort of as complex and as urgent as they were back in Vienna and literally a hundred years ago. So that it feels to me like he was really onto something. And I don't think that's true of every thinker of the 1920s or every psychoanalyst of the 1920s. He really, he really he's like heat-seeking missile. He has this ability to sort of put himself in the most contested zones, our emotional lives. Today we are joined by author Olivia Laing to discuss her new book, Everybody: A Book About Freedom, which explores the body as a mechanism for understanding the world around us through the story of radical psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich. A contemporary and friend of the famous Sigmund Freud, Reich believed that the body communicated things that his patients could not articulate. In many ways, he’s the often-overlooked father of trauma and somatic therapy. In Reich’s view, unexpressed reservoirs of emotion, if left unprocessed, led to the build up of a sort of muscular armor that patients carried with them for life. Though Reich’s later work, which featured increasingly eccentric ideas, has led to his erasure within the common psychoanalytic discourse, Laing reminds us that Reich’s belief in freedom from oppression and dominion over our bodies, and our lives, is just as prescient today as it was 100 years ago—and she challenges us to think about the stories of our own bodies within this larger cultural context. MORE FROM OLIVIA: Everybody: A Book About Freedom Funny Weather: Art in an Emergency Crudo The Lonely City: Adventures in the Art of Being Alone The Trip to Echo Springs: On Writers and Drinking Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hi friends. Throughout this holiday season, you will find me right here per normal. We will keep

0:06.6

publishing new episodes every week and a few solos thrown in as well. So when you just need to escape

0:14.2

from the business of the holiday shuffle or take a break from mom or dad or who knows who,

0:19.8

we'll be here as we always are.

0:31.2

Hi, it's Elise Lunan, host of Pulling the Thread. I'm an author, a podcast host, and parent

0:36.9

who built a long career in media.

0:39.3

I grew up in a state of perpetual curiosity, investigating the world and asking a lot of questions.

0:45.9

In this show, I chat with culture-defining leaders, thinkers, and experts about this rare

0:51.1

moment that we find ourselves in and how to think about our own lives and experiences

0:55.4

within a larger social and spiritual construct.

1:00.0

That's what I think is so funny about. This is like 100 years on.

1:03.0

These things that he's talking about remain as live as ever,

1:06.0

as sort of as complex and as urgent as they were back in Vienna literally 100 years ago.

1:13.5

So it feels to me like he was really onto something.

1:16.3

And I don't think that's true of every thinker of the 1920s

1:20.0

or every psychoanalyst of the 1920s.

1:22.1

He really, he's like a heat-seeking missile.

1:25.6

He has this ability to sort of put himself in the most contested zones of our emotional lives.

1:32.3

Today we are joined by author Olivia Lang to discuss her new book, Everybody, a book about freedom, which explores the body as a mechanism for understanding the world around us.

1:43.1

She does this through the story of radical psychoanalyst Wilhelm Reich.

1:47.9

A contemporary and friend of the famous Sigmund Freud,

1:51.2

Reich believed that the body communicated things that his patients could not articulate.

...

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