But part of the original concept (Roddenberry's) is that Humans are more "evolved," this is why they don't have inter-personal conflicts.
Why do near perfect people need a shrink?
Because the higher-ups keep telling them they don't?
But part of the original concept (Roddenberry's) is that Humans are more "evolved," this is why they don't have inter-personal conflicts.
Why do near perfect people need a shrink?
McCoy had a strong distaste. Barclay was suffering from a pathological phobia.
Even when Roddenberry had the full control of TNG, there were people with some major issue (like Tasha Yar, Admiral Mark Jameson or the Doctor Ira Graves)But part of the original concept (Roddenberry's) is that Humans are more "evolved," this is why they don't have inter-personal conflicts.
Why do near perfect people need a shrink?
He literally fled from the transporter room after after Worf, Riker and Crusher beamed over one by one to the Yosemite (Realm of Fear). Probably it wasn't a real phobia, but anyway it was something that prevented him from performing his regular duties.It shouldn't be too hard for a smart man like Barclay to pass a pathological phobia as a strong distaste. Remember that he did take the transporter eventually, so that wasn't a real phobia after all. You can't just overcome a phobia because people shame you to it. It takes months and enormous effort and more often than not it's never resolved.
Even when Roddenberry had the full control of TNG, there were people with some major issue (like Tasha Yar or the Admiral Mark Jameson)
He literally fled from the transporter room after after Worf, Riker and Crusher beamed over one by one to the Yosemite (Realm of Fear). Probably it wasn't a real phobia, but anyway it was something that prevented him from performing his regular duties.
Because human nature being what it is, doesn't lend itself to be "evolved" or "perfect" in the Roddenberry-esque sense. Thus they need an enforcer, but they call it a "counsellor" instead. In other ideologies that also believed man could be perfected (with disastrous results I might add) they had commissars and informants to take care of that.But part of the original concept (Roddenberry's) is that Humans are more "evolved," this is why they don't have inter-personal conflicts.
Why do near perfect people need a shrink?
I think we are supposed to understand it as a phobia in more or less the conventional sense. That he tackles and triumphs over it by the end of the episode is just TNG making sure everything is pleasantly tidied up before the credits roll. A bit like another episode featuring Barclay - Genesis - where everybody goes through a brutal and horrible disfigurement reducing everyone to beasts but by the end of the episode, instead of months of traumatic physical and psychological rehabilitation, everyone is exchanging wisecracks and having a great ole chuckle about it all.It shouldn't be too hard for a smart man like Barclay to pass a pathological phobia as a strong distaste. Remember that he did take the transporter eventually, so that wasn't a real phobia after all. You can't just overcome a phobia because people shame you to it. It takes months and enormous effort and more often than not it's never resolved.
Instead of months of traumatic physical and psychological rehabilitation, everyone is exchanging wisecracks and having a great ole chuckle about it all.
I think we are supposed to understand it as a phobia in more or less the conventional sense. That he tackles and triumphs over it by the end of the episode is just TNG making sure everything is pleasantly tidied up before the credits roll. A bit like another episode featuring Barclay - Genesis - where everybody goes through a brutal and horrible disfigurement reducing everyone to beasts but by the end of the episode, instead of months of traumatic physical and psychological rehabilitation, everyone is exchanging wisecracks and having a great ole chuckle about it all.
If Counselling was therapy, then it was medical, therefore Dee answered to and reported to Bev, the CMO... But Dee didn't, so she can't have been?
I'm pretty sure that Dee wasn't a lawyer, but what about a Guidance Counsellor?
What I find so interesting about this thread is that the only reason why Deanna Troi is so trusted in her position is because she's one of Our Heroes. Were we to meet her on another ship, having all of that power, I wonder what our perceptions and expectations of what should happen to her would be. As it is, we trust her, implicitly, because Picard's crew does ... and because she's beautiful & sweet.
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Good question. I just remember Janet Brooks in The Loss. Anyone else before?This discussion left me wondering though: what was the first time we actually see Deanna do sessions or therapy-like work with clients (instead of just advising the senior staff) ?
I'm just curious ... why don't you feel compelled to like her?I think I would trust her because, as you say, Our Heroes (and the entire crew) trust her. I'm not sure I'd like her at all, though.
For those not familiar with Counselor Troi, she was the ship’s counselor on the starship Enterprise on the TV show “Star Trek: The Next Generation”. She was telepathic, she wore tight purple jump-suits and dresses during the first years of the show instead of the uniforms that the rest of the crew wore, and she basically did talk therapy — crew members came to her to explain their inner struggles and she asked them questions. When the show launched in the early nineties, she typified the popular view of therapy at the time: you sat and talked to a nice person that tried to read your mind while helping you uncover insights that solved all of your problems.
Counselor Troi’s role also reflected the popular view of mental illness at the time: other people had them. Despite the prescient innovations the Star Trek universe imagined for physical healthcare — like tricorders and replicators — its vision for the future of mental healthcare was basically Sigmund Freud in a low-cut leotard (I apologize if I just destroyed anybody’s adolescent Deanna Troi fantasies).
Since the nineties, I’d say there’s a greater awareness that mental illnesses are more common than most people assumed, and you can’t just talk about your feelings and make these illnesses go away. Now consumers expect their therapist to practice an evidence-based form of therapy like CBT, DBT, ACT, etc. There are methodologies, healthy actions that patients can take, and recovery is becoming a clearer path for consumers and providers. But there’s still the expectation that you have to learn those methodologies and walk that path of recovery with a therapist, with your own version of Counselor Troi. And this brings us to the Counselor Troi Problem:
Counselor Troi is not scalable.
If everybody must work with Counsellor Troi to improve and maintain their mental health, the ship is going to fall apart in a mess of mental illnesses. There are not enough Counselor Trois on the Starship Enterprise to meet the mental health needs of the crew.
I'm just curious ... why don't you feel compelled to like her?
Psychiatrists don't answer to CMOs. These are two distinct disciplines with very little in common.
CHIEF MEDICAL OFFICER OPPORTUNITY
PURPOSE: The Chief Medical Officer (CMO) has oversight of all licensed clinical services provided throughout the organization and is responsible for effective and efficient leadership of provider performance. This position is accountable to the CEO and Board of Trustees for developing and implementing CHCS medical services strategies and, in conjunction with divisional VPs, establishing and implementing strategies and performance standards, monitoring and applying continuous improvement processes to achieve expected high quality medical outcomes while appropriately managing compliance and risk. This position also provides high level oversight for all waivers, grants and collaborative efforts involving more than one division and creates and maintains relationships with other academic and community based organizations on a local, state and national level.
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