| The Inwood Journal |
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The Power of the Person. Drew Pinsky, who TIME magazine (June 15, 1998) describes as "obsessed with changing ... a culture of 'broken-down interpersonal relationships' that lack intimacy", is a person with a mission. Drew knows it is possible for an individual to bring about profound changes in the world by his own efforts, and Drew is out there doing it. Drew does it with his nightly radio and TV shows, with his private practice, with service at Los Encinas Hospital in Pasadena in several capacities, and with service as President of the Pasadena Medical Society, and as Editor of the Los Angeles County Medical Association magazine. Watch Loveline and you'll know that this intelligent, sincere and gentle man cares deeply about the troubled teens he counsels, and he is obviously making a difference. (For more information about Drew, the nicely executed Dr. Drew's Loveline is the only resource you'll need.)
Freud taught us to recognize the roots of our behavior in our early childhood experiences. That's determinism and today few would quarrel with it. But Freud never preached fatalism. He saw adult behavior as having childhood antecedents, but he also saw it as changeable. And his belief system surely never included the "the corollary of inevitable incompetence": We can change our behavior, we are responsible for it, and we can use it to change the behavior of others. That's why there was a Da Vinci, and unfortunately, a Hitler. In a world made inhospitable and cold by the post-Freudian abrogation of personal responsibility, we applaud Drew Pinsky and the others like him who understand the power of the person and exercise it. Speaking of exercise (ouch, that segue hurt), read what we think about the training, equipment, and diet needed to enjoy jogging. (Or click here to go back to the page that referred you.) |