Wednesday, 1 January 2025

A Guilty Victim: Recovering Creativity after Trauma and Abuse. Toby Ingham discusses his new book. Introduced by Anthony Stadlen. Inner Circle Seminar 299 (27 April 2025)


A Guilty Victim

Recovering Creativity after Trauma and Abuse

A book by psychotherapist Toby Ingham

illustrated by his client William Smith

published by Karnac 13 March 2025
 

Toby Ingham

conducts by Zoom

Inner Circle Seminar No. 299

introduced by Anthony Stadlen

Sunday 27 April 2025

10 a.m to 5 p.m.


Toby Ingham


Toby Inghams consulting room, in his shed 

This extraordinary book grew from a form of Bayeux tapestry created by a client, William Smith’, to illustrate and demystify the experiences he was recounting in his psychotherapy with Toby Ingham.

Smiths own healing artistic quest inspired him to invite Ingham to write an account of the therapy in the hope that it would help others. Ingham has fulfilled this request magnificently: painstakingly, with great perceptiveness, humility, and humour.

The book combines Ingham’s account and Smiths illustrations. It shows how despair and desolation may be transformed, through authentic psychotherapy, into creativity and hope.

After decades researching the paradigmatic case of psychotherapy from Freud onward, Anthony Stadlen reached the conclusion that such histories should be written by clients, not by therapists. But this book with its illustrations embodies an even better solution. Like the therapy itself, it is a collaboration, client-led. Together, Ingham and Smith have created a masterpiece, deserving an honoured place in the history of psychotherapeutic case studies.

Today, Toby Ingham will describe and discuss with seminar participants his conjoint quest with William Smith both in this therapy and in writing and illustrating this book.

In the afternoon, Anthony Stadlen will lead discussion on several general issues arising from this remarkable book and the collaboration it describes and embodies.

Smith’s and Ingham’s book is an implicit rebuke to the tradition of psychologising and medicalising case-histories from Freud’s ‘Dora’ to the present. It is a notable contribution to remedying and redeeming  this decadent tradition.
 

‘Moving and absolutely gripping. Toby Ingham is an Oliver Sacks, an expert in the workings of the human mind with the writerly skill to turn painstaking clinical practice into compulsively readable narrative. This book is the story of the rescue, against all the odds, of a desperately damaged person; of a triumph of good over evil: it will be a resource and a balm for all who suffered neglect, abuse and other traumas as children in Britain’s residential care systems.’

Alex Renton, journalist and author of Stiff Upper Lip: Secrets, Crimes and the Schooling of a Ruling Class

‘Toby Ingham has written an extraordinary book, part case study and part novel. The author is a psychotherapist and has written, with his patient’s active help and participation, an account of the therapy, charting the ups and downs, the dramas, misunderstandings and bursts of connection and understanding in the therapeutic relationship. Interspersed with the history of the therapy the author becomes a novelist and re-creates scenes from his patient’s life, telling stories of suffering and abuse but also of his patient finding some peace and understanding. The book shows how creativity is linked to courage, showing how if pain and trauma can be faced then our lives can be transformed.’

Laurence Spurling, Psychoanalytic Psychotherapist, Senior Member of the British Psychotherapy Foundation


Toby Ingham is a UK-based psychotherapist and supervisor and a former clinical director of South Bucks Counselling. His writing has been commended in the British Journal of Psychotherapy


This will be an online seminar, using Zoom.


Cost: Psychotherapy trainees £140, others £175reductions for combinations of seminars; some bursaries; no refunds or transfers unless seminar cancelled
Apply to: Anthony Stadlen, ‘Oakleigh’, 2A Alexandra AvenueLondon N22 7XE
Tel: +44 (0) 7809 433250  

For further information on seminars, visit: http://anthonystadlen.blogspot.com/

The Inner Circle Seminars were founded by Anthony Stadlen in 1996 as an ethical, existential, phenomenological search for truth in psychotherapy. They have been kindly described by Thomas Szasz as ‘Institute for Advanced Studies in the Moral Foundations of Human Decency and Helpfulness’. But they are independent of all institutes, schools, and universities.

No comments: