Word: psychiatrist
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...America is so money-oriented. (Thank God! It's always helped me!) But it has its disadvantages because the psychiatrists know their business doesn't mean a thing if there are no sick people around, and so they make everybody feel guilty. You know, all New York City is running to a psychiatrist. All America thinks it has sexual hang ups. Everybody's running to shrinks...
...twenty-year-old would have been blissfully unaware of anything going on so early on a Sunday morning in the middle of July, but I was pumped up and ready to start my day. In one hour (drumroll, please), I was going to interview Gerald Sarwer-Foner, a retired psychiatrist from Detroit...
...perhaps attributable to the rise of discount airlines. Horst W. Opaschowski, who heads Germany's Leisure Research Institute, says: "A second travel market of short trips and short distances is coming into being." Is this a good thing? In Spain, where the trend is similar if less marked, Madrid psychiatrist José Luis Carrasco Perera argues that tourists who substitute several short breaks for one sustained vacation "do not disengage sufficiently - the mind doesn't have time to forget the workplace." Alain de Botton, author of last year's The Art of Travel, agrees: "There's a huge advantage...
...help assuage the difficulty, Dr. Arthur Kornhaber, a family psychiatrist, opened the "granddaddy" of intergenerational camps, Grandparents' and Grandchildren's Camp, in 1986, held at Great Camp Sagamore at Raquette Lake, N.Y. Kornhaber had studied the grandparent role since 1970, and he discovered certain concerns of the older generation--namely, how can grandparents play an important role in their grandchild's life when they live far away...
...extended mission into the bush. This could have the effect of cleaving the novel into two incompatible halves - a portrait of a marriage and a political thriller - but Rush merges the two successfully and somewhat shockingly, when the doctor who is the target of Ray's surveillance becomes Iris' psychiatrist, neatly short-circuiting Ray's heretofore hermetically separate identities and violently abolishing his certainty in every truth he ever relied on. In all his identities Ray is an obsessive interpreter: he relentlessly decodes everything he sees and hears, whether it's a surveillance tape, Matthew Arnold's Dover Beach...