Sher, Manny (2003) ‘From Groups to Group Relations: Bion’s Contribution
to the Tavistock “Leicester” Conferences’, in Lipgar, Robert M. and Pines,
Malcolm, eds. (2003) Building on Bion: Branches (vol.2). Jessica
Kingsley, 2004, pp. 109-144.
How does psychoanalysis bear on groups? This is the question
Wilfred Bion asked at the outset of his work, work which, you will recall from a
previous unit, began in some unlikely places. He was born in India, sent away to
public school in England (which means private school in the UK) at age eight,
became a tank commander in the First World War and a psychiatrist in the second
(Bion, 1982). In the first he was to be awarded the country’s highest military
decoration but ended up with a lesser one because he spoke his mind about how
the war was being run (Trist, 1985, p. 10). What one might say from reading his
autobiography is that what he learned most profoundly in that life, and
particularly war, was about strange organisations and about terror, sheer dread
of annihilation, where one literally doesn’t know what one is doing or why one
acted as one did or how one survived. I believe that this knowledge was the key
to his later discoveries. In the Second World War he was involved in a number of
exercises which have borne a rich fruit. He devised the procedures by which
officers were (and still are) selected (Trist, 1985, pp. 6-10) and went on to
create settings in which officers who had broken down could regain their dignity
and their will to fight (Bridger, 1985; Trist, 1985, pp. 14-25.
The way he did this is vividly described in a number of
reminiscences by him and colleagues. There were two key elements. The first was
to place people in a situation where they were constrained to cooperate, to work
for the good of the group and not merely for survival of the self. The second
was to create an anxiety-provoking setting in which one could, with luck, think
about what one was doing while doing it. You’ll recall that he used a
phrase for this in his later work, one which I think is wonderful: ‘thinking
under fire’ in the here and now and not just with hindsight. What successful
group relations work does is to help people to learn to think under fire. To put
it another way, it helps people to retain mental space of a creative and
constructive kind - to be neither a saint nor a shit but an effective,
considerate human being. Religions have always tried to do this - without
notable success, in my opinion. I believe that the group relations approach, if
applied consistently and ambitiously enough, can do it.
The key to all this is an insight which Bion had and which
everyone who has worked in this tradition has held on to. It is this. Put people
under stress (and that includes the stress generated in ambiguous situations),
and you will evoke their most primitive anxieties, anxieties which it is
appropriate to call psychotic, hence, the phrase ‘psychotic anxieties’. It
was Bion’s belief that groups and institutions were designed in order to
constrain and contain such anxieties and that much of what we find so odd about
them is that they do two things at once. They protect us from a perpetual
sense of being about to be destroyed, yet they do so by creating defensive
social structures and forms of organisation and behaviour which are often
dreadful, inhuman, even cruel. They are based on strange unconscious phantasies
which his work in group relations and (as David Armstrong has shown, 1992) as a
psychoanalyst has done much to illuminate.
This is the deep paradox of life above the individual level -
families, groups, clubs, institutions, cultures, countries. Bion showed this
exquisitely in the experiments with groups he created in the army. The first
lasted six weeks, was hugely successful, and he was rapidly got rid of in an
utterly strange way (Trist, 1985, p. 16; deMare, 1985). He went on to create
groups at the Tavistock Clinic in London, and others, most notably A. K. Rice,
came after him and set up regular venues for group relations events and
conferences which are now conduced on a regular basis throughout the world
(Miller, 1990, 1990a; Colman and Bexton, 1975; Colman and Geller, 1985;
Hinshelwood, 1987). Bion’s own papers in this field were collected and
published in 1961 as Experiences in Groups and Other Papers. Toward the
end of his work in this field he began to explain his findings in terms of the
work of the psychoanalyst Melanie Klein (Bion, 1961, pp. 141-91), who has done
much to illuminate very primitive unconscious processes, particularly those
associated with anxiety, aggression and destructiveness (Klein, 1975; Young,
1994, ch. 5). It is my opinion and that of many others that she has a great deal
to say to those of us who are trying to save the world -- in the former Soviet
bloc, in Afghanistan, in former Yugoslavia, in Rwanda, in Oklahoma City, in
Tokyo, New York, Washington, Iraq, the Middle East, Columbia, Liberia and
wherever the dark side of human nature is engaged in virulent projective
identification (which I will define in a moment) - from destroying itself.
Once again, what happens in group relations work is
that people are put in situations which are designed to be safe and contained
enough so that when those anxieties are - quite deliberately - evoked by the
staff, it is just possible to see them in operation and to think about them in
the thick of the distress they evoke. It is the staff’s role to take in and
detoxify the poisonous projections and group madness and to make interpretations
which are designed to help the members of the conference to come to understand -
and to some extent transcend - the situation of being in the grip of psychotic
anxieties and thereby learn to behave rather better than they did before being
given access to this insight, this training in thinking under fire. The group
exercises are usually complemented with group therapy sessions and with
individual consultations where each member is invited, in the presence of others
in a small group, to reflect on the potential relevance to that person’s work
and life of what has been experienced at the conference, The hope is that if you
do this a few times, you may be able to think under fire yourself in your work
role and perhaps even at home.
The Leicester Conferences on group and organisational
behaviour, with particular emphasis on authority and leadership, have been held
at least once a year since 1957. They are heir to the traditions discussed
above, especially the work of Klein, Bion and Rice (other influences are
mentioned in Miller, 1990, pp. 165-69) In the two-week residential conferences
is that various group events are so arranged as to facilitate experiential
learning about the ways in which group processes can generate psychotic
anxieties and institutional defences against them (Miller, p. 171). For example,
the staff may simply instruct the membership to form groups and specify the
available rooms, some of which have consultants in them. The staff then leave
the room, and the anxiety about what to do overwhelms the members. The struggles
that ensue in the members' minds between individuation and incorporation, as a
result of the conference group events, is hard to credit by anyone who has not
taken part in a Leicester Conference or related 'mini-Leicester' events.
Similarly, descriptions of events and feelings are likely to seem odd to anyone
not familiar with the sorts of events around which the conferences are
structured. I believe, however, that the relevant emotional points will be
sufficiently clear without a (necessarily) long description of the conference
rubric.
I will describe my experiences as an ordinary conference
member at Leicester and as a member of staff at two group relations conferences
in Bulgaria and will then add some reflections by Manny Sher, the director of a
later Leicester conference. My own experience at Leicester involved feeling
continually on the edge of disintegration as a result of behaviour in the
various group events (ranging in size from a dozen to more than a hundred
people) which I found appalling and from which there seemed no escape, while
efforts to persuade people to behave well produced flight, sadism, collusive
lowering of the stakes or denial. The potential of the group for uniting around
(what was called on occasion) 'cheap reconciliation' or for cruelty, brought me
to the point of leaving on several occasions (some did leave), and I frequently
had the experience of having to use all my resources to hold myself together
against forces which I experienced as profoundly immoral, amoral or pathetically
conformist. No appeal to standards of group decency was of much avail.
I ended up feeling so alone and defensive that very early one
morning after a bad night (during which I consumed a lot of pistachio nuts) I
formed a group in my mind which consisted of some of the people I admired in
history and in my lifetime, e.g., Socrates, Lincoln, Gandhi, King, Bonhoeffer,
Marcuse, Mandela, who had stood up to intolerable social forces without quitting
the field or having their spirits broken. I dubbed this ‘The PSÖD
Solidarity Group’ (to indicate the oscillations between paranoid-schzoid and
depressive functioning). Armed with their mandate (bestowed by one part of my
mind onto another) I managed the next morning to talk my way into a meeting with
the staff, for the purpose of mounting a critique of the rubric of the exercise.
I felt contained by the inner solidarity provided by my imagined group, while I
was, in truth, actually on my own in the phenomenal context of the conference
events. I had blown out of a group in considerable distress, because it had
utterly failed to live up to its self-designation of advocating and practising
decency and civility among its members and urging such standards on the larger
group of conference members.
Just as I was on the point of sitting down to confront the
staff group in the name of my inner world group (vainly hoping they would show
some interest in its name, membership and values), a representative of the group
I had left appeared and bestowed 'plenipotentiary powers' (the highest of the
designated forms of delegation of authority) on me, freeing me from the dreaded
status of 'singleton'. A singleton is a person with no role status in the large
group (see Miller, 1990, p. 179 and Turquet, 1975, where the plight of the
singleton is insightfully and poignantly described). I had felt unutterably
alone, almost totally in the grip of paranoid persecutions, holding on for dear
life to my hallucinated historical group. The bestowal of my conference group's
trust reincorporated me into the social whole on terms I could accept. I was
told afterwards that one motive for giving me the mandate was fear of what I
would tell the staff group if I approached them while still furious with the
group I had left. I later learned that there was also a measure of admiration
for me among some members of the conference staff who referred to me as ‘the
Lone Ranger’.
My confrontation with the staff group, acting in this
exercise as 'Management’, was - predictably - without issue, but I went away
feeling that I had spoken my piece without suffering the humiliation that many
others had experienced. I had offered my analysis of the situation and their
role in it, one dimension of which was that they would - as a part of the
point of the exercise - continue to behave as they were doing, i.e., act as an
immovable object onto which the groups would project their phantasies about
authority and (hopefully) begin to take responsibility for themselves and take
back their projections. I felt that I had done that and negotiated my own rite
of passage - just.
Having gone some way toward resolving my own temporary
insanity (though not my omnipotence) I was only able to bask pleasantly in group
membership for a few minutes before members of another group, who had sought
refuge in being regressed and silly (they had all been to previous conferences
and might have been expected to be street wise, but they took refuge in
regression and called themselves, with a nice pun, 'The Potty Training Group')
stormed into the room where the staff/Management group were holding court. The
person whom I had considered to be the mildest member of that group physically
attacked a German member of staff with shouts of 'fascist' and other violent
epithets. He was aided and cheered on by other members of his group, until one,
a woman I felt sure was a Jew but I now recollect was probably not but was a
German, broke down sobbing and shouted for all this to stop (‘Not again!’),
which it did.
The descent from work or task-oriented groups to groups in
the thrall of psychotic basic assumptions is, as Bion pointed out, spontaneous
and inevitable (Bion, 1961, p. 165), even in a situation which all concerned
know to be temporary and 'artificial'. I continue to find this profoundly
sobering. I also continue to ruminate it and am far from having digested the
experience, though I have found it increasingly helpful in my work and related
activities.
My next experience of a group relations conference was some
years later and in a novel and particularly apt setting, Sofia, Bulgaria, where
I had played a central role in setting up the conference and was, for the first
time, a staff member. I have been involved since 1992 in an attempt to bring
psychoanalysis to Bulgaria, a project which is full of pitfalls and has met with
many setbacks. Many aspects of our overall project were stymied for lack of
funds and the non-availability of training therapists in the country. Indeed,
there was not a single person in Bulgaria trained in psychoanalysis or
psychoanalytic psychotherapy. One aspect of the educational and clinical scheme
which we could get on with is group relations, since it could be launched
without the overall project being established. This is because the usual mode of
teaching in this field is an intensive conference which can last for days, a
week or two weeks. It involves the intensive study of authority, leadership and
autonomy by individuals taking part in a temporary institution. This is achieved
by members monitoring their own experience in the process of taking part in the
individual, group and institutional dynamics of the conference itself. That is,
it is a particularly intense form of experiential learning which concentrates on
interpreting the constantly shifting, dynamic unconscious processes which
mediate the relations between the individual and the group in the ‘here and
now’. The group relations model is an equivalent to the psychoanalytic method
as a tool of social and cultural enquiry, and the members of the conference are
encouraged to make links to their wider experiences in organizational and social
life. When the instigator of the introduction of psychoanalytic thinking to
Bulgaria, Professor Toma Tomov, first learned about this approach he immediately
saw its promise for facilitating change from the rigid bureaucratic methods that
prevailed under communism.
Although there is now an annual two-week group relations
conference at Leicester and frequent ones on the Continent, in Israel, America,
Australia, India and elsewhere, there have been practically no previous group
relations events in Eastern Europe. The only one we have heard about went so
badly that a leading figure in the field was led to warn us off from attempting
it. Indeed, our Bulgarian colleagues got cold feet in the penultimate planning
stage and had to be persuaded to see it through. The sense of risk and weight of
responsibility on the shoulders of Toma Tomov were very great, and the British
team approached the event with considerable trepidation. The director of the
conference, David Armstrong, who works at the Tavistock Centre Consultancy
Service, is one of the leading figures in the field. Both he and Gordon
Lawrence, the deputy director, have decades of experience conducting group
relations conferences. David Armstrong recruited a team of consultants from the
UK, of whom I was the least experienced.
There was, of course, the problem of languages. This was
solved by appointing a Bulgarian colleague to work with each member of the
British team. They were interpreters at the same time that they were trainee
staff members. This combination of roles was a tough one to carry out, since
staff members are the objects of intense projections in all the conference
events, and the people involved had no previous experience. The British staff
were very impressed by the alacrity and insight with which they got on with it.
The setting of this first Bulgarian conference was surreal.
It was held at the Palace of Culture, an extraordinary kind of institution found
in the centre of every capital city in Eastern Europe. It was said of the one in
Warsaw that it provided the best view of the capital, since it was the only
vantage point from which one could not see the Palace of Culture... The one in
Sofia is massive, lavishly appointed and festooned with striking and imposing
artefacts which had been commissioned by the communist regime - carvings,
sculptures and a huge colourful mural which purported to embrace all of history
and all of symbolism and formed the backdrop to all events in the room where
plenary sessions took place. There is a particular penchant for elaborate
chandeliers among the official architects who design these palaces, and I found
myself irresistibly drawn to counting the burnt out bulbs when the dynamics of
the conference threatened to overwhelm me, sometimes with intense feelings,
sometimes with boredom. The setting was made more remarkable by the fact that
one result of democratisation and embracing the market economy and free
enterprise is that the palace had been opened up to hundreds of stalls selling
the most awful junk which comes from the West or from new enterprises - zillions
of plastic toys, hair sprays, portable cassette decks, perfumes, along with cars
and television sets. The conference was held on the fifth level, and I
experienced it as floating on a sea of tat, while seeking to foster a more
worthwhile set of values for this dramatically and confusingly changing society.
I find it hard to express adequately what happened, but it
was very moving and heartening. The sixty conference members were bewildered,
didn’t have much idea what to expect and felt ambivalent about the British
experts who had jetted in for the event. On the one hand, they were keen to
learn, especially since Western ideas of management are de rigeur; on the
other, they were understandably resentful of what might be a new and subtle form
of cultural imperialism. But what transpired was truly remarkable. One British
member of staff said it was the best group relations conference she had ever
attended. Once the participants got past their first layer of defences, my
experience of them was that their souls yearned to be free of the suspicions,
cynicism, spying and despair that made up so much of their lives under the old
regime and in the chaos of subsequent events. They found it particularly hard to
find a way of being between the position of isolated individual and a member of
the mass. That is, the task of forming groups with clear aims, boundaries and
territories was especially appreciated. One participant expressed this as the
result of a society whose members are in transition from serfdom to citizenship.
Bulgaria was under Turkish hegemony for five centuries, followed by Russian,
German and then Soviet control. Nominal and fledgling democracy has only been in
place since 1989.
In the small and large group events people are allowed to
speak whenever the spirit moves them. The members spoke with great clarity and
simplicity and quite soon found the conference events facilitating and relevant
to their lives and work. I felt that the emotional atmosphere was unusually free
of bull-shit, when compared with what happens in Britain, where there is often
layer after layer of conference-wise defences and tricks interposed between the
aims of the conference and the insides of the members. When we came at the end
to the applications groups - where members describe their circumstances and seek
to apply what they have learned at the conference - each spoke of truly daunting
life dilemmas on the part of professional people attempting to find authenticity
and dedication in settings which could easily go either way: to integrity or
toward destructive splitting and opportunism. The problem of trying to hold
things together - intellect and feelings, job form and content (in a society of
sinecures) - was especially striking. In the final plenary a member said he felt
he was left standing helpless in the middle of a large field. This was
interpreted as less forlorn that it might appear to be at first glance. To be
able to stand there and bear that experience without running away from it into
an instant, perhaps superficial, solution means that though he may have felt
helpless, his situation was far from hopeless. His ability to have that
experience, to contain it and reflect on it struck us as a real benefit of the
conference.
There was a press conference on the following day in which
participants and journalists agreed that the use of the group relations model
has immense promise for Bulgaria and other Eastern European countries and could
make important contributions in a number of settings --- medical, commercial,
governmental, psychiatric, educational -- and in working with minorities (there
is, for example, a large, alienated Gypsy population in Bulgaria). A week-long
conference was planned for Easter, and all who attended the one in December were
greatly looking forward to it. It was felt, and I agree, that the group
relations approach offers the best synthesis of management thinking with
integrity and psychodynamic authenticity in dealing with the role of the
individual in groups and institutions.
In fact, the next conference was cancelled. The reason
was envy and spite on the part of other academics at the New Bulgarian
University (NBU), the base for the project of bringing psychoanalysis to
Bulgaria. A way was found to bring some of the young people who had acted as
trainee staff to a group relations conference mounted by the Grubb Institute in
London. A Group Relations Club also met regularly to read, discuss and plan
future events. We then managed to get a grant of $100,000 from the Open Society
Fund and to mount another group relations conference in July-August 1994, which
was as remarkable in its way as the first one. It was held in the newly-acquired
premises of the NBU, a facility which had formerly been used for the education
of Communist party officials. The grounds were sorely in need of the attention
of gardeners, and the rooms were hot, but the proceedings were electrifying. I
recall most vividly an event in an exercise in which the membership were asked
to form groups to interact with the staff, who were designated as ‘Management’
(like the one I described above at the Leicester Conference). One young
psychiatrist - well-known to all of the staff, whose clinical work I had
supervised and with whom I was on affectionate terms - came before the
staff/Management group and said that since we were unwilling to meet with them
and were completely intransigent, there was no possible way forward. When it was
pointed out by the director of the conference that they had asked for no meeting
and that we had therefore made no response of the kind he described, a deep
frown came across his face. He was silent for a long time and then said that we
had utterly shattered his world view. That is, he had to acknowledge that his
characterization of us was pure projection, albeit firmly based on his
experience growing up in the culture and society of pre- and (unfortunately)
post-1989 Bulgaria.
There were many comparable experiences in the various
small and large group events of the conferences and in the application groups at
the end of the week. People found it hard to the point of impossibility to
imagine that groups could be formed for good and proactive reasons, that
institutions could permit progressive and constructive things to happen, that
anyone outside one’s own family and closest friends could be trusted. This
was especially evident in the large groups, where various people were repeatedly
accused of playing cynical or comical or otherwise disruptive roles. Still
others told moving stories about how it was pointless to hope, to build, to seek
change. In the application groups, people told poignant tales about why their
jobs were pointless, their initiatives thwarted, their positions based on
fragile patronage.
These conferences and the plotting and intrigues
surrounding them offer vivid illustrations of the insights the group relations
approach can provide. They do so in ways that are reminiscent of the fate of
Bion’s initial experiment at Northgate Hospital in World War Two -- a success
but killed off after only a few weeks. When the second Bulgarian group relations
conference ended the staff were heartened and felt sure that the next conference
(which I was unable to attend) would be able to build quite quickly on the
experiential learning of this and the previous one. Then we learned that the
rest of our grant had disappeared It was simply gone. There was a heated
showdown between advocates of our programme and certain responsible officials
which might have led to catastrophe, but it didn’t. Instead, it led to the
creation of a new Bulgarian Institute of Human Relations at the NBU, with an
ambitious programme and full backing for grant application to funding bodies in
the West. Not much has come of these applications, but the Institute of Human
Relations continues to thrive.
One crucial meeting is worth recalling. A significant figure
with access to major financial resources had agreed to meet with us. People who
had been power brokers under the old regime had moved over to being
administrators of funds being granted by Western agencies and NGOs
(non-governmental organizations). The meeting was scheduled for Saturday morning
in Winter. Gordon Lawrence and I flew in from London, but fog prevented us from
landing at Sofia, and we were diverted to Burgas on the Baltic. In order to get
to the meting on time we had to take a taxi and ride all night through the fog
on icy roads. We got to Sofia in time to sleep for an hour, and we arrived at
the meeting rather breathless and dog tired. The grandee did not turn up. We
were assured that this did not mean that the grant would not be forthcoming -
only that he wanted to make it clear who was more important. We swallowed our
understandable reactions and set about explaining the proposal to a group of
people who knew about it already. The potentate turned up an hour late and
explained disarmingly that when he agreed to meet us it had slipped his mind
that he had promised his wife that he would look after the children that
Saturday morning -- hence the transparent bag containing water and a goldfish
which was suspended from his hand as he came into the room and which remained
there throughout our deliberations. After our exposition he assured us that he
would get us a major grant. It never came, nor has any other significant
funding. The third Bulgarian group relations conference was, nevertheless, held
with Bulgarians in charge and British staff in support. I cannot give an account
of it, since I was (suspiciously, you may think) laid low with sciatica just
before my intended departure from London.
Candour obliges me to mention that at a certain moment in the
second conference we were having a hurried lunch. The director, a person I
greatly admire and like, called the group to order for a quick meeting. I made a
response to his first sentence, to which he replied, amiably but firmly, ‘I
wasn’t necessarily intending to start a discussion’. I experienced this like
a slap in the face. Without a word I got up and left the table. He found me some
time later and said that he was very angry and that my storming off challenged
his authority. I said I meant no disrespect, and we got on with working together
without incident and subsequently. After long reflection I have concluded that I
regarded myself as his special protégé and could not bear to be publicly
silenced by him. I wonder if my chagrin at that exchange may have brought on my
sciatica when it was next time to work with him.
This incident brings me to the somewhat delicate topic
of group dynamics among staff at group relations conferences. Not much has been
written about this. Indeed, not much has been written about the experiential
side of such conferences at all. The classic accounts of the rubric are not
expressed in the first person: Eric Miller’s Miller, Eric (1990) 'Experiential
Learning Groups I: The Development of the Leicester Model' and ‘Experiential
Learning Groups II: Recent Developments in Dissemination and Application’.
When I was preparing for my first group relations conference
I was not ale to find much literature about the experiential side, though I’d
heard many a tale, most of them lurid, and I wondered if that was somehow
deliberate so that one could experience it unprepared and therefore relatively
undefended. There is a literature about large group events under the auspices of
the Institute of Group Analysis (e.g., Kreeger, 1975; Ettin, 2003 Wilke, 2003)
but not much about the Leicester Conference model. This omission has been
strikingly filled by an extraordinarily honest and self-revealing account by
Manny Sher (2003) of his experience as a first time director of a two-week
Leicester Conference. What is so striking about his diary of the conference is
something one should have known, but I confess that I didn’t. It is that the
director has to bear all the projections of three groups -- the ordinary
members, the training group (trainees for becoming staff in the future, people
very jealous of their status as no longer being mere conference members) and the
staff, who can by no means be relied on to offer unqualified support. I say I
should have known it, if only because when I was an ordinary member at Leicester
I became utterly convinced that my partner was having an affair with the
conference director (she was not at the conference, but they were colleagues and
friends). I should add that I did not have a scintilla of evidence for this
paranoid projection and that he did not behave toward me in an untoward way at
the conference. Indeed, when the crunch came I felt that he was respectful of me
where he had been hard on others. Nevertheless, in my mind and in the grip of
the anxieties evoked by the conference, he was -- in the transference -- the
patriarch and a threat to me in many ways, including sexually.
Sher notes that his anxiety about the role of director was so
high that he had included eight former conference directors on his staff of ten.
His aim may have been to shore himself up, but the effect under fire was to make
him feel extraordinarily scrutinised and perceived as a new boy. When he made
mistakes, e.g., in scheduling events or their lengths, none of which was
particularly major and all of which could be corrected, he subjected himself to
withering self-criticism. Loyalties and betrayals preoccupied him. He felt
vulnerable for being a Jew and for being a South African. He saw himself as the
captain of a rudderless ship. He also reflects on the key elements of the
processes of the agenda-less groups which make up the structure and processes of
a group relations conference:
1) the psychotic anxieties which we all bring from infancy
and which are evoked when we feel potentially overwhelmed and regress in social
settings,
2) the unconscious phantasies which make them specific and
which colonise our minds and overwhelm and replace rational, secondary process
thinking,
3) leading to the formation of projective identifications
onto the group and individuals in it and especially onto the conference staff
and director.
To the extent that the conference process works, it sets in
train a process of containing anxieties and the taking back of projections,
leading from the paranoid-schizoid to the depressive position, from extreme
splits and punitive guilt evoking hatred and ardour felt toward particular
individuals, to seeing things as a mixture and to constructive, reparative
guilt. This takes place to different degrees on different themes in a given
conference and affects individuals in the staff, the training group and the
ordinary members in individual ways. It is also not a process which is completed
on site. One deliberates on group relations events long after one returns to
ordinary life. Indeed, I have seen a new thing of two while writing this unit.
Woe to him or her who is the partner of someone who goes home on the free day in
the middle of a Leicester Conference. I was once such a person and was cast in
the role of all-purpose scapegoat at the same time that I was called upon to be
a perfect breast. This occurred years before I went to one, but I remembered and
when I did go to a Leicester Conference, I stayed in Leicester and spent that
day swimming, pottering around and eating pistachio nuts.
I’ll offer a tiny example of attempting to get the
membership to ‘take back the projections’. In my first Bulgarian group
relations conference a member asked me several times why I was wearing red
braces. This question became extremely interesting to a number of members as the
days went by. One can only imagine what thoughts and anxieties they may have
had. Come to that, one can speculate at length on why I would wear such a
flamboyant article of clothing (which was not unusual for me). On the last day I
took the floor and said, ‘I will tell you why I wear red braces: to hold my
trousers up’. Much genuine and relieved laughter.
I mentioned that there are ‘application groups’ toward
the end of a group relations conference. These can be both painful and extremely
useful. The staff member facilitates the application of what has been
experienced and learned, to the work situation of the member, which can be a
very moving and cathartic experience, as I mentioned with respect to the
Bulgarian conferences. I like to think that once one has been to such a
conference, there is a space in one’s mind to which one can return and gain
enough perspective to think under fire. A good analogy is the ‘internal
therapist/analyst’ a person who has finished therapy/analysis carries around
in his/her head. That internal object is a presence and can be consulted in
trying times. Perhaps even the voice and manner of the therapist comes to mind,
giving self-containment, insight, forbearance, compassion, strength. On a good
day the result will be that the person who has benefited from a group relations
event will not shoot from the hip but will be somewhat mature in responding in
stressful group and institutional settings..
Group relations events lie somewhere between group
analysis and the work setting. They are specifically designed to bring primitive
processes to the surface and to allow a contained space to reflect upon them,
just as the analytic frame of group analysis or individual therapy does. The
space has well-defined boundaries and parent figures who are known to be
experienced in this work as well as others who are known to be apprentices (the
‘training group’) -- children, young adults, adults. Of course, at the same
time, all are simultaneously children and adults. Members are likely to be heads
or department heads of institutions, even though they may be neophytes at group
relations events. The events also have rules which are carefully spelled out in
the literature one received before arriving; the references cited therein and in
the documents placed in one’s hands at the conference specify timetables,
room, sorts of events. These are all containing at the same time that they are
experienced as restrictive. Members express their protests at being infantilised
by acting out -- affairs, drinking, even sneaking off or playing truant from
particular events. Jealousy, envy and spite are expressed. People shout, others
pout and tears flow. Rumours abound, especially about the mythical member who
found the conference dynamics so stressful that he had a heart attack, and the
staff would not call an ambulance. This story is apocryphal but perennial.
I have tried to evoke the experience of group
relations events, events which are, above all experiential in the sense of
experiential learning. I believe that you can learn a lot from reading about
such events in my account and the ones described in the references. However,
there is no substitute for the real thing. People who have attended group
relations events will assure you that they were important to their understanding
of human nature and themselves. Go forth and do likewise.
This is a unit for the Distance Learning MA in Psychoanalytic Studies,
University of Sheffield (2003).
REFERENCES AND FURTHER READING
(Place of publication is London unless otherwise specified.)
Armstrong, David (1992) ‘Names, Thoughts and Lies: The Relevance of Bion’s
Later Writings to the Understanding of Experiences in Groups’, Free
Associations (no. 26) 3: 261-82, on-line at http://human-nature.com/hraj/lies.html
______ (2003) ‘The Work Group Revisited: Reflections on the Practice of
Group Relations’, Free Associations (no. 53) 10: 14-24, on-line at http://human-nature.com/hraj/work.html
______, Lawrence, W. Gordon and Young, Robert M. (1997) Group Relations:
An Introduction, on-line at http://human-nature.com/rmyoung/papers/paper99.html
Bion, W. R. (1961) Experiences in Groups. Tavistock.
Bridger, Harold (1985) ‘Northfield Revisited’ in Pines, 1985, pp.
87-107.
Colman, A, D. and Bexton, W. H., eds. (1975) Group
Relations Reader 1. Washington, D. C.: A. K. Rice Institute.
______ and Geller, M. H., eds. (1985) Group Relations
Reader 2. Washington, D. C.: A. K. Rice Institute.
DeMare, Patrick (1985) ‘Major Bion’, in Pines, 1985, pp. 108-13.
Ettin, Mark F. Bion’s Legacy to Median and Large Groups’, in Lipgar and
Pines, 2003, vol. 2, pp. 29-69.
Hinshelwood, R. D. (1987) What Happens in Groups. Free Association
Books.
Hugg, Terry W. et al., eds. (1993) Changing Group Relations: The
Next Twenty-Five Years in America. Proceedings of the Ninth Scientific Meeting
of the A. K. Rice Institute. An A. K. Rice Publication.
Klein, Melanie (1975) The Writings of Melanie Klein, 4 vols.
Hogarth. Vol. I: Love, Guilt and Reparation and Other Works, 1921-1945. Vol.
II: The Psycho-Analysis of Children. Vol. III Envy and Gratitude and Other
Works; 1946-1963. Vol. IV: Narrative of a Child Analysis; all
reprinted Virago, 1988.
Kreeger, Lionel (1975) The Large Group: Dynamics and
Therapy. Constable; reprinted Karnac: Maresfield Reprints.
Lipgar, Robert M. and Pines, Malcolm, eds. (2003) Building
on Bion: Roots (vol.1). Jessica Kingsley.
______ (2003) Building on Bion: Branches (vol. 2). Jessica Kingsley.
Main, Tom (1975) ‘Some Psychodynamics of Large Groups’,
in Kreeger, 1975, pp. 57-86.
Miller, Eric (1990) 'Experiential Learning Groups I: The
Development of the Leicester Model', in Trist and Murray, 1990, pp. 165-85.
______ (1990a) ‘Experiential Learning Groups II: Recent
Developments in Dissemination and Application’, in ibid., pp. 186-98
Pines, Malcolm, ed., Bion and Group Psychotherapy. Routledge;
reprinted Jessica Kingslay, 2000.
Sher, Manny (2003) ‘From Groups to Group Relations: Bion’s Contribution
to the Tavistock “Leicester” Conferences’, in Lipgar and Pines, vol. 2,
pp. 109-144.
Trist, Eric (1985) ‘Working with Bion in the 1940s: The Group Decade’,
in Pines, 1985, pp. 1-46.
______ and H. Murray, eds., The Social Engagement of Social Science: A
Tavistock Anthology, Vol. 1: The Socio-Psychological Perspective. Free
Association Books.
Turquet, Pierre (1975) ‘Threats to Identity in the Large Group’ in
Kreeger, 1975, pp. 87-144.
Wilke, Gerhard (2003) ‘The Large Group and Its Conductor’, in Lipgar
and Pines, 2003, vol. 2, pp. 70-105.
Young, Robert M. (1994) Mental Space. Process Press. 1994; on-line
at http://human-nature.com/rmyoung/papers/paper55.html
Copyright: The Author
Address for correspondence:
26 Freegrove Road, London N7 9RQ
robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk
Web site and writings: http://www.human-nature.com