Heavyweight - #28 Dr. Muller
Episode Date: November 7, 2019In his twenties, Jonathan began seeing an inscrutable, mysterious therapist. After 6 years without progress, she told him it wasn’t working out because of him. 25 years later, Jonathan wants to know... if it was really his fault. Credits Heavyweight is hosted and produced by Jonathan Goldstein. This episode was produced by Stevie Lane, BA Parker, and Kalila Holt. Editing by Jorge Just. Special thanks to Emily Condon, Tim Howard, Annika Witzel, Sir Richard Evans, Dr. Robert Proctor, Alex Blumberg, Luisa Beck, Emanuele Berry, David Berman, and Jackie Cohen. The show was mixed by Bobby Lord. Music by Christine Fellows, John K Samson, Blue Dot Sessions, Bobby Lord, Y La Bamba, Shanghai Restoration Project, and of Tropique. Our theme song is by The Weakerthans courtesy of Epitaph Records, and our ad music is by Haley Shaw. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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How come your French is so much better than mine?
I think everybody's French is better than yours.
Yeah, why is that?
Because we listen.
We don't listen.
I mean, I was in French immersion with all you guys.
You either daydream or you're talking.
Do you know what?
It sounds like you're on all those French immersion teacher sides that I had throughout the years.
That's what they used to say.
Which means you're head in the clouds.
I know what that means.
Et Francais, la langue Française.
I know what that means.
Et français, la langue française de... pour avoir quelqu'un de...
Jackie?
I'm gonna...
You know I'm getting close to the hang-up, eh?
You can feel it coming?
When you start getting on my nerves.
Right about now.
Right about now.
Ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha, ha.
From Gimlet Media, I'm Jonathan Goldstein, and this is Heavyweight.
Today's episode, Dr. Mueller. Growing up, a single question dominated my thoughts.
What was the use?
What was the use of getting out of bed?
Of combing your hair?
Of breathing?
All that breathing.
What was the use of anything
when all of life inevitably came grinding to an end?
By 17, I was waking up in the middle of the night, seized by the meaninglessness of it all.
By 18, I started to lose my hair. At 19, I dropped out of college. And at 20,
I knew I had to do something. So I began seeing a therapist.
knew I had to do something. So I began seeing a therapist. Initially, the idea felt romantic,
like something out of J.D. Salinger or Hitchcock. At our first appointment, I might have even worn a blazer. My new therapist extended a hand and introduced herself as Dr. Mueller. And for the
next six years, that was the only name by which she was known to me.
Dr. Mueller never referred to me by my first name either.
Instead, she called me Mr. Goldstein,
which, because she spoke with a heavy German accent, she pronounced Goldstein.
The first and only time I tried correcting her,
she simply said,
It is Goldstein.
Dr. Mueller was rail-thin, appeared to be in her late 60s,
and wore her hair in a grayish bowl cut.
She favored turtlenecks and macrame vests and sat behind an imposing desk,
empty except for a telephone
and a neat stack of small notepapers.
At the end of our first appointment, she asked me to write up a one-page family history.
Instead, I took a deep dive into my childhood.
I wanted her to have all the source material she'd need to get to the bottom of my morbid disposition.
And so, the following week, I proudly presented her
with a book-length memoir.
Dr. Mueller skimmed through it
and then, silently,
stuck my tome in a drawer
and never brought it back up.
So several sessions later,
I did.
I am not very interested in the past,
she said.
I'm more interested in the present.
What are you going to do now, she asked.
What I was going to do now, I hoped, was talk about my past.
But Dr. Mueller could care less.
A therapist uninterested in the past ran contrary to everything I thought I knew about therapy.
It was like a carpenter
who refused to work with wood.
More than that,
it was like a carpenter who hated wood,
and if you brought them wood,
they'd throw it in a concrete drawer
and never mention it again.
Wasn't excavating the past
pretty much a therapist's whole job?
Where else does one find answers?
Dr. Mueller's unwillingness
to even acknowledge my past
was confounding,
but so were a lot of things about her.
Sometimes, she'd inexplicably
show up wearing a neck brace.
Other times,
she'd spend frantic minutes
buffing out an invisible scuff mark
from a waiting room chair.
Then, there were the long anecdotes about car
trouble, a trip she was planning, stories that went nowhere and were illustrative of nothing
I could fathom. And all the while, whole precious expensive minutes elapsed in which I could neither
whine nor complain my way to mental health. It felt positively wasteful.
Dr. Mueller's office was in a large old echoey building downtown.
Our appointments happened around dusk,
and in my memory, it's always the dusk of winter,
cold and wet Montreal winter.
From behind her desk, lit by a desk lamp, she spoke of giving birth to one's authentic self, a self that wasn't all tangled up
in regrets about the past or consumed by anxiety over the future, aka a self that didn't sound very
Jonathan Goldstein-y. In every session, Dr. Muller repeated the same refrain,
you must give birth to yourself.
What could she possibly mean, I asked my girlfriend at the time.
Barbara was working on her bachelor's in psychology,
and in my darker moments I felt certain her relationship with me
was a part of her fieldwork.
It might be a gestalt thing, she said uncertainly,
but I don't know that gestalt therapy is even a thing anymore.
Week after week, Dr. Mueller and I sat in a dark room
as I tried in vain to birth myself.
On a bad day, she would reprimand me for not doing as she instructed.
On a good day, she would say that I was very, very close My authentic self was crowning
Was this just her line, I wondered
Something Dr. Mueller told all her patients
I grew increasingly frustrated
I was still lost, still waking up at noon
Still spending my days watching video rentals and smoking cigarettes in my parents' basement, still showing up for appointments with Dr. Mueller for conversations that felt as pointless as life itself.
Finally, after being told for the umpteenth time that the miracle of birth was nigh,
I grew upset.
It's hard to hear this year after year, I said.
I told her that we must be doing something wrong.
It is not working, she said.
Because of you.
She spoke the words quietly, but firmly.
I was taken aback.
It had to be something more than just me,
if only slightly,
maybe a tiny bit because of her?
I mean, she was sitting in the room as much as I was.
Even in my insecure state,
her conclusion felt off,
and I said so.
It is because of you, she repeated.
Was a therapist even allowed to say that?
How could she refuse to share in this failure?
I think maybe this should be our last session, I said.
Ending things was something I'd been thinking of doing for a while.
But you have yet to find a philosophy, she said,
words to live by, that will ease self-birth.
Not everyone needs a philosophy, I responded.
That is true, she said.
But you do.
At the end of the hour, Dr. Mueller rose from behind her desk
and opened the door for me.
She smiled warmly, sincerely,
no edge at all.
The blame she'd cast, in combination
with the simplicity of her goodbye,
was chilling.
She shook my hand, ending one of the
most intense personal relationships
I'd had up until that point in my
life. And then,
just like that, I was back
in that echoey hallway, wondering what the hell
had just happened. It's a question I still don't have an answer for. When you're young, because
the world is small and new, so many experiences confuse you. But as you grow older, the odd things
fall into place, and you look back with something approaching clarity.
But after 30 years, my experience with Dr. Muller
somehow feels more mysterious,
more difficult to parse than it did when I was 20.
You go to therapy to form a more coherent narrative out of your life.
Yet paradoxically, the chapter of my life with Dr. Muller
remains one that I've never really been able to make sense of.
And so, I still find myself asking,
who was this person?
And was she a bad therapist?
Or was I a bad patient?
Although Dr. Mueller died in 2003,
I recently realized there might still be a way to find out.
In recent months, I find myself moving away from traditional psychotherapy and towards a more improvisational mental health regimen.
That is, I stay up late while drinking beer and watching old movies.
It's while watching At Close Range, a Sean Penn-Christopher Walken film from the 1980s,
that I realize I'd already seen it in a college class.
And with this recollection, I remember the professor who taught the class,
and the one time I'd seen him outside of his classroom.
It was in Dr. Mueller's waiting room.
I'd seen him exiting her office,
or at least I think I had.
The moment was long ago and so fleeting.
But if true, this memory had the power
to tear open a potential wormhole
connecting me to my past.
As a kid in therapy for the first time, I had no perspective on Dr. Mueller.
But here was a full-fledged adult patient of hers, a professor no less,
who'd have the experience and insight to cast the decisive vote
in the was-it-me-or-was-it-Mueller referendum.
Was she just weirdly hung up on this notion of self-birth,
or was I just too young to get it?
With the movie paused in the background,
I pace the floor of my living room.
A plan begins to take shape.
All I have to do is break all the rules of therapy,
of polite society,
and track down a now-elderly professor who taught at a school
I dropped out of, to inquire if it had been him I'd seen exiting my therapist's office
30 years ago.
Yes, I agreed, nodding my head to no one in particular.
Three beers into a six-pack of tallboys at two in the morning.
This was an excellent idea.
Find the man who can supply context.
What was wrong with a little context?
The only problem was,
after thinking as hard as I could,
I could not remember the professor's name.
How long has it been? It's been a while.
Oh man, yeah. It has been a while.
A visit to the school's website tells me nothing about my old professor.
But I do discover that the present chair of his department is an old college friend.
Dana and I haven't spoken in close to 20 years.
How are things with you?
They're good. They're good, years. How are things with you?
They're good. They're good, yeah. Things are, you know, quiet.
Dana tells me how much she enjoys teaching English,
and I tell her that I'd recently been guiltily reading Madame Bovary,
a book on the required reading list back when we were in school that I never actually read.
And I must have started it because I found some of, like, my marginalia that makes me, like, hate myself when I was that age.
I underlined this whole paragraph, and in the margin, I wrote, Espanolism?
And what could that even have possibly meant?
Eventually, I explained the reason for my call.
How I'm in search of a professor from her department whose name I could not remember,
but who may or may not have had
a ringside seat to the development
of my young psyche.
I proceed to describe the professor
the best I can.
The guy had kind of like black
curly-ish hair,
maybe kind of balding.
His first name might have been Rob, could have been Bob.
I offer Dana all the detail I can.
He seemed to enjoy chewing gum.
Once, during the warmer weather,
he might have taught while wearing a Panama hat.
None of that is ringing a bell with me.
After a while, I just give up.
Well, um,
thank you. It was nice
talking to you. No problem.
It was nice talking to you, too.
As we're about to get off the phone,
one more small, unhelpful
detail pops into my head
and immediately out of my mouth.
It's a surprise.
You know, he had a mustache
at some point.
Is it possible his name was Maury?
Maury.
That is the guy.
Oh, well, there you go.
After the break, Professor Maury.
Maury.
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Hello, Jonathan.
Hey, Maury.
Glad I got through.
Yeah.
Can you hear me okay?
Yeah, I can hear you okay.
Where I am?
Yeah.
Where I am, the...
Where Maury is, is Jamaica,
sitting with his neighbors in the communal yard.
And after all these years, he's still professorial.
You know, Bob's song, No Woman, No Crime.
You know, Georgie lit a firelight in a tenement yard in Trenchtown.
You can't really understand what that means
and what you've actually been in one of them.
Maury spends half the year in Jamaica,
and as soon as he got my message asking if we could speak,
he phoned right back.
Every so often, he's interrupted by the neighbor's daughter,
Alexi, and her toddler sister, Tessie.
Alexi, your phone's on.
Take Tessie out. Take her into the yard, please.
No, no, no.
Maury, a Jew, has been working on a documentary
with Bob Marley's granddaughter, Arasta,
about the relationship between Jews and Rastas
and their cultural overlaps.
Like what overlaps?
You know, the groups that are quite orthodox,
they don't eat pork.
While I do find
the subject of Maury's documentary semi-interesting, the questions I'm asking are not in service to
that semi-interest, but rather to staving off the moment I have to announce the invasive nature of
my phone call. The dreadlocks are from the same biblical injunction that leads to Hasidic Jews
wearing beards. The whole point of therapy is to have a
sacred space, separated from
the rest of the world, free from
the judgment of others.
And here I was, phoning up a stranger
to ask, mind if I poke
around in your sacred space a bit?
Any hot takes on the therapist?
Did she uncrazy you?
Or are you like, still not?
Maury would have every right to bang down the phone on my face. Did she uncrazy you? Or are you like, still not?
Maury would have every right to bang down the phone on my face.
And so, I keep deferring.
Um, is the Rastafarian, is it connected to the Lost Tribes?
Uh, there could be, like, it's not really... We go back and forth for almost half an hour.
All the while, Maury never asks why I'm phoning.
Tessie, someone on phone wants to say hello to you. Say hello, Jonathan.
Hi, Tessie.
Having exhausted every possible way to put off asking my question,
every digression, every subject change,
every attempt to keep Maury's two- Every digression, every subject change, every attempt to keep
Maury's two-year-old neighbor on the phone.
I'm left with no recourse but to finally
get to the point of my weird, out-of-nowhere
social call.
So, I just dive in.
Anyway, so...
So, yeah, I'll tell you why I'm
phoning.
So, I
have a pretty strange question, and I'm just going to say that right out the gate.
Basically, the reason I'm calling you is because there was a moment where
our lives crossed, and just totally in a very coincidental way, and I was reminded of it.
What? Yeah.
Tessie, Tessie, give that back.
Okay, Tessie.
Just as I'm finally getting to it, Tessie.
She grabbed a tiny little plastic-wrapped bit of weed and was running out with it.
I didn't know what she would do with it, you know?
She's not going to smoke it.
Uh-huh.
She's not going to smoke it.
Yeah.
Once the Cheech and Chong-esque shenanigans are behind us,
I resume mealy-mouthing my way through a procession of preambles.
You know, I don't want to make you uncomfortable or anything.
I want you to be, you know, comfortable answering this.
And if you don't want to, totally fine.
I used to see this therapist, and I have this memory, and I might be misremembering even,
is of being in the waiting room and seeing you leave her office. It was Dr. Mueller.
Maury is so unfazed by my question,
I'm inclined to wonder whether he's bogarted little Tessie's joint.
Without any ado, he just jumps right in,
telling me he began seeing Dr. Mueller during a creative block and continued to see her for four years.
I found her very interesting, and I also found her very weird in some way.
I don't remember exactly what age she was, but she was kind of on the older side for deep-sea diving.
And then there was a thing about the horses, which I can't remember.
Maury and I swap old memories. It's validating.
Dr. Mueller was odd.
Why does anybody wear two pairs of glasses
unless they're an alien with six eyes?
Is she just off a
UFO? You know, sometimes I've got that
feeling that she was some sort of alien.
Maury remembers how angry she'd get if he
was even a few minutes late.
How harsh she could be in her method.
To me, the method always seemed like a bit, you know,
it's not interesting to talk about, you know,
what happened to you when you were six years old, you know?
It's like, what are you going to do now?
What is your next step?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And even then, she wasn't really that interested in feelings.
It was really more about,
that's the term that she constantly used.
What is your concept?
What is your concept of how you are going to deal with this? You have to formulate a concept.
You haven't yet formulated, I think she thought that I wasn't formulating enough concepts.
I tell Maury about the note that Dr. Mueller and I had parted on, how she'd been crossed because of
my failure to birth myself.
When I ask if self-birth was something they'd also talked about, he says no.
But I had the same feeling with her. This isn't quite working the way it should. And eventually she just said, I don't think you need me anymore. She didn't say, you know,
this is useless. We're not getting anywhere. She actually said, I think we've gone to where we want to get.
And maybe she was right, I don't know.
Well, that sounds kind of like a nice way to end therapy,
as far as those things go.
Yeah.
Sure, he wasn't handed a certificate with the word cured stamped on it,
but getting to where you want to go
is a more
dignified end to therapy than I'd managed. Maybe it wasn't with honors, but at least
Maury had graduated rather than dropped out. Just as one of the strangest telephone calls
of my life comes to an end, Maury casually mentions that he just so happens
to be in touch with another of Dr. Mueller's former patients,
and one who, unlike the both of us,
wasn't confused by Dr. Mueller at all.
Maury encourages me to give him a call.
I've seen a couple of therapists over the years,
and she wasn't my favorite.
After a breakup left him devastated, Michael went to Dr. Mueller for help.
a kind of who's talking now competition.
She sort of reprimanded me,
which I thought was kind of strange.
Michael's memory sparked one of my own.
One day during a fit of coughing,
I asked Dr. Mueller for water.
There was a sink in the corner of her room,
but no cup.
I needed a glass of water, and she only... And she told you to go to the sink and use your hands, right?
Cupped your hands?
Yeah, how do you know?
Because she told me to do the same thing.
Hunching over the sink and cupping my hands together
to catch the flow of water from Dr. Mueller's spout,
I felt like someone from the Bible, like a bear.
Until now, I'd been alone with my bestial memories.
No more. But when I bring up the business of giving birth to myself, as in, how nutty was all that, I'm surprised by his response.
I can't remember ever saying anything like that to me.
Hey, hi, Jonathan. Hey, Judith. It's Judy, actually. Oh, Judy, Jonathan.
Hey, Judith.
It's Judy, actually.
Oh, Judy, okay.
Yeah, I can hear you. I'm so sorry.
Michael has put me in touch with yet another patient of Dr. Mueller's,
the person who recommended he see her in the first place.
Because unlike Michael, Maury, and me,
which, by the way, sounds like a Jewish folk trio,
Judy loved Dr. Mueller,
so much so that she always refers to her as
the fantastic Dr. Mueller.
Judy's a painter who began seeing Dr. Mueller
in the mid-70s because Judy's lack of confidence
in her own work was threatening to derail her career.
Hear me?
Yes, I could hear you.
Let me try. How's that? Is that better?
Is that better, Jonathan? I think it is. I think it's a little... Is that better? I think so. Let me try. How's that? Is that better? Is that better, Jonathan?
I think it is.
Is that better?
I think so.
Judy says Dr. Mueller's approach went beyond talk,
beyond even the confines of the office.
She went to my gallery to see my work,
and the gallery dealer greeted her and showed her my work.
Sure, Judy had talked in therapy about her self-doubts as an artist,
but she never would have anticipated Dr. Mueller actually going to see her work.
Saying, who was that?
She cut people off.
I mean, it was like, really, I couldn't help but laugh.
I mean, it was, she cut a very severe profile there.
But the point is, Judy says, that Dr. Mueller loved what she saw that day.
And hearing that, at that particular moment in her life, from someone as no-nonsense as Dr. Mueller, gave Judy the confidence she was looking for.
she was looking for.
I just accepted her, I guess, idiosyncrasies because she was 100% in my court.
She stepped in in moments that were difficult.
Judy experienced a different side of Dr. Mueller,
one that I never could have even imagined.
And the more we talked, the more I realized how different our experiences had been.
While my Dr. Mueller had been largely inscrutable, Judy's Dr. Mueller loved the Beatles.
Judy got to know a Dr. Mueller who'd always wanted to be an actor,
who took vacations alone to go scuba diving,
and described swimming alongside a manta ray as
one of the most meaningful encounters of her life.
Judy's Dr. Mueller was the type of person who blushed after making a sly joke, who got
a look of satisfaction when she hit on something deep.
And this is why, on the wall of Judy's art studio, beside pictures of her friends, her
family, and her dogs, hangs a photograph
of the fantastic Dr. Mueller. Dr. Mueller devised a treatment plan uniquely tailored to Judy.
Judy had needed confidence and reassurance, and Dr. Mueller went out and gave it to her.
If she'd done that for Judy, perhaps she'd also done the same for other patients.
With that in mind, I asked Judy
if during the course of her therapy,
Dr. Mueller had ever mentioned giving birth to herself.
But Judy has no idea what I'm talking about.
After 30 years of obsessing,
it dawns on me that Dr. Mueller
might have tailored this notion of self-birth
specifically to me.
My mother was a violent bipolar manic depressive.
This is Judy's husband, Neil.
Who also was very, very intelligent, brilliant.
She's a painter. She was capable of a lot. But she was also
very aggressive and unable to be a mother.
Neil and Judy were newlyweds when Judy encouraged him to start seeing Dr. Mueller.
For the most part, things in Neil's life were going great. His career was taking off,
and he finally felt settled. But when it came to dealing
with his mother, Neil says he had no control. She'd phone at all hours, sometimes even threatening
suicide. One night she phoned saying she was about to jump off her balcony, and so that very night,
Neil rushed to the airport to fly to her. When he arrived at her home, he expected to see her body
on the ground outside,
but she was inside her apartment.
She just wanted to see him.
What finally pushed him to the breaking point was the time he called her from his hotel while away on a business trip.
And she says, you're having an affair.
And she gets into this vile bile about me having an affair and betraying my marriage,
I'm going to tell your wife.
Neil wasn't worried that his wife would believe his mother.
He was worried about the lengths his mother was willing to go to,
to assert control.
I told my wife, I said, don't worry, I'm taking care of it.
You know, she's crazy again, she's leaving these messages,
but I'm making it better, I'm taking care of it, whatever I said.
And my wife began to cry.
She said, you'll never take care of it.
This will never go away.
Neil was a full-grown man with no idea how to deal with his mother.
Desperate, he played Dr. Mueller
the threatening voice messages his mother had left.
Dr. Mueller just, she bowed her head
and she just looked down and she said,
oh, wow.
She was like really like, oh, wow.
And she gave me a script.
She said, okay, say this.
Neil still has the original piece of paper upon which he dictated Dr. Muller's words.
This is a little kind of yellowy, you know, two by four piece of paper.
It says here, dear mother,
what you've done has done damage to my life.
From here on, you can sustain a relationship with me if you behave in a positive, constructive way.
But at the moment, it's better that we don't talk.
I think that's kind of where all, I mean, there's nothing really more.
Neil acknowledges that it wasn't much, really just a couple of lines.
But for him, it was enough.
It was the first time he'd ever dared talk to his mother this way.
It was hard for me to read this.
You know, I was scared.
After he read it, Neil says he and his mother didn't speak.
For ten years.
Which sounds insane for people who have normal parents.
You know, I mean, I'm always measuring this,
but she knew I was never going to come back until she started to behave better.
And so a decade passed. And then one day,
my mother called me and she was totally cooled out. She just said, I'm really sorry. I get it.
I understand you were right. Please forgive me. Please forgive me. And her voice had all of that in it. It wasn't, she was, she really meant it. And from that day forward, if you can believe
it, we had a relationship after that, a loving one. She never lashed out or was aggressive. It was over.
And I had that relationship with her up until my mother passed away a couple of years ago.
Whatever it was, I never would have had those final few years with her.
I have it because of the sessions with Dr. Mueller.
So imagine, excuse me, so imagine how I think about Dr. Mueller.
Toward the end of Neil's therapy, Dr. Mueller was diagnosed with cancer.
It made her weak, and in the last year,
she would disappear during their sessions for long stretches in the bathroom.
The last time I saw her, she...
She shook my hand goodbye. It was a very brave, gracious, dignified thing.
The way she did it, she said, good luck.
I mean, she meant it.
She was like saying, good luck with all of you.
All of you, Neil, like, just good luck.
And she looked at me in the eye and...
Anyway, so she shook my hand,
and that forever is burnt into my brain.
About a year after Neil stopped seeing her,
at the age of 77, Dr. Mueller died of cancer.
Dr. Mueller died of cancer.
As with me, Dr. Mueller wasn't very interested in learning about Neil's past.
But unlike me, from time to time, Neil did learn something about hers.
Particularly towards the end.
As the bigger issues in his therapy receded, and a sort of friendship emerged, they just talked.
Sometimes, about her family life back in Germany.
I think they were fairly wealthy.
I think a very professional, wealthy family.
I think her father was a doctor.
They had a beautiful home, many stories.
And then the Nazis came, and they absconded their home and used it for headquarters.
And her bitterness about the war is that as a German, she was regarded as the enemy.
So I think that kind of smarted.
She constantly talked about Jews were not the only victims.
And it was confusing for her to work with Jews, I think.
She never said that, but I think that she saw a lot of Jewish people in Montreal and the attitude towards Germans.
So I think that had to play back
on her own wounds because she exposed her wounds. And I think I always thought that her, we were
also, we were part of her therapy.
Was our Jewish clientele merely a coincidence,
or were we, as Neil believed, a part of Dr. Mueller's own therapy?
And if we were, what was she trying to heal?
Was there some part of her past that she couldn't simply stick in a desk drawer and never bring up again?
While Dr. Mueller had never been very interested in my past,
I was now quite interested in hers.
Dr. Muller's obituary mentions a son, Bruno.
He's a retired computer systems consultant.
He agreed to talk, but didn't want to be recorded.
When I ask about his mother's life during the war,
he tells me all he has are snippets.
The past, Bruno tells me, didn't come up much as dinner conversation.
Given his mother's feelings about the past, it makes sense.
What he does know is this.
She was born Anna Carola Cumpa, and she was an athlete.
She played tennis competitively and was a strong enough swimmer to attempt an escape during the Allied invasion by swimming across the Rhine.
As she swam, Bruno says, snipers from the other side fired at her.
Bruno tells me his grandfather was a doctor
who was eventually captured by the Russians
and sent to a Soviet prison camp.
These camps were notoriously brutal,
with hundreds of thousands of German captives
dying from violence, malnutrition, or forced labor. For years, Dr.
Mueller didn't know whether her father was alive or dead. On the day of an Allied bombing campaign
that would devastate her hometown, Dr. Mueller's family didn't have time to make it to the local
bomb shelter, which was fortunate because it was destroyed. Instead, the family hid in their
garden shed,
which turned out to be the only part of the house
that survived the devastation.
The bombing wasn't supposed to hit Efferen that hard.
Annika is a journalist who lives near Efferen,
where Dr. Mueller grew up.
They were actually aiming at the harbor in Cologne,
but they had the order not to return with all the weapons.
Like, get rid of all your bombs
before you get back home.
Don't go around flying with all the bombs,
but just drop them somewhere.
And so, unfortunately,
they were dropped on Ephraim.
I'd commissioned Danica to find out
anything she could about the Muellers,
so she'd wandered the streets of Ephraim
looking for traces of the family. But most of the people who lived in Efren during the war are now gone.
I asked if she was able to find out anything about Dr. Mueller's father,
anything that might elaborate on his capture by the Russians.
What I did come across, and that kind of struck me, was that he was in a Nazi doctors' union at the time.
So the doctors in this union, their job was it to tell people from a medical perspective why one race would be superior to another race.
Eugenics.
Exactly.
The mission of the National Social Astrobund, as the Union was called, was to
make sure doctors were aligned with the Nazi spirit.
We can't know for certain that Dr. Müller's father wasn't forced to join, but we do know
that by the end of the war, half of the 90,000 doctors in Germany were not members of the
Asterbund.
In other words, you didn't have to be in the Union to practice medicine.
On top of that, there's this.
He wasn't just a member,
but he is listed as like the Kreisamtsleiter,
which, okay, how do I translate this?
The rough translation is that Dr. Mueller's father
was an upper level manager in the Nazi Physicians League.
He oversaw a district of two million people.
While it's impossible to know his private intentions and beliefs,
given the prestige of his position, it's unlikely he was a secret hero of the resistance.
A leader of his rank, let alone a medical leader, would at the very least have been aware of the systematic sterilization
and execution of those deemed undesirable,
among them the so-called mentally ill.
No wonder Dr. Mueller might have felt compelled to leave the past where it was.
What are your recollections of Herbert and his wife?
Good people.
I'm proud to know.
I'm glad to be their friend.
Once again, I find myself speaking to a German psychiatrist in Montreal.
His name is Dr. Gert Morgenstern,
and he was close to Dr. Mueller and her husband, Herbert,
both as friends and colleagues.
They would gather at Dr. Morgenstern's home in a quiet neighborhood in Montreal,
where Dr. Mueller's husband, Herbert, and he played music together.
Herbert on the flute, Dr. Morgenstern on the piano.
Dr. Mueller would wander in and out, listening to them play. She spent many hours in Dr. Morgenstern on the piano. Dr. Muller would wander in and out, listening to them play.
She spent many hours in Dr. Morgenstern's home. Dr. Morgenstern's son, Mark, explained at the
beginning of the conversation that his father might not have much to offer. In recent years,
his memory has begun to falter, and much of Dr. Morgenstern's past has become lost to him.
But since this might be the only chance I get to talk to someone who actually knew Dr. Morgenstern's past has become lost to him. But since this might be the only chance I get to
talk to someone who actually knew Dr. Mueller, who can speak to her as a friend, we decide to
give it a try. I ask Dr. Morgenstern if he remembers spending time with the Muellers.
Yes, I think so. It was pleasant. We look forward to it.
Mark says as his father's memory fails,
he's held on to the happy memories
and allowed a lot of the painful ones to go.
Like the Muellers, Dr. Morgenstern was a German
who immigrated to Canada.
But unlike the Muellers, he was a Jew.
He fled Germany in 1937, a year before Kristallnacht.
You both immigrated from Germany.
Was that a subject that came up?
I don't remember it.
Life during the war?
No, I don't remember any of that.
So she never talked with you about what she went through during the war?
Not that I remember.
What we talked about was what we were doing
and what we were planning to do.
Dr. Morgenstern says they never talked about the past,
that they didn't talk about their religions,
didn't even talk about psychology,
and they never discussed Germany.
Mark says that after fleeing,
his father never spoke a word of German again.
So if they didn't talk about the past,
what did they do together?
Make music and talk. And what did you like't talk about the past, what did they do together? Make music and talk.
What did you like to talk about?
The music we were playing.
Because he was a fellow therapist, as well as her friend,
I ask him what he knows about Dr. Mueller's practice, her approach.
Throughout our conversation, Dr. Morgenstern's answers are brief,
a few words at most. But when I ask him about Dr. Mueller's insistence on self-birth, and whether it was
an idea that she tailored to my situation, or some obscure therapeutic method, Dr. Morgenstern
grows animated. She wasn't doing a method. She invented what she said.
It's a continual process, an attitude toward life.
In other words, you're actively producing your future in your present.
You have decisions to make.
You have memories to make, you have memories to select, and you are building your future that way. But you never actually finish giving birth to
yourself. It never is a completed act.
While I'd taken my inability to give birth to myself as a failing of either myself or of Dr. Mueller,
it wasn't really.
Maybe Dr. Mueller telling me over and over
that birth was imminent was her way of saying,
there is no end point.
It's just living.
And that's the point.
Anna Carola Kumpel, the daughter of a doctor who served a regime that treated the mentally ill as a blight upon humanity,
left Germany to become Anna Carola Müller,
who became not only a doctor, but a psychiatrist,
and one who tended to Jews or anyone else who needed her help.
You are not your past.
You are not your father or your family.
Or at least you do not have to be.
You are the thing that you make,
which is a lesson Dr. Mueller must have had to learn for herself
before she could pass it on to others,
before she could pass it on to others, before she could pass it on to me.
Even though I still don't have what Dr. Muller might call a philosophy,
I eventually came to see that what's the use was never the right question.
The most important things in life have no use.
And maybe this is the closest I've come
to words to live by. guitar solo
guitar solo
guitar solo
guitar solo
Now that the furniture's returning to its goodwill home
Now that the last month's rent is scheming with the damage deposit
Take this moment to decide
If we meant it, if we meant it if we tried
or felt around
for far too much
for things
that accidentally
touched
This episode of Heavyweight
was produced by me,
Jonathan Goldstein,
along with Stevie Lane,
B.A. Parker,
and Kalila Holt.
The show is edited by Jorge Just.
Special thanks to Emily Condon, Tim Howard, Annika Witzel, Sir Richard Evans,
Dr. Robert Proctor, Alex Bloomberg, Louisa Beck, Emmanuel Berry, David Berman, and Jackie Cohen.
Bobby Lord mixed the episode with original music by Christine Fellows,
John K. Sampson, Blue Dot Sessions, and Bobby Lord mixed the episode with original music by Christine Fellows, John K. Sampson, Blue Dot Sessions, and Bobby Lord.
Additional music credits can be found on our website,
gimletmedia.com, slash heavyweight.
Our theme song is by The Weaker Thans, courtesy of Epitaph Records,
and our ad music is by Haley Shaw.
Follow us on Twitter at Heavyweight,
or email us at heavyweight at gimletmedia.com.
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