Heavyweight - #35 Rachel and Jon
Episode Date: November 12, 2020Rachel and Jon are siblings who were separated as young children. Jonathan helps them confront the woman responsible... fifty years later. Credits Heavyweight is hosted and produced by Jonathan Goldst...ein. This episode was produced by Kalila Holt, along with Stevie Lane. Special thanks to Emily Condon, Alex Blumberg, PJ Vogt, Mohini Madgavkar, Nabeel Chollampat, and Jackie Cohen. The show was mixed by Bobby Lord. Music by Christine Fellows, John K Samson, Blue Dot Sessions, and Bobby Lord. Our theme song is by The Weakerthans courtesy of Epitaph Records. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Hi, John.
I am Robo Goldstein.
Oh, boy.
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Pass me the scalpel.
I'd love to chat.
Would you?
Would you really?
Would you love to continue to chat with me?
No.
How many people are you able to be that honest with?
Just you
Well, that's kind of special, right?
I know, eh? Good point
That is a good point, you see?
It's a very special bond
From Gimlet Media, I'm Jonathan Goldstein, and this is Heavyweight.
Today's episode, Rachel and John.
Right after the break.
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You ready to start? I'm ready to start?
I'm ready to start.
You're sitting down?
Yeah.
Okay, your eyes closed?
Mm-hmm.
Anything you see where there's some feelings, that's what we're looking for.
Okay.
This is a therapist named Alvin in session with a patient named Ted.
What are you feeling? Can you describe it?
Like, it's happening right now? Right now? The session was recorded
as a part of an educational psychotherapy video series.
In the session, Alvin is helping Ted relive a memory,
the time his domineering father-in-law
was rude to his wife.
And he's all dressed up.
Hi, Jenny. Yeah.
Oh, there he is. Hold your...
And he's... Yeah, there's a formal thing. He's like, you know, good to see... We have to... It's like the minute we talk to each other, our voices drop. Yeah. And he's all dressed up. Hi, Jenny. Yeah. Oh, there he is. Oh, hello. And he's, yeah, there's a formal thing.
It's like, you know, good to see.
We have to, it's like the minute we talk to each other, our voices drop.
Yeah.
Hi, how are you?
Yes, yes.
Alvin's eyes are shut tight.
His method is to try to will himself into the patient's skin,
to feel what the patient is feeling.
I can do this better than you.
Watch me.
Okay.
Ready?
Okay, okay.
I'm going to put my arms around you.
I'm going to bring you kind of close.
I'm doing better than you, huh?
Yeah.
Yeah, good.
Alvin does voices and role plays,
and at times the session feels like avant-garde improv.
It's playful and honestly kind of bizarre.
But the point of it all is to help the patient
rehearse behavior in the office
that he can then apply in real life.
Touch her. Touch her. Oh, Jen. Yeah. Hold her. And then, Jen, I like you so much.
By the end of the session, Alvin has turned Ted, a meek, buttoned-up patient,
into someone capable of expressing himself emotionally.
Going to be this way with Jenny, because you rehearsed it. We got it, huh? I'm ready.
We have this ability within us to become a whole new person.
Alvin died in 2014.
But this is Howard,
a psychotherapist
and one of Alvin's disciples.
Howard runs Alvin's website and publishes his books.
Are you talking a little hyperbolically when you say a whole new person?
No, it is that radical, Jonathan.
It's to become a whole new person.
The term he used is an optimal person.
And discover that within yourself.
According to Alvin, once you've discovered this optimal personhood,
you can shake off what others want and live on your own terms.
It changed my life direction.
And for these kinds of radical results,
Alvin was given a Lifetime Achievement Award
from the American Psychological Association.
One psychology textbook even goes so far as to describe Alvin
as being, quote, as important as Freud.
But this isn't a story about Alvin's professional life,
his life inside the office.
This is a story about Alvin's real life.
He insisted I run away. This is Rachel, Alvin's real life. He insisted I run away.
This is Rachel, Alvin's daughter.
And I did.
How old were you?
I was in grade five.
The year was 1970.
Alvin and Rachel's mom had been locked in an ugly custody battle for eight years.
Rachel's mom was poor and struggled with
depression. Rachel really wanted to live with her dad. So when Alvin suggested she run away from
Judy in Denver to his house in Ohio, Rachel didn't pack a bag. She didn't say goodbye to anyone.
She just left. Like he set up this whole thing with his lawyer, and I just felt like I needed to do what my dad and the lawyer told me,
and this was the right thing.
I think I said I was going to the library,
and somehow, I don't remember how I got to the lawyer's office,
and then they took me to the airport and put me on the plane, and I left.
Alvin had gotten remarried
to a woman with two kids
and Rachel loved feeling
like she was a part
of this happy family.
There were dogs to play with
and bikes to ride.
And yet,
this other feeling
would often creep in.
I miss my mom.
I miss my friends.
I miss my cat.
But I could never, ever, ever say that out loud to anybody.
And there was someone else Rachel missed.
Missed most of all.
She told us she was going to the library.
And then she never came back.
This is Rachel's brother, John.
He's two and a half years younger than Rachel
and only has flashes of early childhood memory about Alvin.
He recalls doing father-son things that'd make perfect sense
if the son was an adult,
things like lifting weights together and smoking.
He was a pipe smoker.
He bought me my own little cherry wood pipe,
and, you know, as a four-year-old,
he actually had me smoking, you know, tobacco in the pipe with him.
It was as though Alvin couldn't distinguish between adults and children,
which was why he saw John's closeness with his mom
not as a child's natural maternal attachment,
but rather as a personal slight.
And so Alvin never asked John to run away. John was left behind in Denver with Judy.
I think in his mind, I just, you know, was more a mama's boy and a chip off Judy's block. And
I think he sort of gave up on me. And he was really focused on Rachel.
And as the final custody hearing approached,
Alvin's focus on Rachel intensified.
He wanted to prove to the court that Rachel was better off with him.
So he had about a half dozen social workers and psychologists offer assessments.
Rachel was interviewed, and Alvin's new family observed.
None of the experts spoke
to Judy. And the plan worked. In the autumn of 1970, a judge ruled that Rachel would be allowed
to stay in Ohio with Al for good, but John would remain in Denver with Judy. And we never lived again. When you have a sibling who is just a critical part of your family and then you're
separated from them, it's a wound. How uncommon was an arrangement like that? Extreme. Yeah, very, very uncommon. Kids are not split up.
We each grew up alone.
I missed her through my whole childhood.
I missed her a lot.
I mean, we were,
we were so close when we were young
and, you know,
she was the big sister
who through all of that
was looking out for me
growing up from then on
just me and my mom
grew up as an only child
and my mom just always
being in pain
and she never was able to enjoy
whatever it is we were doing at the moment
it was always oh if only Rachel were here,
we could all be together.
And I'd be saying, but we're here now.
When he turned 13, John invited Rachel to his bar mitzvah,
but Alvin wouldn't let her go.
Rachel sent a poem instead.
It had to do with a rubber band
stretching across the distance and connecting us.
For John, not only did he lose his big sister, he also lost his dad.
Year after year, John tried to re-enter Alvin's life.
But each time he reached out, Alvin rebuked him.
One time, as an adolescent, John tried
scheduling a visit. And he said, well, as long as you guys, you know, me and my mom required any
money, any child support, there'd be no visit. And I said, well, it sounds like you care more
about money than about me. And he said, well, I don't want it to just sound
like that. That's how it is. Nevertheless, a few years later, John asked once again if he could
come visit. By this point, Rachel was 18 and no longer living with Alvin. So when Alvin refused
John yet again,
Rachel told her brother to come visit her instead.
They hadn't seen each other in eight years.
Was she the same sister that you remembered?
Um, no.
I mean, I knew her as a, you know,
six, seven, eight, nine, ten-year-old.
Next time I saw her, she was an adult.
In the years since that visit,
Rachel and John have made a point of staying in each other's lives.
They talk on the phone, celebrate holidays together,
and once a year their families all take a trip.
But their childhood together, that's been lost.
I mean, my daughter certainly watches us
and thinks that we're more like cousins.
She can see the disconnect because we did not grow up together. John and Rachel still have
questions about their childhood. But now that their parents are both dead, they have no one to ask.
So they parse through their separate memories, trying to construct a timeline, comparing moments of overlap and filling in the blanks.
To this end, one night while John was visiting Rachel for Thanksgiving,
he asked if they could go through Alvin's files.
Alvin was an obsessive record keeper,
and after he died, Rachel inherited his papers.
She'd never really gone through them,
keeping them stored away in a filing cabinet.
But that night, she pulled them out,
and together, John and Rachel made a series of disturbing discoveries.
The first of which was the script.
The script, for me, was like, oh my God.
The script was a lengthy diatribe written by Alvin
from the point of view of a child, Rachel's point of view.
In it, Alvin refers to himself as Daddy, Judy as Mother, or Judy, or simply She.
I later ask Rachel to read some over the phone.
Two and a half pages long in small psychologist writing.
Okay, so here I go. It's,
half pages long in small psychologist writing. Okay, so here I go. It's in my good happy dreams,
custody is changed and I live with daddy. If I am forced to go back and live with mother,
it will only be till the day I'm 14, which apparently was when you could decide.
When I'm with her, I feel scared that I might get tight and angry and cold like Judy.
She's not a mother. She is a keeper.
She makes me feel like I'm in a prison.
I can't let her touch me.
It was like finding your childhood internal monologue committed to paper and written in your father's handwriting.
Rachel didn't remember seeing the script as a kid,
but she remembered saying those kid, but she remembered
saying those things, and she remembered thinking them. In one of Alvin's many books, a volume
entitled The Manual of Optimal Behavior, he writes that behavior can be rehearsed and modified,
quote, until you are ready and eager to go ahead and do what you have rehearsed and modified.
Unbeknownst to her,
Alvin was having Rachel rehearse and modify.
It was so explicit.
There was nothing subtle about it.
You know, the whole thing was sick.
The second thing discovered among the files was a letter from Rachel to her mom.
In it, she begs Judy to let her live with Alvin.
But there were two copies,
one written in Rachel's hand
and one written in Alvin's.
Going through the papers,
Rachel remembered other things.
How Alvin encouraged her
not to smile when she was with her mom,
saying if someone photographed her happy,
it could be used as evidence against him in court.
In every photo from that period with her mother,
Rachel is wearing a frown.
That's when I started questioning
and started to realize that I was coached or brainwashed.
It made sense.
For most of her adult life,
Rachel had had no memory of loving her mom.
It was only after her mother's death,
when she found Mother's Day and birthday cards
she'd written to Judy when she was very small,
that Rachel realized she had.
I love you, Mommy, she'd written.
I love you so much.
But with Al's constant coaching,
it had all been stamped out.
The final thing John and Rachel found that night
were those psychological reports
Alvin had Rachel submit to
just before the final custody hearing.
In them, you see Alvin's scripting bear out.
One report notes that Rachel kept repeating,
quote, I want to live with my father.
He loves me.
My mother doesn't love me.
The report notes that she said this with, quote, grim determination.
They also uncovered one particular report that night
that was longer than any of the others.
It was the only one that evaluated both John and Rachel,
and in this, it carried the most weight.
And what shocked John and Rachel most of all...
My dad clearly edited it,
and then she rewrote it with the edits
and submitted that rewrite.
Is that ethical as a social worker?
No, oh no. No, no, no, no, no. No, it's not. No. Oh no. No, no. No one should ever let
anybody else, especially their client, edit their reports. No, it's really bad.
The report was written by a social worker named Joyce.
Alvin's edits to Joyce's report made the language more emphatic.
For example, where Joyce had written that Rachel was hesitant when it came to Judy,
Alvin changed it to say she was fearful.
In another spot, he added that Rachel wanted to blot out any memory of ever having been away from him.
Honestly, I mean, it was horrifying.
You know, just to see the detailed notes,
to see the edited drafts, the crossouts, and his handwriting,
and then the final version that was submitted to the courts
with his edits in there.
Like, there's no question what happened.
The report concludes with a recommendation,
the strongest one of any report,
and the only recommendation of its kind.
She recommended that I live with him
and that my brother live with my mom.
John and Rachel's separation came down to a decision dictated by Alvin and signed off on by Joyce.
How was Alvin able to exert this kind of power over a social worker,
someone who was supposed to be an impartial outsider?
John and Rachel couldn't understand it. But that night, when Rachel googled Joyce, she was shocked to realize
that Joyce hadn't been an impartial outsider at all. Joyce was a family friend.
Rachel recognized Joyce as the kind, dark-haired woman whose house she visited as a child.
Rachel would bring her cello over to play music with
Joyce and her family, which means that, on top of everything else wrong with the report,
Joyce should never have been the person to write it in the first place.
She was like the one person in my life as a kid who could have said, hey, I think you're coaching
her, and this isn't right.
Why are we going to try and split these kids up?
She was the one who could have said something.
In 1970, Joyce recommended that my sister go with my father and that I go with my mother, and that's what happened.
And that dictated the course of my life. What happened?
This is the question that's been nagging at John and Rachel since they found the report.
How could this have happened? And so, John and Rachel want to find Joyce and ask her.
What I don't fully understand, though, is what I have to offer. Rachel and John are both
practicing therapists themselves. They're more than capable of posing difficult questions.
And although I play a mental health semi-professional, semi-convincingly on a podcast,
I'm not actually one at all. What can I do? Well, so I have had to advocate for myself my entire life from a very young age.
And nobody advocated for me or my brother.
And so if you could help me with this, it would be a healing piece for me that somebody else advocated for me.
After the break,
in search of Joyce.
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I find Joyce, the social worker's Facebook and email address right away. And I messaged to ask if she'd be willing to speak with John and Rachel about their parents' custody battle.
I don't hear back for several weeks,
and during this time, my thoughts keep returning to Alvin
and the video of his session with Ted, the meek, buttoned-up patient.
Touch her, touch her.
Oh, Chad.
Throughout, Alvin tries to help Ted release his bottled-up feelings.
I can do this better than you. Watch me.
Okay. Okay. Okay.
What's happening inside me right now?
Over my chest, I'm having...
But what felt like a brand of extreme empathy in the first viewing
now feels like something else.
I'm going to put my arms around you.
I'm doing better than you, huh?
Yeah.
Now it feels as though Alvin is scripting the outcome.
If you want to cry, go ahead.
Go ahead.
It's okay.
Go on.
At one point, Alvin tells Ted to cry.
Ted, it's okay.
Go ahead.
Cry.
Go on.
It's all right.
Ted is not anywhere close to crying.
Ted, you're starting to cry.
Go ahead.
Let yourself.
Let yourself.
Go on.
It's all right.
Go on.
Do it.
Ted is not starting to cry.
But Alvin insists.
Ted, you're on the verge of crying. Do it. Now. Cry. Go ahead. Ted is not starting to cry, but Alvin insists.
And then, a tear appears in the corner of Ted's eye.
It rolls down his cheek.
It's as though Alvin has conjured it into being through sheer force of his own will.
Good for you, good for you, great, great.
Okay, now.
The video is a part of a series produced
by the American Psychological Association
intended to showcase
prestigious psychologists in session.
The way the series works is that
for privacy reasons, the patients
are portrayed by actors.
As the credits roll, I learn that
while Alvin the therapist is Alvin
the therapist, Ted the therapist is Alvin the therapist,
Ted the patient is actually Bob, the actor.
It was a quick shoot. It wasn't a rehearsal per se.
We just kind of went in and improvised.
This is Bob, and performance-wise, Bob has done it all.
Juggled swords, cracked whips, beaten fire.
I've done, for ten years I did a stage hypnosis show.
Bob is a regular Renaissance man, in that he also worked at a Renaissance fair. When Bob showed up to film that day, he was asked to
improvise some sort of marital problem that Alvin could help solve by bringing his method to bear.
I asked Bob if he found Alvin's behavior domineering, but Bob doesn't recall much.
There is one thing, though,
that Bob does still recall,
even 13 years later.
It seems Bob wasn't Alvin's first choice of patient.
He had had someone else do it before,
I think it was an African-American lady,
and it didn't go the way it needed to.
Do you know what I mean?
Can you elaborate?
He showed it to me briefly.
Bob describes the video Alvin showed him before they started filming that day. In it, the setup was the same as it was for Bob's shoot.
Alvin was in an armchair, his legs up on an ottoman. Except this time, in the armchair beside
him was the actress. Like Bob, the actress in the video had been asked to come up with a marriage problem,
but in doing so, the actress went to a darker place than Alvin anticipated,
describing a husband who was vicious and cruel. Nonetheless, Alvin tried to offer counsel.
He was saying things like, when he behaves in this way, can you be playful about it?
And the actress said things like, when he calls me names, suggesting that
he might be in some ways borderline, at the very least, verbally abusive.
It seemed there was the way the actress was given to talking about an abusive relationship.
And then there was the way that Alvin preferred her to talk about one.
And so the actress was replaced and Bob was shown her video to illustrate what Alvin did not want.
It's, You know, I
got the message, I guess.
Still not having received a response
from Joyce, I decide to mail a
letter. And just a few days later,
I find an email in my inbox.
In it, Joyce
tells me she's not sure how much help she
can be. She reminds me that
it has been 50 years.
But, she says, she's willing to
try. She concludes the
email by saying, please feel
free to contact me if you wish.
Joyce. Hello. Hello. I think your sister's here too. Here we are.
Hello. Hello. The last time John and Rachel saw Joyce, they were children.
They're now in their 50s and 60s.
Because of the pandemic, the meeting between Rachel, John, and Joyce will have to take place over Zoom.
John and Rachel joined first from their respective homes.
So how are you guys feeling today?
Quite anxious, actually.
What about you, Brother John?
I'm more nervous than I thought I would be.
John is seated in a chair, his posture upright.
Rachel is sitting back on a couch.
Go ahead and talk a little bit.
What did you have for breakfast?
I had yogurt and blueberries, yeah.
Me too.
And yogurt and blueberries, yeah.
Me too.
I can see that Joyce is in the Zoom waiting room.
Waiting.
Back in my day, a waiting room had all kinds of stuff to keep you occupied,
like lukewarm water you could drink from a paper cup,
or a 20-year-old copy of Vogue.
But now waiting rooms are so metaphysical. There's nothing to do in them.
I suggest we let Joyce in. Okay. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Uh, yeah. Let's, let's do it.
Joyce appears on the screen wearing a bright blue sweater and a colorful ascot that gives her the
affect of a fun grandmother. Standing beside Joyce is a middle-aged man who I assume is her son.
He's helping her get set up.
Hello.
Hello?
Joyce and her son frown at the computer.
It seems they're having sound issues.
There's a long moment in which we all look at each other
in silence.
And then...
Hello.
Hi.
Joyce.
Joyce settles into an armchair.
Well, do you all look familiar to each other?
No.
Well, it's been a long time.
I'm Rachel.
Hi, Joyce.
Hi, Rachel.
Hi, I'm John.
You're John.
So, Joyce, do you...
You're John.
So, Joyce, do you, I know John and Rachel are curious about just how much you remember.
Maybe.
Virtually nothing.
So I wasn't clear what I can do for you.
I'm certainly willing to try. so I think what we're remembering from that time or what we know is that my dad and my mom were in
a very I don't know if you remember a bitter custody battle and there were so many court
battles and one of the reports was done by by you so we wanted to talk to you about that and find out what you remembered about that.
Joyce inhales to clench teeth,
shakes her head.
Oh, I really don't know what happened.
We want to, we think our father
influenced kind of everybody he met in a very heavy-handed way.
Yes, I would certainly agree with that.
You know, saying Al was heavy-handed is an understatement.
Joyce's husband at the time was a colleague of Alvin's.
That's how she first came to know Alvin.
He and her husband both taught
in the local university's psychology department.
Joyce says her husband would always come home
with Al stories.
Acting out at meetings
and shouting out inappropriate stuff.
So he was very controlling.
He took control of any social situation.
One party at my house, he was a guest,
along with the other members of the psych department.
And he just took control of the whole evening.
And of course, the more people drank, the more intense it got.
I think the focus was on people's dreams
and dream analysis.
For Alvin, a Freudian,
this meant exploring each partygoer's dream
for hidden sexual desires that he, Alvin,
could then expound upon in a room full of colleagues.
Joyce relates the anecdote to illustrate the kind of guy Alvin was.
But John hears something else in the story.
So you all socialized?
Well...
John is trying to remind Joyce that she was Alvin's friend,
that writing the report wasn't appropriate.
But the implication goes over Joyce's head.
The department wasn't a big one. And it was close-knit. And everybody got together.
Friday, what do you do? You hang out with the people that you know best.
And that was in the department.
out with the people that you know best. And that was in the department. What kinds of questions did you have that I can help with or that I might answer or speculate about?
You don't remember evaluating us. You don't remember having that role?
No. I guess I'm curious if you remember um because I would
have said also like I want to live with my dad and I love living here but I was coached
like don't smile if someone takes a picture of you with your mother oh Rachel oh Rachel
could you see that at all?
No, this is all news to me.
Did you do other custody evaluations? Was that a part of your practice?
That may have been one of the first ones.
And it was at his request that I did that initially.
It was at Al's request, you're saying?
Oh, yeah. Yeah.
Do you remember any thoughts or feelings that, you know, maybe it's not appropriate for me to evaluate someone that I socialize?
No, no, not really. Because this was in the beginning of our arrival, and so we weren't
really socializing at that point. At that point, Joyce and her husband had just arrived in town.
While her husband taught at the university, Joyce did not. She hoped to someday, but she was still
fairly young. And at the time, the only women in the psych department were grad students and secretaries.
So when Alvin, this larger-than-life figure, came asking for a favor, it felt hard to say no.
He was chair of that program.
And, you know, I was new in town.
I'm a people pleaser.
new in town.
I'm a people pleaser.
So I think that that added to my
vulnerability to Al.
Well, I want to make sure
that you
know that
your report
recommends that we're split up.
Joyce
takes off her glasses.
She places them in her lap.
Oh, wow.
I am sorry.
I never would have done something like that.
And hearing that I did makes me feel terrible.
So that's a surprise to you.
It's a total surprise.
And it's totally against everything I believe.
It's horrifying.
I don't know what prompted it or what precipitated it.
I don't know.
I'm sorry.
But of course, there's more.
You know, we can see Al crossing out words and phrases that you wrote
and then rewriting them in stronger language.
And then it's that stronger language that's in the final report.
I'm appalled by that.
I hate to keep repeating myself, but I am truly sorry that that happened
and had terrible consequences.
I have a stomach ache.
I feel terrible that it turned out that way.
I feel awful that I had a part in that or that I'm perceived to have had it.
Well, I did.
I mean, I can't say I didn't if I wrote it.
This is something Joyce does a few times.
She'll start to say something like, if I did this,
but then she'll correct herself. Rachel has the report standing by to hold to the camera so Joyce
can see it for herself, see her own signature. But that never becomes necessary. Even though
she doesn't remember, Joyce believes John and Rachel, and so she doesn't cop out or equivocate.
leaves John and Rachel, and so she doesn't cop out or equivocate.
If I did something like that, or because I did something like that, I am so sorry, you guys.
There's anything I can do to mitigate in some small way.
And it means a lot that you say that.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah.
And it's not just words.
It's heartfelt.
It's really heartfelt.
Do you have any idea why he might have turned to you?
Well, to control the outcome, I think.
He was more comfortable with women because he could push them around.
Did you feel used by him?
Well, I guess he was using me, so yeah.
Joyce says the relationship with Alvin was short-lived.
The end came soon after Joyce invited Alvin and a few of his psychologist friends to
join her private practice. They accepted and all began working out of her office.
And we did that for a while. And then they decided that it wasn't appropriate to have a social worker
in the practice. So they asked me to leave. And it was at Al's instigation.
What he said to me was,
it's not that you're incompetent.
It's just that I don't know that you're competent.
And, you know, for me to remember this 50 years later,
says a lot, doesn't it?
So this was him kicking you out of the practice my practice my practice your practice
i remember you like very very very fondly. Well, you're kind.
You're kind.
You were a nice lady.
You were a good person.
And I see that now too.
I mean, I had every reason to feel that way.
Rachel will later tell me that because of the way her dad brainwashed her,
she often can't trust her memories.
So it feels good that her memory of Joyce is correct.
Joyce is nice. But Rachel is nice too and can sense memory of Joyce is correct. Joyce is nice, but Rachel is nice too,
and can sense how badly Joyce is feeling.
You know, I think my dad was so controlling,
and I have to think that my dad coerced you
and really pressured you to do that.
Mm-hmm.
Thank you.
You know, hopefully you can tell.
Rachel and I are okay.
We're really good parents.
We're close to our children.
We did not replicate any of this. Oh, really good parents. We're close to our children. We did not replicate
any of this.
Oh, that's wonderful. I'm so glad to hear that.
And I've been with my wife
37 years
and thankfully now
Rachel and I came back
together on our own and I'm very
close with my sister.
Oh, I'm so glad.
I'm so glad. I'm so glad.
Damage done to us
can often become damage we do to others.
And on it goes.
But watching John and Rachel,
I'm struck by the way they're breaking that cycle.
Not just in their lives,
but right here in the room.
Well, the Zoom room.
Just to be clear, Joyce,
I really appreciate what you're saying.
And really, really important to me that others just own and acknowledge their role in any dynamic, in any interaction.
If they do that, I'm good.
And Al, never. I tried in different ways. He would never
own any culpability, responsibility, anything. When John first became a psychologist,
he'd see Alvin at various conferences where Alvin was received as a star. For John,
it always occasioned
a weird mix of pride in his father's career
and bitterness over his personal rejection.
At one conference,
John attended Alvin's lecture
in the hope of forcing his father to talk to him.
Alvin saw John in the audience,
but afterwards made him wait online
along with all his adoring fans.
Eventually, John grew frustrated and left.
It's one of the mysteries of my life,
how he justified or rationalized to himself,
you know, having a son and supposedly loving him
and then just cutting him off and rejecting him
for the rest of your life.
I don't, I can't fathom that at all.
There was an email exchange over seven or eight months where I endeavored to answer that question,
that lifelong question of, you know, why?
And he just kept trying to sell me his books and, you know, it became this refrain,
have you read my book? Have you read my book?
And I'd say, if you would like me to read your book, send me a copy and I will read it.
No, he wants me to buy a book. He wanted me to buy a book.
In his emails to John,
Alvin wrote that it was a sophomoric myth that a parent should seek relationships with one's child.
I do not accept silly pop psychology truisms, he wrote.
Near the end of Alvin's life, John wanted to make one last effort to see his father,
so Alvin could meet his grandkids.
But Rachel counseled John not to go.
She said that Alvin would refuse to see him,
and was still so full of anger that he might even call the police.
After his death, Alvin left behind a will with a section listing the names
of those who'd wronged him. Each person was to receive a single dollar. Among them was John.
Back when I spoke to Al's disciple, Howard, he told me that Al was bedridden at the end of his
life, yet he was still focused on his therapeutic method. Just before he passed away, when I visited
him, he said, Howard, I'm working
on becoming more of an optimal person. I'm just doing it now. And he was like so energetic.
And do you, from your perspective, I mean, did he achieve that kind of like optimal personhood?
He said he had.
When I raised the subject of Alvin's relationship with his kids and how that connected to his optimal self,
Howard says he can't really speak to that.
Alvin didn't bring up his kids much.
There's a lot of stuff that goes on sometimes,
good and bad, and that's just what happens in life.
We live and we adjust and do what we have to do.
But I don't think whatever happens at a certain point in someone's life
should define them for who they are as a person overall.
Can you come back in a little bit, honey?
A little girl barges into Joyce's room.
She's wearing a lacy blue dress that's either a nightgown or a Cinderella costume.
I'll be with you in a little bit.
Thank you.
That's my six-year-old granddaughter.
Oh, she's cute.
Very cute.
We're sheltering in place together.
Yeah, that's nice.
Nice.
I'm very lucky.
Joyce, I'm so appreciative.
Thank you.
Yeah, thank you.
One can believe one is optimal,
just as one can believe one is fluent in French,
a talented singer, a good therapist.
But the only way to really know
is through one's relationship with others,
the ones who love us, who guide us,
who let us know when we wander astray.
For some, realizing your optimal self
does not occur in spite of other people,
but because of them.
My son is getting married in the backyard I'm looking at in a few weeks.
Congratulations.
Thank you.
It'll be a very small socially distanced wedding. 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 tried.
Or felt around for far too much
From things that accidentally touched
This episode of Heavyweight was produced by senior producer Kalila Holt,
along with Stevie Lane and me, Jonathan Goldstein.
Special thanks to Emily Condon, Alex Bloomberg, PJ Vogt, Mohini McGowker, Nabil Cholampat, and Jackie Cohen. Thank you. Our theme song is by The Weaker Thans, courtesy of Epitaph Records. Follow us on Twitter at Heavyweight or email us at heavyweight at gimletmedia.com.
This is the last episode of the season, but do not fear, there's still more Heavyweight to come.
We're doing three check-in episodes in December, exclusive to Spotify, but absolutely free and very easy to access.
I'll be joined by producers Kalila and Stevie.
There will be a conversation with best-selling writer
Curtis Sittenfeld and some segments that take advantage
of the music on Spotify's platform.
So these are things we couldn't do anywhere else
and we're pretty excited about that
and we hope you'll find it exciting too.
See you in December.
Sun in an empty room
Sun in an empty room Sun in an empty room
Sun in an empty room