The World Is a Strange Choice Right Now
A Therapist Reads Her Voicemail
by Julie Püttgen
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About the Book
As a writer, a therapist, and a first-generation francophone immigrant, I’m fascinated by how human beings attempt to convey our experiences to one another, and how our technologies mediate and shape those attempts. Recent conversations with other people whose families arrived here when they were children have helped me to understand something essential about the young immigrant’s experience: in the midst of various cultural fundamentalisms we know there is another way. Another language. Another way of framing lived experience. Another way to eat, dress, and move around. We don’t know yet which is our way. We just know that anyone who tells us there’s only one way is either lying, or ignorant.
So I am a therapist who is also an artist who is also a former Buddhist nun who is also a writer whose immigrant soul knows none of these lenses can by itself describe the complexity of what it is to be alive in a field of meaning that wants us to wake up.
In the infancy of the pandemic,we all found ourselves sudden immigrants to a new land whose rules we knew weren’t the only way to live, whose shores we found it impossible to leave. The ensuing Mental Health Epidemic could also be described as "everyone is displaced, all at once." Calls for help built to a crescendo. Something I didn’t know when I signed up for a Google Voice account for my therapy communications: Google AI would be archiving, transcribing, and in many cases distorting the words of anyone who left me clinical voicemails, for posterity. Like so many new immigrants, these callers’ attempts to share their experiences were altered and encapsulated in unpredictable ways.
This book can be described as a series of dialogue-form visits to a pandemic-era archive at the threshold between the spoken world and the secrecy of the therapy room. It can also be described as a series of dialogues within one immigrant therapist’s soul, as she navigates a new world and her role in it.
So I am a therapist who is also an artist who is also a former Buddhist nun who is also a writer whose immigrant soul knows none of these lenses can by itself describe the complexity of what it is to be alive in a field of meaning that wants us to wake up.
In the infancy of the pandemic,we all found ourselves sudden immigrants to a new land whose rules we knew weren’t the only way to live, whose shores we found it impossible to leave. The ensuing Mental Health Epidemic could also be described as "everyone is displaced, all at once." Calls for help built to a crescendo. Something I didn’t know when I signed up for a Google Voice account for my therapy communications: Google AI would be archiving, transcribing, and in many cases distorting the words of anyone who left me clinical voicemails, for posterity. Like so many new immigrants, these callers’ attempts to share their experiences were altered and encapsulated in unpredictable ways.
This book can be described as a series of dialogue-form visits to a pandemic-era archive at the threshold between the spoken world and the secrecy of the therapy room. It can also be described as a series of dialogues within one immigrant therapist’s soul, as she navigates a new world and her role in it.
Author website
Features & Details
- Primary Category: Poetry
- Additional Categories Action / Adventure
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Project Option: 5×8 in, 13×20 cm
# of Pages: 180 -
Isbn
- Softcover: 9798875454455
- Publish Date: Oct 03, 2024
- Language English
- Keywords AI, creative nonfiction, therapy, pandemic
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About the Creator
Julie Puttgen
Lebanon, NH
I was born in 1972 in Lausanne, Switzerland, and attended Yale University (BA in Studio Art), Georgia State University (MFA in Drawing, Painting, and Printmaking), and Goddard College (MA in Clinical Mental Health Counseling / Expressive Arts Therapy). I move through the world as a writer of creative non-fiction, socially-engaged artist, teacher, lover of movement, backpacker Dharma bum, companion of rescue pups, former Buddhist nun, and present-day expressive arts and somatic therapist. I've been around the block, tried many things, succeeded and failed, and carried my heart through many of this world's wild, beautiful, boring, terrible, sacred spaces.