From: Mermaid . (britannica@hotmail.com)
Date: Sat Sep 21 2002 - 22:56:58 MDT
[Mermaid]The following is from Eric Berne's terribly outdated (but 
entertaining) book, Games People Play. I hope some of you will find it 
entertaining and/or interesting and/or useful.
<begin excerpt>
Games People Play, Eric Berne(c)1964.
page 159-162
Wooden Leg
Thesis: The most dramatic form of "Wooden Leg" is "The Plea of Insanity." 
This may be translated into transactional terms as follows: "What do you 
expect of someone as emotionally disturbed as I am-that I would refrain from 
killing people?" To which the jury is asked to reply: "Certainly not, we 
would hardly impose that restriction on you!" The "Plea of Insanity," played 
as a legal game, is acceptable to American culture and is different from the 
almost universally respected principle that an individual may be suffering 
from a psychosis so profound that no reasonable person would expect him to 
be responsible for his actions. In Japan drunkenness, and in Russia war-time 
military service, are accepted as excuses for evading responsibility for all 
kinds of outrageous behaviour(according to this writer's information).
The thesis of "Wooden Leg" is, "What do you expect of a man with a wooden 
leg?" Put that way, of course, no one would expect anything of a man with a 
wooden leg except that he should steer his own wheel chair. On the other 
hand, during World War II there was a man with a wooden leg who used to give 
demonstrations of jitterbug dancing, and very competent jitterbug dancing, 
at Army Hospital amputation centers. There are blind men who practice law 
and hold political offices(one such is currently mayor of the writer's home 
town), deaf men who practice psychiatry and handless men who can use a 
typewriter.
As long as someone with a real, exaggerated or even imaginary disability is 
content with his lot, perhaps no one should interfere. But the moment he 
presents himself for psychiatric treatment, the question arises if he is 
using his life to his own best advantage, and if he can rise above his 
disability. In this country, the therapist will be working in opposition to 
a large mass of educated public opinion. Even the close relatives of the 
patient who complained most loudly about the inconveniences caused by his 
infirmity, may eventually turn on the therapist if the patient makes 
definitive progress. This is readily understandable to a game analyst, but 
it makes his task no less difficult. All the people who were playing "I'm 
Only Trying to Help You" are threatened by the impending disruption of the 
game if the patient shows signs of striking out on his own, and sometimes 
they use almost incredible measures to terminate the treatment.
Both sides are illustrated by the case of the stuttering client of Miss 
Black's, mentioned in the discussion of the game "Indigence." This man 
played a classical form of "Wooden Leg". He was unable to find employment, 
which he correctly attributed to the fact that he was a stutterer, since the 
only career that interested him, he said, was that of a salesman. As a free 
citizen he had a right to seek employment in whatever field he chose, but as 
a stutterer, his choice raised some questions as to the purity of his 
motives. The reaction of the helpful agency when Miss Black attempted to 
break up this game was very unfavorable to her.
"Wooden Leg" is especially pernicious in clinical practice, because the 
patient may find a therapist who plays the same game with the same plea, so 
that progress is impossible. This is relatively easy to arrange in the case 
of the "Ideological Plea," "What do you expect of a man who lives in a 
society like ours?" One patient combined this with the "Psychosomatic Plea," 
"What do you expect of a man with psychosomatic symptoms?" He found a 
succession of therapists who would accept one plea but not the other, so 
that none of them either made him feel comfortable in his current position 
by accepting both pleas, or budged him from it by rejecting both. Thus he 
proved that psychiatry couldnt help people.
Some of the pleas which patients use to excuse symptomatic behaviour are 
colds, head injuries, situational stress, the stress of modern living, 
American culture and the economic system. A literate player has no 
difficulty in finding authorities to support him. "I drink because I'm 
Irish." "This wouldn't happen if lived in Russia or Tahiti." The fact is 
that patients in mental hospitals in Russia or Tahiti are very similar to 
those in American state hospitals. Special pleas of "If It Weren't For Them" 
or "They Let Me Down" should always be evaluated very carefully in clinical 
practice-and also in social research projects.
Slightly more sophisticated are such pleas as: What do you expect of a man 
who (a) comes from a broken home (b) is neurotic (c) is in analysis or (d) 
is suffering from a disease known as alcoholism? These are topped by, "If I 
stop doing this I wont be able to analyse it, and then I'll never get 
better."
The obverse of "Wooden Leg" is "Rickshaw," with the thesis, "If they only 
had (rickshaws) (duckbill platypuses) (girls who spoke ancient Egyptian) 
around this town, I never would have got into this mess.
Antithesis: Anti-"Wooden Leg" is not difficult if the therapist can 
distinguish clearly between his own Parent and Adult, and if the theraputic 
aim is explicitly understood by both parties.
On the Parental side, he can either be a "good" Parent or a "harsh" one. As 
a "good" Parent he can accept the patient's plea, especially if it fits in 
with his own viewpoints, perhaps with the rationalization that people are 
not responsible for their actions until they completed their therapy. As a 
"harsh" Parent he can reject the plea and engage in a contest of will with 
the patient. Both of these attitudes are already familiar to the "Wooden 
Leg" player, and he knows how to extract the maximum satisfactions from each 
of them.
As an Adult, the therapist declines both these opportunities. When the 
patient asks, "What do you expect of a neurotic?" (or whatever plea he is 
using at the moment) the reply is "I dont expect anything. The question is, 
what do you expect of yourself?" The only demand he makes is that the 
patient give a serious answer to this question, and the only concession he 
makes is to allow the patient a reasonable length of time to answer it: 
anywhere from six weeks to six months, depending on the relationship between 
them and the patient's previous preparation.
<end excerpt>
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