Eric Reinhart Profile picture
Aug 7, 2022 18 tweets 6 min read Read on X
I often take care of people after suicide attempts. When they explain why they tried to die, a large proportion say they could no longer see “the point” in life. “There’s no meaning for me, no reason to live.” Most clinicians push against this idea to dissuade people from it. 1/
Many are fearful of acknowledging truth in our patients’ words. I often find it useful to, rather than oppose this personal nihilism, instead lean into it. It’s more honest. Many who have made many attempts and seen countless psychiatrists immediately see through canned lines. 2/
Yes, there is no intrinsic meaning or purpose in your life. This is difficult; it’s also the reason there’s possibility for you. The task of living is to invent meaning and purpose, and then invent it again. It’s work. Much of the time it’s painful. Sometimes, it’s also joy. 3/
But this work of living is especially challenging in a society that doesn’t support people in the task of meaning-making and offers so few sites for cultivation of purpose with others—and many of those that exist are destructive.

It’s why I want us to build systems for this. 4/
It’s systems that offer meaningful, rewarding, and organized opportunities to both give & receive care that we most need to rebuild community, health, and safety in America. Rather than doubling down on failed police and prisons models, we need an entirely different paradigm. 5/
And it’s not just patients who need these systems to help generate a satisfying sense of meaning & purpose. We as doctors, therapists, social workers, nurses, & caregivers need this. Working in our failing US healthcare system is intensely demoralizing. We need more, together. 6/
Much of what’s called “burnout” in healthcare has less to do with poor working conditions—no worse than they were 20 years ago—than growing disillusionment. It’s increasingly hard to believe that our work is part of the solution rather than perpetuating our for-profit problem. 7/
It’s by building genuine community care systems via the practice of accompaniment in which the giving and receiving of care are intertwined that we can make Lilla Watson’s famous statement below mean something in both material and spiritual terms. 8/
bostonreview.net/articles/eric-… Image
This thread could just as easily have begun with the lives of people with whom I work who’ve committed acts of violence. Erosion of social fabric along with material deprivation due to neoliberal US policy has led to isolation and nihilism. Like community, safety demands care. 9/
“accompaniment is not simply good for public health [it’s also about] community-building, an ethically oriented politics of care, & the abolition of inherited structures of oppression that often subtly reproduce themselves in our efforts to undo them.” 10/
bostonreview.net/articles/eric-…
If you’ve read this far, figure I might as well try to get you to read my attempts to imagine ways forward. Hence the above essay and the below, which addresses the plague of public distrust from which we’re suffering and what it’ll take to end it. 11/
slate.com/news-and-polit…
And @gregggonsalves and @akapczynski’s essay, also linked in one of the subthreads above, lays out what I believe is an essential public system. My add would be that we should be even bolder: not 200,000 but an initial goal of 2 million workers. 12/
bostonreview.net/articles/gregg…
2 million community health+safety workers in America might sound unrealistically ambitious. But consider that it would be still only half the number employed by the law enforcement industry and less than half the number of nurses we have in the US. It’s a very realistic goal. 13/
To all those who’ve sent messages, I’ve read each one and wish I could engage in the way you deserve. Unfortunately, I cannot. This underlines why what we need is armies of accompagneuteurs working in community to provide care & simply be alongside those who are hurting most. 14/
Not why I posted this, but it happens I have an ideal opportunity to build a program to implement this accompaniment paradigm in US communities. I need, however, to raise funds to enable it. If you may be able to support this, please reach out for more info about the project. 15/
Be warned it's also about using community health+safety worker systems to end mass incarceration and reliance on policing rather than care. So if decarceration, shared safety, & reparative justice aren't among your priorities, might not be a good fit. 16/
undark.org/2022/01/06/the…
Relatedly, as addiction arises in relation to the same policy factors mentioned above that foreclose a sense of life possibility for millions of people, please read & then share with your representatives our new harm-reduction explainer in @thenation. 17/
thenation.com/article/societ…
accompagnateurs* (ie, those who accompany)

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More from @_Eric_Reinhart

Apr 17
The Trump regime is now using US Attorneys to intimidate academic journals by sending them letters demanding they explain how they ensure ‘viewpoint diversity.’ Journal editors should be public about this and coordinate to refuse to comply with these fascist tactics. Image
The 'radical,' 'woke' science of aspergillus infections and bronchial biopsies. Image
'Viewpoint diversity' – is sarcoidosis actually bad? Should trans people get treatment for chest infections? Is ivermectin the cure for lung cancer? Why shouldn't Joe Rogan perform lung transplants? So glad RFK Jr is in charge to ensure these important views get airtime.
Read 13 tweets
Mar 9
The advice my faculty friends at elite universities are getting from senior colleagues, who are themselves following their own advice: "Just keep your head down and don't attract attention. It'll pass."

It may serve self-interest, but, at scale, it ushers fascism onto campus.
I can't tell you, as a humanities prof with few options for income and no non-university work experience, for example, to sacrifice your job for fundamental ethical-political principles. But by refusing to do so, you're likely ultimately going to have it taken from you anyway.
It speaks to how delusionally self-righteous many senior faculty are that they think they're being "mentors" and "supporting" junior Black, Brown, Palestinian, Muslim, and queer faculty when saying this rather than recognizing it's effectively an announcement of abandonment.
Read 4 tweets
Feb 1
A thread on my scandal this week with LA Times and their billionaire owner, who has repeatedly meddled in editorial processes to advance his own personal agendas. The whole situation is symptomatic of the oligarchic takeover of US media and politics.👇
newrepublic.com/article/191030…
I've published ~60 OpEds and am familiar with the back-and-forth of the editing processes and editorial control over final copy, headline, and subhead. The problem in this case is not the cuts alone, which I expected might be requested. It's a combination of factors, including...
1) Key cuts made and the OpEd published without me first being given an opportunity to see the final draft (this alone is also not so unusual when working on tight deadline), which, in its final unapproved form, no longer featured even a single critical statement about RFK Jr.
Read 15 tweets
Jan 31
I am the author of this OpEd, which was given a misleading title and from which key lines were cut—lines that made very clear that RFK Jr is dangerously ignorant, has absolutely no business near HHS, and is effectively a mass murderer in waiting.
My first time working with the Los Angeles Times, and I expect also my last.
My suggested title, which reflects the content I expected to go to press, was “RFK Jr’s Wrecking Ball Won’t Fix Public Health.”

A vote for RFK Jr is a vote for nothing but chaos, the opposite of the essential public-systems building I argue for in the OpEd, and mass death.
Read 6 tweets
Jan 13
Preoccupation with Trump as "the end of democracy" in the US keeps sending me to Winnicott's essay on "fear of breakdown," in which what one fears is a past event that has already transpired but not been "experienced" because the ego is too "immature" to incorporate it. 1/
The fact is that democracy in the US was dead on arrival. Born in slavery and misogyny, and matured through the development of the associated distinctive form of US capitalism, it ended before it ever began, but disavowal of this reality is the basis of national identity. 2/
Through an overwhelming fear of its impending breakdown as a future event that must be defended against at all costs, liberals defend against recognition of both past and present in which this breakdown, or rather still-birth, of democracy has plainly already occurred. 3/
Read 6 tweets
Nov 13, 2024
As a culture, we have been trained to turn to therapists and psychiatrists to define and 'treat' an ever-expanding range of feelings and experiences, and therapists and psychiatrists have been trained to see and work on a depoliticizing, individualizing plane. While therapy and
psychiatry have myriad essential roles that can be life-saving and mobilizing for many, it's hard to argue that their aggregate social, cultural, and political-economic effects are not ultimately reactionary and reproductive of suffering. This is why it seems so important to me
to practice both with an awareness of their existing and potential harms, and to work towards their obsolescence at both the individual patient and collective level. This is part of what I think of as abolitional psychiatry, which doesn't call for the abolition of psychiatry
Read 6 tweets

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