A DAY WITH SANDRA BUECHLER, Ph.D. “Holding a Mirror Up to Nature:” Perspectives on Human Striving

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What does it mean to make a difference in patients’ lives? Join Sandra Buechler, Ph.D., Training and Supervising Analyst at the William Alanson White Institute, for a special day of reflection and dialogue. Author of nine influential books—including Making a Difference in Patients’ Lives (winner of the Gradiva Award) and Erich Fromm: A Contemporary Introduction (Routledge, 2024)—Dr. Buechler has inspired generations of clinicians to approach psychoanalysis with courage, empathy, and humanity. In this talk, Dr. Buechler will share insights drawn from her decades of clinical practice, teaching, and writing, offering guidance not only for psychoanalysts and psychotherapists, but for anyone seeking meaning in the challenges of human living.

Sandra Buechler, Ph.D. will present a morning and an afternoon session.

Morning Session 2 hours:

“More Simply Human:” Fundamental Motives According to Erich Fromm and William Shakespeare

In his instructions to actors, Hamlet directs them to “…hold as ‘twere the mirror up to Nature to show Virtue her feature, Scorn her own image, and the very age and body of the time his form and pressure” (Hamlet, Arden, 2016, Act III, Sc.2, 21-24). I will compare the assumptions about human motives implicit in the plays of William Shakespeare and the psychoanalytic and sociological theories of Erich Fromm. More specifically, I will discuss needs for relatedness, transcendence, rootedness, identity, and a frame of orientation and devotion. My premise is that creating a “dialogue” between these two astute observers of human behavior will yield interesting ideas for our discussion.

Afternoon Session 2 hours:

“More Simply Clinical:” The Clinician’s Hope and Grief

This talk takes as its basic assumption that hope and grief are inevitable in the clinician’s professional life. I will describe some of my own hopes, the losses I have incurred, and their emotional consequences. They run the gamut, from the deaths of patients, through sudden terminations, planned terminations, and losses of hope, meaning, and purpose that, collectively, take their toll. I believe that, however the work ends, the clinician loses the potential “self” she might have become, had this particular treatment continued. Finally, I will suggest some sources of resilience for the mourning clinician.


FEES -           LUNCH INCLUDED!!!

General Attendee $200

TICP Member, Guest, Faculty: $175 

Students $100 





When
September 27th, 2025 from 10:00 AM to  3:00 PM
Location
Victoria University
73 Queen's Park Crescent
Toronto, ON
Event Fee(s)
Virtual - General $200.00
Virtual - TICP Member, TICP Guest Member $175.00
Virtual - Student $100.00
Other $0.00