The Apocalyptic Act- Part 4: Psychoanalysis is a Waste of Time.

A Desire that should not be Linear- and; a falling grammar but a prevailing desire- desire circumnavigates when an alpha and an eschaton do not infect with an ominous snore the obiter dictum of the signifier’s tonality, and when the object, itself, ID self + no equation of jouissance and the Other or Soma, oxygenates the bloodlines because it has been baptised not in the Name but in the desire’s Siloam Pool, a cleansing by which a motion constitutes as it goes, not whilst becoming; and, if it is to mention the word “use,” in the guidelines of Wittgenstein, not for jouissance but for this It-self, that object, not the I-Object but the autistic “I object,” that stands beyond time and no time, it is about a use of the object cause- one ought to teach It how to swim, in the immemorial ocean that the Nietzschean encephalous has been able to conceive: this is the oceanic experience, to which idiots that have entitled psychoanalysis as an emotional practice parallax with the oceanic feeling- as if one is to be turned, with the undergoing of psychoanalysis, into a boring lover who thinks that it is romantic to stand as an agalmatic viewer to the world-weariness, of the dyeing sun and the serene aquatic topology. It is the oceanic experience of archegony– the apician comportment cleared of the father; and, because of this, an analyst canisters, through the shadowy forest where one can, still, to perceive of the existence of prostitutes, freed from the cursing of time and the ethics of the wellbeing of the Gaze, and hear their whisper: of course, if there is some remaining belief on extraordinary beasts, if psychoanalysis has not been turned so much scientific as science itself- and the whisper is, that, this, is the way for a subject to use the Real, implied this subject is an orphan from a father.

 

 

The Psychoanalytic Act: On the Formation of the No-Body.

By Petros Patounas.

The School of the Freudian Letter Publications.

 

 

The Apocalyptic Act- Part 3: The Death of the Subject Supposed to Know.

The Subject Supposed to Know has deceased, yet transference is alive; then, it is to version our terminology if we are to declare anything decent with some kilowatts of responsibility for the clinic beyond the father, whose long craved reign a given doubtful Thomas hunts for situating his smallest of his ten fingers upon the rotten blood of the wound, by asking if, is it a clinic beyond the father, or, is it a clinic with a different sort of a father: one is, if the thoughts may peregrinate in time, in the linearity of the signifier, which is erroneous yet settled, provoked to think of Pax Romana, an era which, as much as the changes of it could be argued in chronological terms and not only, one strikes a mind more, that of the reallocation from hubris to sin, which is, among these revolutions, the only one that is not sequential and timed as much as the signifier in the graph of desire: it is free as free association ought to be if the analysts ears do not listen to the Other; there was no word in ancient Greek language having the same connotation as did later on the word Sin, with its reference to guilt and the moving away from the father.

 

 

The Psychoanalytic Act: On the Formation of the No-Body.

By Petros Patounas.

The School of the Freudian Letter Publications.

 

 

On Counter-transference and Exorcism.

And when this one, this professor of psychology, a Lacanian, one that God, if he sought to offer a testimony of his omnipotence, must use all of his arts and crafts to orient into a Lacanian analyst, that one who has spoken about counter-transference- to this astute sage it is de rigueur to quote a proverb, not taken from any methodic text, but from a wisdom that has withstood the force of time and most likely has been translated into all the languages of the universe: that English one saying that “Only a donkey brays in front of another donkey.” It could be something saccharine to tingle one’s ear when in the place of the supervisor, that place of asininity of the analyst’s analyst, not dealing with the analyst’s counter-transference, neither with the desire of the analyst: rather, with the failure of the same desire, because one does understand- the acting out akin to pantomime commands not for an interpretation of the message but of the messenger. A good companion would be a decent book on exorcism- as it is stated and never heard, a demon will not abandon a subject unless the analyst calls it by its name- in such a way the invoking of Gabriel’s hymn settles the amusement with the name of the father. It is not nomination but a singing- a note pausing the refrain and stops the session at the koriphosis, for, the best way up is the way down, according to Heraclitus, as the analyst’s desire has its own destiny as much as the drive does. But for that precision an analyst ought to have a fine-tune voice and a dose of astigmatism when it comes to the letters, so to perceive their kinesis. Braying is a first class exercise with one’s dummy.

 

The Psychoanalytic Act: On the Formation of the No-Body.

By Petros Patounas.

The School of the Freudian Letter Publications.

On Enjoyment and Suffering.

Let us masticate over, once again and more seriously before our teeth’s cavities extinguish that ability, the hard kernel of the Death Drive as it is audibly obtainable in the clinic- subjects do not enter analysis because they cannot enjoy: only perverse subjects actually, might, go to analysis because they do suffer; those are the subjects who know how to enjoy: psychoanalysts have lots to ascertain from this novel science- that which a saint is able to practice.

 

The Psychoanalytic Act: On the Formation of the No-Body.

By Petros Patounas.

The School of the Freudian Letter Publications.

On Lacanian Bastards.

There is nothing but despicable wondering when a subject is encountering an analyst serving two organizations with irreconcilable Ethics at their heart- well, it could be something to digest, akin to the food-brand to be mentioned a few lines bellow, if one is thinking in the same way of the professor also to be mentioned latter, who differs to nothing from a bad nutritional protein for the brain, for, as such a book is called, depending from the context and of course from one’s appetite. Church of England: it is precisely about service and mastery. How can one say, like the fairly minted professor, who even wrote his stupidities in a book, that, in his practice, he uses sometimes Winnicott and sometimes Lacan, to understand- and this is where he is absolutely wrong- his analysands? If one may attempt to be creative, to generate a moronic figure of speech or an idio-matic expression, one idyllic to explain mild mental dim-witted phenomena of this sort, that would be the McDonalds of Lacanian Psychoanalysis- this person is a Harvard professor, no wonder about the scientific reasoning used. Or, what about the other one, and there are many like this person, who considers herself half Lacanian and half Kleinian? Where do these halves have a place in an orientation, unless this implies a technique based on absolute knowledge, nothing to strike a chord of psychoanalysis?

 

 

The Psychoanalytic Act: On the Formation of the No-Body.

By Petros Patounas.

The School of the Freudian Letter Publications.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Speech of the Stutterer.

Psychoanalysts have an intolerably bad voice- very few of them could have become singers- leave aside been part of a divine gospel choir; the urge would be for one to enrol in a series of music classes so that to be in touch with rhythm, for desire does not allow one to be a stutterer- that as far as the concern is about the subject called psychoanalyst. The stutterer divulges that the father is still breathing and to be venerated- although this breath exudes poison- especially now that he has been apotheosized through his murder and, truth be told, possesses all the women with the daedalic nuisance of a Midas touch; indeed, the stutterer natters of the name of the father fluently- contained by a different time frame, one that only a singing gale would have enough musical schooling, smooth enough, to distinguish, for, the voice is the modulation of the flux of the breath as much as silence is the absence of that modulation, with meaning reached after the motion since the demodulation of the object occurs before the meaning of jouissance. One has only the duty to have a look, if these matters are visible and not auditory, at the process of apophallation exemplified by the brilliance of Limax maximus– which, with a procrustean chirurgic operation, teaches what it takes a subject a few hundred of sessions to recognise if its ears have been cleaned enough by the atmospheric aura smelled from the place of the analyst’s desire- if not, yet only to reach a different statistical method, some sort of apophenia but based on signifiers, which analysts like to discuss among themselves having the impression of a cure, instead of magic that they do not, and they should not, appreciate- and here is where the speech of the stutterer sounds melodious to those who do not practice a psychotherapeutic form of analysis: analysts are called for to sing more; it makes it easier when one stutters.

 

 

The Psychoanalytic Act: On the Formation of the No-Body.

By Petros Patounas.

The School of the Freudian Letter Publications.

The Apocalyptic Act- Part 2: Before the Discourse that is to Reveal.

It is a pure experience, a real one- not of, neither within, but around the body of signifiers, or, better uttered, that of the letters which are silent- Not unvoiced- yet they are in motion, not that of flesh and bones, where the real phallus is to be understood as a signifier whose signified is the object a- one to which the letters subtract themselves and where jouissance becomes a cause, for, the object is not destined to the acting out but to the act: this is the initiation of the horror deriving from the apocalyptic act- the pervert who, avows, not disavows, becomes the protector of the ethic of the cause because it is a free subject to place its being at the tip of desire. And if this statement needs an example, no better to be, than the life of Saint Mamas- a true signifier to bear- as much as the lion he is in-pictured with: to the movement within the realms, and not the real, of the feminine Apeiron, the subject is accompanied by the death drive; the excess becomes compass.

 

The Psychoanalytic Act: On the Formation of the No-Body.

By Petros Patounas.

The School of the Freudian Letter Publications.

A Man-ual of Lacanian Technique.

When it comes in terms of orientation, a reader ought not to pay the dues to a person who has achieved the one thing Lacan was very cautious about, even caustic: that is, a book about a psychoanalytic technique- be that Lacanian; this is the work of a true master who, more than anything else, seeks to control analysis running it thus into a static conception and not an orientation, in such a way that by the “scientific” way in the steps of the Ego tradition, Lacanian orientation has been exposed as, through the pages of that book, an example to turning masturbation into a science. That is the value of that book- a jouissance not even of the idiot.

The Apocalyptic Act: Part 1- From the “A Being Silent.”

If, in and within the grey, almost black, foundation, which cannot subsist without an end, there is the deed, then meaning and use are derivatives of motion and time; though, one spectacular devil’s advocate, paid enough to do his job, may speculate of what sort is the motion contemplated since it is not a motion of biology – but one where the tunes and frequencies of the object, as much as those melodious notes of feminine jouissance, are the kinematics beyond meaning, beyond use- and yet again, it is not a utilization of the jouissance, for it is not permissible to consider what a subject enjoys, not only the social animal that reduces the Other into the other person, without considering that the conception of the Other ensues interpretations between sessions despite the truth that it could happened in the mind of the analyst, but also of that ascetic figure who enjoys like a lady.

 

The Psychoanalytic Act: On the Formation of the No-Body.

By Petros Patounas.

The School of the Freudian Letter Publications.