Houston Chronicle Sunday

C. GLENN CAMBOR, M.D.

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1927-2020

C. Glenn Cambor, M.D.,

92, died peacefully, at home, on Saturday, October 31, 2020. He was a psychiatri­st and psychoanal­yst who practiced in Houston for forty-eight years.

Glenn Cambor was born in Denver, Colorado on December 28,1927, the only child of Louis V. Cambor and Lillian Bartholome­w Cambor. His father immigrated to the United States from Greece when he was eighteen and encouraged family members to follow him, where they developed several thriving restaurant­s in both Denver and Laramie, Wyoming. As the only male child in a large extended Greek family, Glenn was doted on by his “girl cousins” with whom he spent many happy summers in Laramie. A son of theWest, he became an avid skier, maneuverin­g the Aspen slopes when the then- tiny town was just building its first chair lift. From the time he was a boy, Glenn loved the meditative calm of fly-fishing and spent some of the happiest times in his life with his children on the streams and creeks of Colorado, NewMexico and the Catskills.

Both his parents were spiritual “seekers,” young people looking beyond the traditions of establishe­d religious practice for truths about the self and the human spirit. They met in a phrenology class, and together studied theosophy, the works of Rudolf Steiner and the transcende­ntalism of RalphWaldo Emerson. They shared their open-minded sense of wonder and curiosity about the world with their beloved son.

Glenn began college at the University of Colorado in Boulder with a plan to study engineerin­g, but, after three semesters, he accepted a place at the US Coast Guard Academy in Connecticu­t, which had a wonderful liberal arts curriculum, and which he credited with awakening in him an abiding love of music, (especially jazz) art, and literature, and which caused him to reconsider what he wanted to do with his life. By the time he returned to Boulder to finish his degree, he had applied to the University of Colorado School ofMedicine in Denver. While in medical school, his curiosity about the human psyche as well as the human body, led him to conclude that the medical specialty of psychiatry was a natural fit.

Glenn trained in psychiatry and psychoanal­ysis at the University of Pittsburgh School ofMedicine and Western Psychiatri­c Institute and Clinic in Pittsburgh,

Pennsylvan­ia, widely considered to be among the best psychiatry programs in the country. His residency was interrupte­d when he served in the ArmyMedica­l Corp as a captain stationed in Germany, and he used his free time there with his first wife, Rosemary, to see as much of Europe (and eat in as many wonderful restaurant­s) as he could. When he returned to Pittsburgh, Glenn developed a thriving medical practice, and over time he and a few colleagues began to explore new fields of thinking in the psychiatri­c world. He studied withMurray Bowen inWashingt­on D.C. and began to incorporat­e Bowen’s ground breaking work in family systems theory into his practice. British psychoanal­ystWilfred Bion and his colleagues at the Tavistock Institute in London and the A.K. Rice Institute for the Study of Social Systems in Washington were developing new understand­ings of how individual­s behave in groups, and Glenn began a yearslong associatio­n with the A. K .Rice Institute and used the insights gained there in his clinical work

In 1972 Glenn relocated to Houston to become a training analyst in the newly -formed HoustonGal­veston Psychoanal­ytic Institute, where he taught for many years and supervised psychoanal­ytic candidates with their cases. In his long career in Houston, Glenn saw individual­s, couples, groups, and all kinds of families, and enjoyed his wonderful, diverse practice. He was also a respected and beloved teacher and supervisor to many other therapists, a legacy that has left a major mark on the larger mental health community in Houston.

He loved opera, jazz, classical music, theater, politics, history, and philosophy and was a voracious reader. In the early 1980s a group of writers began to move to Houston with the goal of establishi­ng a Graduate Program in CreativeWr­iting at the University of Houston. The writer Donald Barthleme became Glenn’s close friend, and at his behest, Glenn joined a small group of civic leaders to form Inprint, a nonprofit establishe­d in

1983 to support the literary arts in Houston,and to give financial support to graduate students who came to study. It gave Glenn great pleasure to watch Inprint grow and bring so many gifted writers to the city. And he was deeply touched when, in

1991, an anonymous donor made a generous gift to Inprint in Glenn’s honor, which has endowed more than three hundred C. Glenn Cambor Fellowship­s at the University of Houston since 1992.

Glenn was a consummate friend to many. With his wife, Kathy, he was always eager to gather people at their home for good food and wine, conversati­on and celebratio­n. Wedding parties, book launches, dinners for visiting writers, simple Sunday suppers--Glenn loved to feed his friends and family, and he adored and was delighted by his children and grandchild­ren.

Glenn’s inquiring mind made him eager to learn as much as he could in his quest to better understand his patients and himself.

His long life, both personally and profession­ally, was a joyful celebratio­n of the human spirit. He believed unflagging­ly that all human beings have an extraordin­ary capacity to grow and change and thrive.

Glenn is survived by his wife of 48 years, Kathy (Kathleen), his children,

Roger, Carolyn, Stephen (Wendy), Kate (Justin Gullingsru­d) and Peter (Chrissy), his grandchild­ren Elizabeth, Spencer, Wentworth, Charlotte, Beatrice and Ingrid and his cousins, Denise Harvill, and CarolMorey.

Glenn’s family is eager to bring the community together to honor and celebrate him and look forward to a time in the early spring, when, with luck, the COVID-19 crisis will have abated.

In lieu of flowers, please consider making a donation to MD Anderson Cancer Center or to any charity of your choice.

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