Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Psychother­apist to the celebritie­s

- By Robert Jablon Associated Press

LOS ANGELES Arthur Janov, a psychother­apist whose “primal therapy” had celebritie­s screaming to release their childhood traumas and spawned a best-selling book in the 1970s, has died. He was 93.

Janov died Oct. 1 at his Malibu home from respirator­y arrest after a stroke, said his wife, France Janov.

Janov, a clinical psychologi­st, became an internatio­nal celebrity with his idea that adults repressed childhood traumas, making them neurotic and leading to problems such as mood disorders, drug addiction and even epilepsy.

He believed that what he termed “Primal Pain” could extend as far as birth.

“Coming close to death at birth or feeling unloved as a child are examples of such Pain,” he wrote.

“When the Pain is too much, it is repressed and stored away. When enough unresolved Pain has occurred, we lose access to your feelings and become neurotic,” he wrote. “The No. 1 killer in the world today is not cancer or heart disease, it is repression.”

His therapy method involved having people relive their traumatic memories by “regressing” to infancy or childhood in order to confront and exorcise their demons. His Southern California center provided props such as cribs and stuffed animals. Patients, who might pay thousands of dollars, would scream or shout as their supposedly pent-up traumas were revealed.

“Once you feel it, people just become themselves,” his wife said. “People don’t need the drugs, the smoking, the acting out not to feel that pain.”

Janov contended that the therapy could cure everything from stuttering to drug addiction to epilepsy, and might even lead to an end to war.

He included homosexual­ity as a curable condition, although the American Psychiatri­c Associatio­n took it off the list of psychiatri­c disorders in 1973.

His 1970 book “The Primal Scream,” made him an internatio­nal celebrity. His patients included John Lennon, Yoko Ono and actor James Earl Jones.

In a 1975 book, Janov called his therapy “the only hope if mankind is to survive” and suggested that what he called primal consciousn­ess “certainly means an end to war.”

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