Mark Epstein

Mark Epstein, born in 1953, is an American author and psychotherapist, who integrates the historical Buddha's teachings with Sigmund Freud's approaches to trauma. He often writes about the interface of Buddhism and psychotherapy.[1]

Mark Epstein before the Buddha-Bar Restaurant Prague

Personal Life

Epstein claimed to have experienced transgenerational trauma.[2] He is married to the artist Arlene Shechet and has two children, born in 1986 and 1990.[3]

Career

Epstein is a graduate of Harvard College and the Harvard Medical School. After completing his psychiatry residency at what is now New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, he entered the private practice of psychiatry In New York City. He is a Clinical Assistant Professor of Psychiatry at New York University School of Medicine.[4] He was interviewed for segments of the PBS documentary, The Buddha.[5]

Meditation practitioner and author

Epstein went to a Buddhist summer camp in Boulder, Colorado, where he met his first Buddhist teachers, Joseph Goldstein and Jack Kornfield. In his early 20s, he traveled to Ajahn Chah's forest Buddhist monastery near Bangkok, Thailand, together with these teachers as well as with Richard Alpert.[1] He has practised insight meditation since 1974.[6]

He is a contributing editor to Tricycle: The Buddhist Review and his books include Thoughts Without a Thinker and Going to Pieces without Falling Apart. Both books deal with the problematic and counter-intuitive Eastern teachings of non-self.

Quotes

“In resisting trauma and in defending ourselves from feeling its full impact, we deprive ourselves of its truth.”[7]

“I think it’s so easy to extrapolate from this moment as if we know what’s going to happen in a week, or a month, or three months, or six months, or a year. And this is one of those situations. The Buddha was always talking about it, of the importance of uncertainty. That really, we don’t know what the next moment is going to bring.”

“For myself, I feel like all those retreats that I’ve been on, they really help. Because this way of living is so much like being on retreat. You can sort of feel what the weather is going to be the next day, but you don’t know much more than that.”

“In this time when people are much more secluded than they’re used to, when they’re quarantined, when they’re in the home, when they don’t quite know what to do with themselves, there’s a real opportunity to bring this quality of mindful awareness to the particulars of one’s life. There’s a real opportunity to be much more alive, and awake, and aware in one’s day-to-day life.”[8]

Works

  • 2018 Advice Not Given: A Guide to Getting Over Yourself, The Penguin Press, ISBN 0399564322
  • 2013 The Trauma of Everyday Life, The Penguin Press, ISBN 1-594-20513-2
  • 2008 Going on Being: Life at the Crossroads of Buddhism and Psychotherapy, Wisdom Publications, Somerville, Mass., ISBN 0-86171-569-1
  • 2008 Psychotherapy Without the Self: A Buddhist Perspective, Yale University Press, New Haven, CT, ISBN 0-300-14313-3
  • 2005 Open to Desire: Embracing a Lust for Life, Gotham Books, New York, ISBN 1-59240-108-2
  • 1998 Going to Pieces Without Falling Apart, Broadway Books, New York, ISBN 0-7679-0235-1
  • 1995 Thoughts Without a Thinker: Psychotherapy from a Buddhist Perspective, Basic Books, New York, ISBN 0-465-03931-6[4]

References

  1. Mark Epstein. Freud and Buddha Archived 2014-03-09 at the Wayback Machine, Network of Spiritual Progressives
  2. The Trauma of Being Alive, p.2, New York Times, 3 August 2013
  3. Sheets, Hilarie M. (2015-06-09). "As the Art World Swoons over Playful Ceramics, Arlene Shechet Hits Her Stride". Artsy. Retrieved 2020-03-08.
  4. "buddhism and psychotherapy by Mark Epstein". www.psychotherapy.net.
  5. "The Buddha | PBS". www.pbs.org. Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  6. "#27: Mark Epstein". Ten Percent Happier.
  7. The Trauma of Being Alive, New York Times, 3 August 2013
  8. Mark Epstein: The Importance of Uncertainty, Hurry Slowly, 21 April 2020
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