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Eric Berne was born May 10, 1910 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, as Leonard Bernstein
the son of David Hiller Bernstein, MD, a general practitioner, and Sarah Gordon
Bernstein, a professional writer and editor. His only sibling, his sister Grace,
was born five years later. The family immigrated to Canada from Poland and Russia.
Both parents graduated from McGill University, and Eric, who was close to his
father, spoke fondly of how he accompanied his father, a physician, on medical
rounds.
Dr. Bernstein died of tuberculosis at age 38. Mrs. Bernstein then supported
herself and her two children working as an editor and writer. She encouraged Eric
to follow in his father's footsteps and study medicine. He received an M.D. and
C.M. (Master of Surgery) from McGill University Medical School in 1935.
Pre-War Years
Berne interned in the United States at Englewood Hospital in New Jersey. In
1936 he began his psychiatric residency at the Psychiatric Clinic of Yale University
School of Medicine, where he worked for two years. Some time around 1938-39, Berne
became an American citizen and shortened his name from Eric Lennard Bernstein
to Eric Berne. His first appointment was as Clinical Assistant in Psychiatry at
Mt. Zion Hospital, New York City, a post he held until 1943 when he went into
the Army Medical Corps. In 1940 Berne had established a private practice in Norwalk,
Connecticut. There he met and married his first wife, with whom he had two children.
From 1940-1943 he also commuted from his Westport home to practice concurrently
in New York City. In 1941 he began training as a psychoanalyst at the New York
Psychoanalytic Institute and became an analysand of Paul Federn.
Army Medical Corps
Because of the demand for army psychiatrists during World War II, Dr. Berne
served from 1943-46 in the AUS Medical Corps, rising from first lieutenant to
major. His assignments included Spokane, Washington, Ft. Ord, California and Bingham
City, Utah. During the latter two years he practiced group therapy in the psychiatric
wards of Bushnell General Hospital.
When discharged from the army in 1946, Berne, now divorced, decided to relocate
in Carmel, California, an area he had fallen in love with when stationed at nearby
Fort Ord. Before the year was out he completed writing The Mind in Action and
signed a contract for its publication with Simon and Schuster of New York. That
same year he resumed his psychoanalytic training at the San Francisco Psychoanalytic
Institute. In 1947 he became the analysand of Eric Erikson, with whom he worked
for two years.
Family Life in California
Soon after beginning analysis with Erikson, Berne met a young divorcee whom
he wanted to marry. Erikson said Eric could not marry until after finishing his
didactic analysis, and so it was not until 1949 that Eric and Dorothy exchanged
vows and set up home in Carmel. Dorothy brought three children to the marriage,
and she and Eric eventually had two sons of their own.
Eric loved the pater familias role, relishing in his large group of offspring
and tending to be, if anything, overly permissive, a nurturing parent more often
than an authoritarian one. However, he also knew how to make time for his writing.
He had an isolated study built at the far end of his large garden, well out of
earshot of his youngsters. In that study he did most of his writing between 1949
and 1964, when he and Dorothy divorced on the friendliest of terms.
During these seminal years in Carmel, Eric kept up a demanding pace. He took
an appointment in 1950 as Assistant Psychiatrist at Mt. Zion Hospital, San Francisco,
and simultaneously began serving as a Consultant to the Surgeon General of the
US Army. In 1951 he added the job of Adjunct and Attending Psychiatrist at the
Veterans Administration and Mental Hygiene Clinic, San Francisco. These three
appointments were in addition to his private practices in both Carmel and San
Francisco.
Break with Psychoanalysis and the Creation of Transactional Analysis
Probably the most significant traces of the origins of transactional analysis
are contained in the first five of six articles on intuition Berne wrote beginning
in 1949. Already, at that early date, when he was still working to gain the status
of psychoanalyst, he was daring to defy a rigid Freudian concept in stating "the
word subconscious is acceptable since it includes both the pre-conscious and unconscious"
(Berne, 1949a, p.1)
When he began training in 1941 at the New York Psychoanalytic Institute, and
later when he resumed his training at the San Francisco Psychoanalytic Institute,
Berne obviously believed that becoming a psychoanalyst was important. However,
in the end that coveted title was withheld; his 1956 application for membership
was turned down with the verdict that he wasn't ready, but, perhaps after three
or four more years of personal analysis and training he might reapply. For Eric
the rejection was devastating but cathartic, spurring him to intensify his long-standing
ambition to add something new to psychoanalysis. He set to work, determined to
develop a new approach to psychotherapy by himself, without benefit of blessings
or support from the psychoanalytic fraternity.
Before 1956 was out, he had written two seminal papers based on material read
earlier that year at the Psychiatric Clinic, Mt. Zion Hospital, San Francisco,
and at the Langley Porter Neuropsychiatric Clinic, U.C. Medical School: "Intuition
V: The Ego Image": and "Ego States in Psychotherapy." Using references
to P. Federn, E. Kann, and H. Silberer, in the first article Berne indicated how
he arrived at the concept of ego states and where he got the idea of separating
"adult" from "child." In the next article he developed the
tripartite schema used today (Parent, Adult, and Child), introduced the three-circle
method of diagramming it, showed how to sketch contaminations, labeled the theory,
"structural analysis" and termed it "a new psychotherapeutic approach."
The third article, titled "Transactional Analysis: A New and Effective
Method of Group Therapy," was written a few months later and presented by
invitation at the 1957 Western Regional Meeting of the American Group Psychotherapy
Association of Los Angeles. With the publication of this paper in the 1958 issue
of the American Journal of Psychotherapy, transactional analysis, the name of
Berne's new method of diagnosis and treatment, became a permanent part of the
psychotherapeutic literature. In addition to restating his concepts of P-A-C,
structural analysis, and ego states, the 1957 paper added the important new features
of games and scripts.
The Seminars
From the beginning, Berne used his regular Thursday evening clinical seminars
in Monterey as a testing ground for his new theory and methods. In 1950-51 he
began a Tuesday evening seminar in San Francisco; this became incorporated in
1958 as the San Francisco Social Psychiatry Seminars in order to handle funds
required for the publication of the Transactional Analysis Bulletin, which first
appeared in January 1962 with Berne as editor.
In 1964 Berne and his San Francisco and Monterey seminar colleagues decided
to create a Transactional Analysis Association, naming it the International Transactional
Analysis Association in recognition of the growing number of Transactional Analysis
professionals outside the USA. The new organization was designated successor to
the San Francisco Social Psychiatry Seminars, and the San Francisco seminar changed
its name to the San Francisco Transactional Analysis Seminar in recognition of
the fact that it was only one of the many branches of the ITAA.
The Last Years
The years from 1964 to 1970 were restless ones for Berne. After his second divorce
his personal life became chaotic as he tried to find another mate. His frustration
in this area led him to work longer hours at his writing, but when he did remarry
in 1967, he did not give up any of his increasingly complex writing commitments.
By early 1970 he was once again divorced.
In 1970, Berne suffered two heart attacks. Two weeks before the first heart
attack, Berne told his friends how well he felt. He had just completed two books,
Sex in Human Loving and What do You Say After You Say Hello?, and was pleased
about how they had turned out. He actually allowed himself some weekends of pure
play, with no writing. However, in June 1970 he suffered the first sharp pains
that went through his chest and back. A few days later he suffered another heart
attack, this time a massive one, which caused his death. Eric died on July 15,
1970
The text on this page is Copyright © 1996, ITAA
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