Good question!
Shrink in this case is an abbreviation of headshrinker, which was a slang term for a psychiatrist (or mental-health professional in general), from around the late 1940s or early 1950s. I guess it came about because patients felt like the pressure of treatment made it feel like their heads were being shrunk. Some also think it refers to the deflation of the patients’ egos.
It’s telling that shrink is sometimes used to refer to both psychiatrists and psychologists. People often get confused between the two, because they both deal with the mind. Psychology is a broader field, dealing with human emotions and behaviour in general, with psychologists tending to specialise in certain fields. Psychology, appropriately enough, means knowledge of the soul, derived from the Greek psyche (soul) and -logia (study of).
A psychiatrist, on the other hand, specifically treats mental illness, and the word’s etymology is also appropriate. It means healer of the soul: psyche + iatreia (healing). An appropriate title for what must be an incredibly challenging job.
Nice to see you tackle one of my favourite subjects, Psychology 🙂 I was on the path to be a Psychologist at some point (with a BSc to prove it) but never got much further than that!
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I can imagine it’s tough to deal with long term. Rewarding, helping people like that, but tough to bear their burdens!
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At least I don’t still work in customer service, was less rewarding to help them with their burdens… Haha
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This is good to know. I never knew the difference. Thank you
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It’s something I’d wondered for a long time too 😊
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I’ve always thought that psychiatrists deal more with the brain than the mind. 🙂
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I think that’s an interesting way to look at it, as a psychiatrist would be more likely to look at the brain as a physical organ to treat 😊.
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I feel like I knew this stuff based on their root words, but at the same time I didn’t realize it. If that makes sense! 😅 But very well written, I liked it a lot from start to finish. 😊
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Thanks 😊. I feel the same: I’d never really though about it, but as soon as I did, it seemed obvious!
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But psychiatrists also conduct psychotherapy, too, is that right? This is an interesting distinction to ponder. I never knew that the root of the term psychology derived from “knowledge of the soul.” That softens the concept a bit for me, making the field seem somehow more approachable, less intimidating.
Daniel J. Siegel talks about the differences between the mind and the brain (i.e. subjectivity, neural integration) in his book “The Mindful Therapist…”.
Fascinating topic. 🙂
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Yeah, I think psychotherapy can be delivered by either a psychiatrist or a psychologist, depending on the type.
I find it really interesting that we use the Greek for “soul” to create so many words related to the mind. Even though we don’t always think of the soul and the mind as the same thing, it makes a kind of sense.
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[…] term is a 19th-century one to refer to someone who treats mental illness (either a psychiatrist or a psychologist). It comes from the French aliéniste, which comes from an older sense of the word alienation, […]
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[…] usually used in a legal sense to refer to a formal restriction. It gained its now common psychological meaning in the 19th […]
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You’re all wrong! They make you look like a stupid person = shrink your IQ. At least, in my world…
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