This week’s Song of the Week was recommended by MIA Reader Jarrett Rose, PhD. “John Lennon wrote Plastic Ono Band in 1970 after, and as a product of, his experience undergoing āprimal therapy,ā often referred to as āprimal scream therapy.ā Then en vogue under the tutelage of psychotherapist Arthur Janov, the goal of the therapeutic method is the eliciting and releasingāsometimes to the point of screamingāof repressed traumatic experiences, particularly those from childhood.
In the song āMother,ā Lennon recounts his early experiences of abandonment by both of his parentsāhis father who left the family when Lennon was a child, and his mother who refused to live with him:
āMother, you had me, but I never had you… I wanted you, you didn’t want me; Father, you left me, but I never left you… I needed you, you didnāt need me.ā
The end of the song features Lennonās vocal intensity gradually increasing until the point of screaming, where he repeats the verses:
āMomma donāt go… Daddy come home.ā
While the time Lennon spent in Janovās primal therapy enabled him to re-narrate his autobiography in a more compassionate manner and better understand his possessive and jealous nature around his relationship with Yoko Ono, his loneliness and feelings of attachment remained, possibly, Janov claimed, due to Lennonās ending the therapy prematurely. In my History of Mental Health course at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in New York, I use this song as an example of the 1960s-70s countercultural ethos of wellbeing, mental health, and self-transformation, and connect it with the principles and aims of psychotherapy as distinct from biological psychiatry and the biomedical model of mental distress.”
-Jarrett Rose, PhD