
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


It's been two and a half months since I deleted the blog, so I owe all of you an update on recent events.
I haven't heard anything from the New York Times one way or the other. Since nothing has been published, I'd assume they dropped the article, except that they approached an acquaintance for another interview last month. Overall I'm confused.
But they definitely haven't given me any explicit reassurance that they won't reveal my private information. And now that I've publicly admitted privacy is important to me – something I tried to avoid coming on too strong about before, for exactly this reason – some people have taken it upon themselves to post my real name all over Twitter in order to harass me. I probably inadvertently Streisand-Effect-ed myself with all this; I still think it was the right thing to do.
At this point I think maintaining anonymity is a losing battle. So I am gradually reworking my life to be compatible with the sort of publicity that circumstances seem to be forcing on me. I had a talk with my employer and we came to a mutual agreement that I would gradually transition away from working there. At some point, I may start my own private practice, where I'm my own boss and where I can focus on medication management – and not the kinds of psychotherapy that I'm most worried are ethically incompatible with being a public figure. I'm trying to do all of this maximally slowly and carefully and in a way that won't cause undue burden to any of my patients, and it's taking a long time to figure out.
By Jeremiah4.8
129129 ratings
It's been two and a half months since I deleted the blog, so I owe all of you an update on recent events.
I haven't heard anything from the New York Times one way or the other. Since nothing has been published, I'd assume they dropped the article, except that they approached an acquaintance for another interview last month. Overall I'm confused.
But they definitely haven't given me any explicit reassurance that they won't reveal my private information. And now that I've publicly admitted privacy is important to me – something I tried to avoid coming on too strong about before, for exactly this reason – some people have taken it upon themselves to post my real name all over Twitter in order to harass me. I probably inadvertently Streisand-Effect-ed myself with all this; I still think it was the right thing to do.
At this point I think maintaining anonymity is a losing battle. So I am gradually reworking my life to be compatible with the sort of publicity that circumstances seem to be forcing on me. I had a talk with my employer and we came to a mutual agreement that I would gradually transition away from working there. At some point, I may start my own private practice, where I'm my own boss and where I can focus on medication management – and not the kinds of psychotherapy that I'm most worried are ethically incompatible with being a public figure. I'm trying to do all of this maximally slowly and carefully and in a way that won't cause undue burden to any of my patients, and it's taking a long time to figure out.

32,246 Listeners

2,118 Listeners

2,680 Listeners

26,380 Listeners

4,270 Listeners

2,461 Listeners

2,267 Listeners

907 Listeners

291 Listeners

4,167 Listeners

1,635 Listeners

313 Listeners

3,833 Listeners

551 Listeners

688 Listeners