It's not easy to validate a reference - real world examples that you personally have had experience with is the *only* truly hard proof.
Not necessarily. Examples that stem from your own personal experience do not
ipso facto constitute "truly hard proof" of anything
per se. You could be operating under a misapprehension (Freud comes to mind among a host of others) and not even realize it due to what feel like sure-fire preconceptions and interpretations of observations. In short, your cognitive reality filter could be akimbo...slightly, somewhat, or maybe even severely so.
Secondly, you also run the danger of committing the "person who" fallacy in your dealings with clients, also known as abusing anecdotal evidence, which itself cannot be held up to scientific scrutiny unless you were to conduct methodologically sound idiographic (single-n) studies. Think Cuba Gooding, Jr., here: SHOW ME THE DATA! SHOW ME THE DATA!!!
Third, being a psychologist, surely you have heard of Campbell's
triangulation. Extended into basic research parlance, there are such things as multiple converging lines of evidence from multiple scientists. The more people we have study and replicate something and arrive at a similar result, the more confidence we have in the result. Does this mean that we can't ever really trust those people? Taking an example from geoscience: just because you weren't among, for example, those geoscientists dating the earth at or around 4.6 billion years old using multiple converging methods (different radioactive isotopes and techniques), do you disbelieve that this is the true age of the earth because you weren't there to have done the radioactive dating yourself?
Closer to home: would you doubt the efficacy of CBT in treating phobias simply because you personally had never used CBT in treating someone yourself? Even if your case (or a number of cases you saw) failed to find efficacy, you could never conclude on that case or cases alone that CBT is not effective. Maybe you weren't doing it correctly, maybe your clients were especially resistent, etc.
Triangulation, baby. Not perfect, but it's a helluvalot better than clinical lore and anecdotal evidence.
I, to the best of my ability at least, do not seriously believe *anything* until I can see it for myself, first hand.
1. Have you ever seen electrons? If not, do you believe in those?
2. What about [
insert name of a place in the world that you have yet to visit]? Does that place (or places) truly exist?
The entire psychotherapy world is, in itself, a failure in terms of really dealing with mental sickness (unless you think that getting better is equatible to behaviour control. I for one certainly don't).
First, accepting your label "failure" for the moment, why do you think that is? Personally, I think the inadequacies largely have to do with the fact that (a) we are dealing with intangibles (e.g., PTSD isn't reducible to a band of identifiable rogue viruses that fly off a traumatic event and infect people's brains) and (b) people are so heterogeneous that it's extremely difficult to deal with core causes (seems like this is what you are tacitly poking at if I am not mistaken). Treating symptoms certainly doesn't "cure" per se, but it can help make life one heck of a lot smoother for lots of people.
Second, personally, I think it's unfair to blanket label the "entire psychotherapy world", as you put it, as a "failure" in "really dealing" with psychopathology, especially since to the consternation of medical model advocates, we simply cannot "cure" mental illnesses like schizophrenia or severe depression the way we can cure a curable physiological illness…at least not yet (I have my doubts about this in the future as well). This seems like too lofty of an expectation given how young our field is. Many responsible clinicians do exist, and they do deal with these illnesses the best they can given the tools in their arsenal...tools which hopefully have good evidence to back them up (i.e.,
not primal scream,
not EMDR, etc.).
Although I think we can agree that the field of psychology is a far cry from a mature social science, there are solid researchers out there who employ the scientific method to psychotherapy research as best as they can, and some
do produce excellent work (e.g., Gerald Klerman & Myrna Weissman in the area of Interpersonal Psychotherapy, David Barlow in CBT, etc.). I just wouldn't be so quick to damn the whole enterprise on the basis of a *currently* unrealistic expectation.