Kort's Korner Newsletter
In This Issue: May, 2008 
  1. About Joe Kort's Private Practice 
  2. Joe quoted in the New York Times April 27, 2008 
  3. Reclaiming the Man in the Mirror Workshop June, 2008 
  4. Oprah interviews Harville Hendrix, Founder of IMAGO Relationship Therapy
  5. What is Covert Cultural Sexual Abuse?
  6. Joe Book Updates 

    If you are new to Kort's Korner I want to welcome you. If you were gone for a while and have returned I want to welcome you back. And if you know of others would be interested in this newsletter please feel free to forward it onto them.
     

    If you are unable to see the images in this newsletter go to Kort's Korner archives
    and click on "Watch Oprah April 29, 2008"

1. About Joe's Therapy and Coaching Practice
 


Joe's Blogs

Gay Affirmative Therapy

Straight Guise

These blogs are about current events, books, workshops, articles, movies and anything related to my specialties within my private practice.

Frequently Asked Questions about hiring Joe Kort for his services


Joe Kort's areas of specialties are:

  • Sexual Addiction and Compulsivity
  • Sexual Anorexia 
  • Sexual Abuse
  • Straight men who have sex with men
  • Chemical Dependency
  • Imago Relationship Therapy
  • Monogamy/Non-monogamy Issues 
  • Breakup Recovery
  • Coming Out Issues
  • Gay Affirmative Therapy
  • Depression and Anxiety Disorders

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To schedule a telephone or in-person session with Joe click either:

Individual, Group and Couple's Psychotherapy

Telephone Coaching and Consultation

To schedule a supervision or clinical consultation

Clinical Consulting and Supervision Services for Psychotherapists

2. Joe quoted in the New York Times 

NEW YORK TIMES
Published: April 27, 2008

Young Gay Rites 
By BENOIT DENIZET-LEWIS

 

(HERE ARE SOME OF THE HIGHLIGHTS)

For nearly an hour, seven of us - five working professionals in our 20s and two college undergraduates - sat in a coffee shop and talked theoretically about what a young gay marriage might entail. In the end, most of us agreed that we would like to be married - just not yet. We still had a lot of living, and growing up, to do. While many of our heterosexual peers undoubtedly did as well, we were immune from the pressure some of them felt to marry. No one - not our friends, not our families, not the gay community - expected us to wed.

For the next few years, I didn't give young gay marriage much thought. While thousands of gay men and lesbians in their 30s, 40s or 50s married in Massachusetts, none of us at the table that night did, even as several of us inched into our 30s. I assumed that marriage - what the gay playwright Terrence McNally recently called "the final civil right; the right to love as anyone else loves" - was a right appreciated only in gay middle age.

But I could also relate to young gay men yearning for companionship and emotional security. Had gay marriage been an option when I was 23 and recently out of the closet, I might very well have proposed to my first gay love. Like many gay men my age and older, I grew up believing that gay men in a happy long-term relationship was an oxymoron. (I entered high school in 1989, before gay teenagers started taking their boyfriends to the prom.) If I was lucky enough to find love, I thought, I'd better hold onto it. And part of me tried, but a bigger part of me wanted to pitch a tent in my favorite gay bar. I wasn't alone. Everywhere I looked, gay men in their 20s - or, if they hadn't come out until later, their 30s, 40s and 50s - seemed to be eschewing commitment in favor of the excitement promised by unabashedly sexualized urban gay communities. There was a reason, of course, why so many gay men my age and older seemed intent on living a protracted adolescence: We had been cheated of our actual adolescence. While most of our heterosexual peers had experienced, in their teens, socialization around courtship, dating and sexuality, many of us had grown up closeted and fearful, "our most precious and tender feelings rarely validated or reflected back to us by our families and communities," as Alan Downs, the author of "The Velvet Rage: Overcoming the Pain of Growing Up Gay in a Straight Man's World," puts it. When we managed to express our sexuality, the experience often came booby-trapped with secrecy, manipulation or debilitating shame.

No wonder, then, that in our 20s so many of us moved to big-city gay neighborhoods and aggressively went about trying to make up for lost time. And no wonder that some of us - myself included - occasionally went overboard.

"The expectation for many years was that if you did any dating in your 20s, they were essentially 'practice relationships' where you did what heterosexual kids get to do in junior high, high school and college," says Jeffrey Chernin, a Los Angeles psychotherapist and the author of "Get Closer: A Gay Men's Guide to Intimacy and Relationships." "But for many gay men, your 20s were about meeting a lot of different people, going out to bars with your friends and having a lot of sex. That has long been considered a rite of passage in the gay community."

But young gay men today are coming of age in a different time from the baby-boom generation of gays and lesbians who fashioned modern gay culture in this country - or even from me, a gay man in his early 30s. While being a gay teenager today can still be difficult and potentially dangerous (particularly for those who live in noncosmopolitan areas or are considered effeminate), gay teenagers are coming out earlier and are increasingly able to experience their gay adolescence. That, in turn, has made them more likely to feel normal. Many young gay men don't see themselves as all that different from their heterosexual peers, and many profess to want what they've long seen espoused by mainstream American culture: a long-term relationship and the chance to start a family.

"For many young gay men today, settling down in a relationship in their 20s - or getting married if they live in Massachusetts - will feel like a very natural thing to do," says Joe Kort, a psychotherapist and the author "10 Smart Things Gay Men Can Do to Improve Their Lives."

To read the entire article go to New York Times 

3. Reclaiming the Man in the Mirror Workshop:
     For Gay & Bisexual Men 



June 21-22, 2008

Reclaiming the Man in the Mirror Workshop for Gay/Bisexual Men



4.  OPRAH April 29, 2008 IMAGO Relationship Therapy


Dr. Harville Hendrix has been on Oprah 17 times! Her first emmy was a show she did 20 years ago featuring his work doing Imago Relationship Therapy.

Those of you who have worked with me know my training is in IMAGO Relationship Therapy and that I use it both with couples and singles. It is a major part of my practice and is successful with those I use it with.

Watch the show and see for yourself!


Dr. Oz and Harville Hendrix Confront a Couple on the Edge

 

Family in Crisis

Dr. Oz travels 3,000 miles for an emergency house call to Wendie and Tony.


Intentional Dialogue

Dr. Hendrix's three basic steps to achieving healthy communication.


Dr. Oz made a house call to a family in

crisis. Now, cameras keep rolling as they

fight for their marriageand reveal a shocking

secret.


 

Tune In Tuesday!

Harville Hendrix aims to help

Wendie and Tony repair their

relationship. Come back to

Oprah.com for the stunning

surprise.