Bennet Wong

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bennet Randall Wong (July 16, 1930 – ), is a Canadian psychiatrist, author and lecturer who co-founded the Haven Institute, a residential experiential learning centre on the west coast of Canada, with Jock McKeen. He has written on mental illness and personal growth.

Bennet Wong, M.D., F.R.C.P.(c)
Bennet Wong, M.D., F.R.C.P.(c)

Contents

[edit] Education

  • B.A. University of Saskatchewan, 1951
  • M.D. University of Alberta, 1955
  • Medical Internship, University Hospital, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, 1955-56
  • Postgraduate Training in Psychiatry, Menninger School of Psychiatry, Topeka, Kansas, 1956-61
  • F.R.C.P.(c), Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada 1973
  • F.C.H.S., International College of Human Sciences, 1998

[edit] Awards and Citations

Who's Who in Canada

[edit] Career

[edit] Career Summary

  • Clinical Director Winfield State Hospital and Training Center, Winfield, Kansas,1957-59
  • Private Practice in Psychiatry, Vancouver, B.C. 1961-75
  • Program Director, Youth Programs, Central City Mission, Vancouver, B.C.1963-67
  • Clinical Director, Youth Resources Society, Vancouver, B.C.,1967-70
  • Clinical Instructor, Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, U.B.C.,1974-80
  • Co-Director, Resident Fellow Program, Cold Mountain Institute, Vancouver, B.C.,1975-80
  • Group Leader,Cold Mountain Institute, Vancouver, B.C.,1970-80
  • Board of Directors, Cold Mountain Institute, Vancouver, B.C.,1972-80
  • Faculty, Antioch College West, M.A. Program in Humanistic Psychology,1974-80
  • Program Director, Cortes Centre for Human Development, 1980-82
  • Board of Directors, Cortes Centre for Human Development,1980-88
  • Advisory Board, Hull Institute, Calgary, Canada 1985-88
  • Board of Advisors, Options for Children and Families, Calgary, Alberta,1987-93
  • Board of Directors, Moffat Communications Ltd., Winnipeg, Manitoba,1973 - 1999
  • Board of Advisors,The Haven Institute for Personal and Professional Development, Gabriola, B.C.,1995 - 2003
  • Director, PD Seminars Ltd.,1982 - 2004
  • Program Director, Haven Institute, Gabriola Island, B.C.,1983 - 2004
  • Seminar Leader, The Haven Institute, Gabriola Island, B.C.,1984 - present

[edit] Training and Early Career

Bennet Wong was a serious student from childhood. An avid reader, he wanted to find answers for life's questions even as a youngster. He excelled academically, and was a talented musical performer in high school and university. Very engaging in social interactions, and was always a bright light in a group. He was interested in psychology from an early age; for a Chinese family, psychiatry is viewed with suspicion, being seen in this culture as superstition and not legitimate. Against his family's wishes, he entered the study of psychiatry following graduation from medical school and attended the Menninger School of Psychiatry in Topeka, Kansas.

During his training in psychiatry, many visiting lecturers appeared at the Menninger School. Anna Freud came to lecture, as well as Henri Ellenberger and other noteworthy luminaries of the day. Wong was especially interested in the presentations of S._I._Hayakawa, the semanticist and political figure. Hayakawa gave a lecture on the history of the blues with illustrations in music rather than words. Wong's imagination was captivated by this innovative use of multimedia; after that, Wong began to deliver his talks with "more than words," and music and poetry became features of his rousing presentations from that time on.

He was appointed to be Clinical Director at the Winfield State Hospital in Kansas. This was a large hospital with chronic patients, most of whom were profoundly retarded. Wong was stunned by the poor conditions for the patients; in some of the wards, the patients were never dressed, and they were hosed down rather than receiving caring attention. Wong was indignant, and vowed immediately to change this. He instituted many programs during his time in this office, all aimed at helping the patients to develop and advance within their own limitations, and always with care for human dignity. He had considerable opposition to his humanistic approach; this detractors believed that such intensive care for people with limitations was not justifiable. Wong was immoveable, and he engaged the nurses and orderlies and medical staff to assist him in his goals. He was able to introduce a feeling of camaraderie and team spirit amongst the workers, and with the patients themselves. This was evidence of a core belief he has exhibited throughout his career: that all human beings have worth, and are to be treated with respect and dignity. Also, this period was a harbinger of future times in his career when he would work with group dynamics to enhance the expression of his goals.

Wong was very interested in psychological and emotional development, and had a special fondness for the idealism of youth. This led him to specialize in adolescent psychiatry. When he opened his practice in Vancouver in 1961, he limited his scope to adolescents and youth. He was asked to consult to numerous agencies and bodies that dealt with youth. He was a frequent speaker at teachers' conferences, schools and parent/teacher associations. He also consulted to the Foster Parents' Association and the Child Welfare League of America. He befriended school principals who were looking to find new and effective ways of keeping young people interested in learning and growing, rather than dropping out. As well, he was a consultant to the Attorney General in British Columbia, and was seen as an expert on dealing with troubled youth (Vancouver Life, 1966) (B.C. Civil Servants' Newsletter, 1967).

He entered the public stage, and was a frequent lecturer at meetings, interviewed on television and radio, and quoted in the newspapers of the day (Campbell River Courier, 1970) (Campbell River Upper Islander, 1970). As the youth revolution of the late 1960's and early 1970's found public attention, Bennet Wong was there to comment on the social phenomenon, and by some he was known as the "hippie shrink." He had traditional training, and position; but he understood the concerns of both the adults and the youth, and he would refuse to taken sides in a moralistic debate.He shocked audiences by talking about things that now seem obvious: adolescents do have premarital sex and many experiment with drugs. Wong believed that the acting out of disturbed youth was often a cry for help, a hidden message that the young people wanted contact and understanding, even while they appeared to want nothing of the sort (Brown, 1970).

Wong began to work more in groups, and was an early adopter of the encounter group process. He was a close friend of Dr. Lee Pulos, the psychogist and entrepreneur, and became friends with Alan Watts, who came to Canada to teach at Cold Mountain Institute. Watts saw in Wong an active mind and a readiness to see beyond the habitual beliefs of the commonplace. Wong was also befriended by the zen master Paul Reps. He discussed many issues with Canada's former Minister of Health and Welfare, Judy Lamarsh, and television journalist Laurier Lapierre. Lapierre credited Wong with helping him to discover his authentic nature. (Lapierre, 1981).

Wong was increasingly interested in the existential approach of writers and thinkers, and saw anxiety as a normal human condition rather than some pathological state. He was quoted in newspapers about his radical view in this regard (Grenby, 1975).

He saw that all human situations have an emotional and psychological component, including illness conditions. So, when he began to study the mind-body approaches of Wilhelm Reich in the early 1970's he began to find answers to questions that had been gestating for years. Traditional medicine in the 1950's made a sharp distinction between physical problems (which were the concern of clinical medicine, and psychological problems (which were seen to be the domain for psychologists, social workers, priests, counsellors and psychiatrists). A common notion was that psychological disturbance was not really a sickness, but rather a sign of weakness. Wong theorized that the human was one entity, and mind and body were one. (Gomori, 2002, p. 205). When he met McKeen, they had an immediate "meeting of minds" on this issue, and in their subsequent collaboration they maintained a theory of bodymind unity (Niosi, July 30, 2005), (Allen 2005, pp. 45-46).

Now retired from psychiatric practice, he is a consultant to corporations, and to the field of child and adolescent development (Wong 2005), (Irvine & Reger, 2006, pp. 90-92). He continues to lecture internationally, and participate in artistic events (Burnaby Now, 2002), (The Record, 2002), (Times Colonist, 2002),(Nanaimo Daily News,2004), (McKeen, 2007).

[edit] Partnership with Dr. Jock McKeen

The unfolding of this phase of Dr. Wong's career in association with Dr. Jock McKeen is detailed in the entry for Wong and McKeen, and in a biography by Gerry Fewster (Vancouver Sun 2002), (Nanaimo News Bulletin 2004), (Niosi, August 31, 2005).

[edit] Establishment of the Haven Institute

This phase of Wong's career in association with McKeen is detailed on the Wong and McKeen pages, and is further discussed on the page for the Haven Institute (Nanaimo Daily News, Jan. 23, 2004), (Wellburn, 2005).

"In today's world, people are more looking for merging than what is emerging (and what is emerging is the revelation of our relatedness to one another in our separate distinctiveness)."

Bennet Wong (Wong&McKeen, 1995, p.130)

[edit] References

  • Staff Reporter. "Dr. Bennet Wong and the 50-Minute Hour", Vancouver, BC: Vancouver Life, March 1966, pp. 41-43.
  • Staff Reporter. "B.C.'s 1967 Child Welfare Program Attracting International Interest", Victoria, BC: The British Columbia's Civil Service Newsletter, Vol.VIII, No. 6, June 1967, p. 1.
  • Staff Reporter. "Our Schools Said Best in Province", Campbell River, BC: The Campbell River Courier, Wednesday February 11, 1970.
  • Staff Reporter. "Attentive Audience Hears Bennet Wong", Campbell River, BC: The Campbell River Upper Islander, Wednesday February 11, 1970.
  • Brown, Nancy. "Sex, LSD, Lies, Theft Probed by Panel", Victoria, BC: The Victoria Times Colonist, 1970 (precise date uncertain).
  • Grenby, Mike. "Manage Your Money, Don't Fret Over It", Vancouver, BC: The Vancouver Sun, Saturday August 16, 1975, p. 42
  • Lapierre, Laurier. "Men of Merit", Vancouver, BC: The West Ender, Vol. 2, No.4, Spring, 1981.
  • Wong, B.R. and McKeen, J.(1995). In and Out Of Our Own Way, Gabriola Island, BC: PD Publishing. ISBN 0-9696755-2-6
  • Staff Writer. "Psychologist Gerry Fewster Appears With the Subjects of His Biography, Ben & Jock", Vancouver, BC: Vancouver Sun, Sat, Mar 23, 2002, p. H17.
  • Staff Writer. "Book Launch by Author Gerry Fewster", Victoria, BC: Times Colonist, Wednesday, May 1, 2002, p. B2.
  • Staff Writer. "What is Love?", Burnaby, BC: Burnaby Now , Sunday, October 27, 2002, p.31.
  • Staff Writer. "Literature Comes to Life", New Westminster, BC: The Record, Sunday, November 3, 2002, p.17.
  • Gomori, Maria. (2002). Passion For Freedom, Palo Alto, CA: Science and Behavior Books. ISBN 0-8314-0090-0
  • Staff Writer. "Haven Foundation Continues Mandate", Nanaimo, BC: The Daily News, Friday, January 23, 2004, p. A4.
  • Staff Writer. "Gabriola Pair Shares Poetry", Nanaimo, BC: Nanaimo News Bulletin, Tuesday August 31, 2004, p 27.
  • Staff Writer. "An Evening of Unusual Poetry", Nanaimo, BC: Nanaimo Daily News, Friday, September 3, 2004, p.C2.
  • Niosi, Goody. "Healing in the Waiting Room", Nanaimo, BC: Harbour City Star, Saturday, July 30, 2005, p.A4.
  • Allen, Wayne (2005). This Endless Moment, Waterloo, ON: Phoenix Centre Press ISBN 0-9684446-2-8
  • Niosi, Goody. "Haven Founders Offer Tips on Happiness", Nanaimo, BC: Harbour City Star, Wednesday, August 31, 2005, p.A4.
  • Wong, B.R. “Toilet Training,” Relational Child & Youth Care, Vol. 18, No. 3, Fall 2005, p. 57.
  • Wellburn, Lynn. "Health and Happiness - a Book on Mind/Body Connection", Nanaimo, BC: Harbour City Star, Wednesday, October 5, 2005, p.A18.
  • Irvine, David and Reger, Jim. (2006). The Authentic Leader, Sanford, FL: DC Press. ISBN 1-932021-19-1
  • McKeen, Jock (2007). Selected Poems of Jock McKeen (English & Chinese), commentary by Bennet Wong, translated by Gloria Sol, Feng Zheng, Paul Wang, Helen Li. Shen Zhen, China: Hua Wei University Publication, 2007.

[edit] Publications

[edit] Wong Publications

  • Wong, B.R. "Group Psychotherapy", Pulse, March 1964, vol.3, no.2.
  • Wong, B.R. “Why Not Delinquency?” B.C. Corrections Courier, vol 2, no. 4, April 1964.
  • Wong, B.R. "If Only I Had Known", Proceedings of the Canadian Conference on Social Welfare, Vancouver, B.C., June 1966.
  • Wong, B.R. "Sex: Personal, Social, Ethical - Take Your Choice", Continuing Education Deparment, U.B.C., November 1966.
  • Wong, B.R. "The Need to Be", The Alcoholism Foundation of B.C., March 1968.
  • Wong, B.R. "The Need To Be", Canadian Journal of Psychiatric Nursing, May 1968, vol.IX, no.5.
  • Wong, B.R. "The Adolescent in Our Changing Society", Child Welfare, July 1968, vol.XLVII, no.7.
  • Wong, B.R. “The Authority Figure As A Therapist,” B.C. Corrections Courier Anthology, no. 2, pp. 7-12, 1969.
  • Wong, B.R. “The Need to Be,” B.C. Corrections Courier Anthology, no. 5, pp. 4-11, 1970.
  • Wong, B.R. "The Problems of Adolescence", The Flying Physician, October 1970, vol.13, no.4.
  • Wong, B.R. "Obstacles to Understanding Youth", Canadian Doctor, October 1970, vol.36, no.10.
  • Wong, B.R. "The Grey World of the Adolescent", Cold Mountain Journal, 1972.
  • Wong, B.R. "Love Is Junk", Proceedings of the Unity Church Conference, June 1973.

[edit] Wong and McKeen Collaborative Publications

See Wong and McKeen Publications list

[edit] External links