Abstract
In remembering Lew Aron I wanted to convey something essential about his wisdom, warmth, scholarship and his two great passions - psychoanalysis and Jewish thought. In his dying Lew courageously taught us all his greatest lesson: to live completely and then die while fully alive.
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Jill Salberg
Jill Salberg, PhD, ABPP is a clinical associate professor and clinical consultant/supervisor at the New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis. She is also faculty and supervisor at the Stephen Mitchell Center for Relational Studies, the Institute for Contemporary Psychotherapy, visiting faculty in the Relational Psychotherapy track at Sackler school of Continuing Medical Education, Tel Aviv University and a member of IPTAR. Her papers have been published in Psychoanalytic Dialogues, Psychoanalytic Quarterly, Contemporary Psychoanalysis, and Studies in Gender and Sexuality and Psychoanalytic Perspectives. She is a contributor to and the editor of the book Good Enough Endings: Breaks, Interruptions and Terminations from Contemporary Relational Perspectives (2010). She has co-edited two books with Sue Grand, The Wounds of History: Repair and Resilience in the Transgenerational Transmission of Trauma, and Transgenerational Trauma and the Other: Dialogues Across History and Difference, (2017). Both books won the Gradiva Award for 2018. She is in private practice in Manhattan.