vendredi 5 juin 2026

(99) To observe is not to explain.



Just because something preserves a trace does not mean that it is the origin of that trace... and observing is not explaining...
Where Félix, following traces upon traces and rereading his earlier notes, arrives—with difficulty—at a few conclusions and, above all, at a doubt that grows clearer with each passing day...


Continuation of Félix’s Notebooks

Igniatius’s letter to Lucian cannot be read in isolation. It resonates too precisely with the formulations, hesitations, and even the very words employed by Lucian in his own letters. This parallelism is not accidental. It suggests that something circulates between them, beyond the explicit therapeutic framework.
What is striking is that the implicit diagnosis Lucian had been elaborating from a distance now seems to be formulated by Igniatius himself, almost in the same terms. The idea of a weakened authority, of a creation escaping its creator, of possession rather than mastery, has already been integrated into the patient’s discourse. This precocity is troubling. It raises the question of the origin of this elaboration: does it come from the subject himself, or has it been induced, however subtly, by Lucian’s own posture?
The principal unease lies less in Igniatius’s condition than in Lucian’s position. Why did he feel the need to call upon me? Not merely for a punctual opinion, but to inscribe this affair within such a dense epistolary circulation. This repeated externalization suggests that Lucian no longer feels entirely capable of containing the situation. He observes and analyzes—which is his duty—but if he theorizes, he also seems deeply affected by what he observes.
Where another therapist might remain within a silent framework, Lucian writes and draws. Where he ought to sustain an asymmetry, he shares it. The refinement of his language, his acute awareness of the ongoing displacements, far from protecting him, expose him. One might say that he accompanies Igniatius into the very zone where categories cease to function, without being certain that he can bring him back from it.
What is amiss, fundamentally, is that I am becoming a sort of third-party guarantor of Lucian’s lucidity. Yet this role is not neutral. By asking me for an external perspective, Lucian implicitly acknowledges that his own attention is wavering, that it requires support. This echoes the phrase “still lucid,” which he used and which was not merely a stylistic flourish.
Within this configuration, Igniatius may not be the only one “possessed” by his figures. It is possible that Lucian, too, has become caught within the field of what he analyzes—not as a patient, but as a discreet co-participant in a scene where each person struggles to maintain a position that continually slips away... all the more so since Lucian has confessed to me that he travelled, following the traces and clues left by this entire little world, to the very locations depicted in the drawings: the vast Archipelago of—
Thus, Igniatius’s letter is not merely an individual symptom. It is also a mirror held up to the therapeutic relationship itself. And the request for help he addressed to me reveals less a weakness than a critical point: the moment when professional distance is no longer sufficient, and when it becomes necessary to recognize that something is taking place here that involves all the protagonists, each at a different level.