This new Orgonon portal is designed to bring together the two foundational pillars of our work: managing the intellectual property by safeguarding and sharing Wilhelm Reich’s legacy worldwide, and managing the physical property by nurturing the unique natural and architectural environment of the Orgonon estate in Maine, the very place he built and shaped.


This site opens the door to both sides of our mission. In terms of intellectual property, you can learn about our publications, archival resources, and ongoing educational programs. Regarding the physical property, you can follow the many developments taking place at Orgonon itself. From trail improvements and grounds restoration to the creation of Orgonon Camps, we are steadily enhancing the visitor experience. Whether you connect with us from afar or explore the landscape in person, these efforts reflect our commitment to expanding Orgonon beyond its historical footprint—making it more vibrant, accessible, and forward-looking than ever, while supporting the Trust’s long-term strength and mission inspired by Reich’s enduring vision for the property.

Recommended Reading: Major Works by Wilhelm Reich

This scientific autobiography is the most comprehensive starting point for understanding Reich’s work. It traces his evolution from Freud’s inner circle, moving beyond psychology to the groundbreaking realization that the body “keeps the score” of our emotional history. Reich details how trauma is physically anchored in the musculature and governed by the flow of a tangible life force he named orgone energy, identifying the function of the orgasm as the biological mechanism nature provides to release it.

This is the groundbreaking 1933 text where Reich officially brought the body into psychoanalysis. Significantly expanded in the 1940s, this edition documents Reich’s pivotal shift from a purely psychological framework to a bio-energetic one. Moving beyond the passive technique of free association, Reich focused on the active function of the patient’s defenses—concepts he termed character armor and muscular armor. He demonstrates that the perceived split between mind and body is a clinical abstraction; in reality, they form a functional, holistic whole. Consequently, the alleviation of symptoms requires dismantling these characterological blocks—manifesting both psychically and physically—to restore the natural flow of life energy.

Originally published in 1933 and significantly expanded in the 1940s, this is Reich’s major sociological study. While referencing the rise of Fascism, Reich analyzes a universal human problem. He identifies the patriarchal family as the “factory” that produces authoritarian subjects. By destroying natural self-regulation in childhood, this upbringing renders individuals structurally incapable of freedom—leading them to crave a “father figure” to rule them.

Though often credited with coining the term “sexual revolution,” Reich’s concept differs sharply from the “free love” later associated with it. He critiques the failures of both conservative suppression and superficial liberation, he dissects the origins of compulsive marriage and the economic dependence of women to understand the source of widespread misery. Reich argues that issues often dismissed as political—such as adequate housing, birth control, and adolescent privacy—are in fact crucial biological requirements for the development of a healthy emotional life.

Written in 1945, this is a personal, humanistic, and often biting monologue. It is not a scientific text, but a deeply emotional reflection on the “little man” inside everyone—the part of the human psyche that fears life, craves authority, and destroys greatness. With illustrations by New Yorker cartoonist William Steig.

In these deep theoretical works, Reich explores the roots of religion and science and applies his functional thinking to the cosmos. He proposes that the superimposition of two orgone energy streams is the basis for the creation of matter and galaxies.

Using the biblical story as a metaphor, Reich explores the “emotional plague”—the destructive social force that systematically attacks truth-tellers. It is a profound study of how humanity reacts to those who offer them genuine freedom, often destroying them while flocking to the empty promises of “freedom peddlers.”

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News from Orgonon…

Fall 2024 update

2024 Conference – Pulsation & Pleasure

wilhelmreichmuseum.org/2024-conference-info

Spring 2024 update

Lore Reich Rubin, M.D. 1928 – 2024

Lore Reich Rubin MD, 95, an eminent psychoanalyst born and…

Fall 2023 Update