The analyst's countertransference to the psychoanalytic process1

M Parsons - The International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 2006 - Wiley Online Library
M Parsons
The International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 2006Wiley Online Library
There is countertransference, not just to individual patients, but to the process of
psychoanalysis itself. The analytic process is a contentious topic. Disagreements about its
nature can arise from taking it as a unitary concept that should have a single defi nition
whereas, in fact, there are several strands to its meaning. The need for the analyst's free
associative listening, as a counterpart to the patient's free associations, implies resistance to
the analytic process in the analyst as well as the patient. The author gives examples of the …
There is countertransference, not just to individual patients, but to the process of psychoanalysis itself. The analytic process is a contentious topic. Disagreements about its nature can arise from taking it as a unitary concept that should have a single defi nition whereas, in fact, there are several strands to its meaning. The need for the analyst's free associative listening, as a counterpart to the patient's free associations, implies resistance to the analytic process in the analyst as well as the patient. The author gives examples of the self‐analysis that this necessitates. The most important happenings in both the analyst's and the patient's internal worlds lie at the boundary between conscious and unconscious, and the nature of an analyst's interventions depends on how fully what happens at that boundary is articulated in the analyst's consciousness. The therapeutic quality of an analyst's engagement with a patient depends on the freeing and enlivening quality, for the analyst, of the analyst's engagement with his or her countertransference to the analytic process.
Wiley Online Library
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果