Hidden Self-States: Some Reflections on the Patient’s Trauma and the Analyst’s Undreamt Dreams

IF 0.2 Q4 SOCIAL WORK
Shirley F. Tung
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract In the treatment of trauma survivors, analysts often find themselves befuddled and disturbed by their clients’ unpredictable and self-destructive behavior. One or more dissociated self-states, initially hidden behind the patient’s high-functioning presentation, may eventually make themselves known in the treatment. The analyst is then challenged to find ways to forge a healing alliance with a disavowed part of the patient’s personality that has previously existed only in the context of a perpetually abusive internalized object relationship. Not only must the multiple self-states learn to communicate with each other, but the unformulated components of the trauma survivor’s childhood experience must be formulated with the analyst in the interpersonal field. At the same time, the analyst’s dissociated self-states and unformulated experience are interwoven in the therapy, creating their own confusion and blind spots. A case study illustrates how the client’s and analyst’s vulnerabilities intersect in the shared unconscious of their work. Psychoanalytic theories on multiple self-states, dissociation, transference-countertransference configurations and unformulated experience all combine to shed light on the difficulties faced by wounded healers treating traumatized patients. The analyst’s countertransference dream is pivotal in exposing her previously inaccessible reactions to her patient.
隐藏的自我状态:对病人创伤和分析员做梦都想不到的思考
摘要在治疗创伤幸存者的过程中,分析人士经常发现自己被客户不可预测和自我毁灭的行为弄得困惑和不安。一种或多种游离的自我状态,最初隐藏在患者的高功能表现背后,最终可能在治疗中被发现。然后,分析人员面临挑战,要想办法与患者人格中被否认的部分建立一个治愈联盟,而这一部分以前只存在于一种永久虐待的内化对象关系中。多重自我状态不仅必须学会相互交流,创伤幸存者童年经历的非模拟成分也必须与人际领域的分析师一起制定。与此同时,分析者游离的自我状态和非模拟的经验交织在治疗中,造成了他们自己的困惑和盲点。一个案例研究说明了客户和分析师的弱点是如何在他们共同的工作无意识中交叉的。关于多重自我状态、分离、移情反移情配置和非模拟体验的精神分析理论都揭示了受伤治疗师在治疗创伤患者时所面临的困难。这位分析人士的反移情梦是将她之前无法接近的反应暴露给患者的关键。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
27
期刊介绍: Psychoanalytic Social Work provides social work clinicians and clinical educators with highly informative and stimulating articles relevant to the practice of psychoanalytic social work with the individual client. Although a variety of social work publications now exist, none focus exclusively on the important clinical themes and dilemmas that occur in a psychoanalytic social work practice. Existing clinical publications in social work have tended to dilute or diminish the significance or the scope of psychoanalytic practice in various ways. Some social work journals focus partially on clinical practice and characteristically provide an equal, if not greater, emphasis upon social welfare policy and macropractice concerns.
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