Summary of Chapter 3 of the The Individual Book (de Bruin, E., 1st Edition)

This is the Chapter 3 of the book The Individual (de Bruin, E., 1st Edition). Which is content for the exam of the Theory component of Module 4 (The Individual) of the University of Twente, in the Netherlands.

 

Chapter 3:

The psychodynamic tradition

Psychodynamic therapy: emphasis therapist’s ability use relationship client/ therapist to explore feelings/ relationship dilemmas --> helps clients achive inshight/ understanding how their problems developed/ how they are maintained, and transform this inshight into mature capacity to cope current/ future difficulties.

Origins of psychodynamic therapy: Freud

  • Free association: patient lie relaxed position and say whatever comes to mind --> Freud reported many patients remembered unpleasant sexual experiences in childhood --> concluded root problems child’s own sexual (emotional energy) needs
  • Features psychoanalysis/ psychodynamic approach:
  • Difficulties client origin childhood
  • Not consciously aware motive/ impulses actions
  • Interpretation transference relationship
  • Stages:
  1. Oral Stage: [1st year life] - Erotic pleasure from oral region (mouth)
  2. Anal stage: [2 to 4 years] - Pleasure from defecating (anal region)
  3. Phallic Stage: [5 to 8 years] – Immature genital longing, directed members opposite sex --> most significant effects later life, because forced repress sexual feeligns
  4. Latency stage: child’s sexuality becomes less important
  • Good enough mother: caretaker/ responds quickly enough without being over-protective/ smothering
  • Importance of unconscious:
  • Id: ultimate motives for our behaviour. Core drives: Eros (life/ love/ sex)/ Thanatos (death/ hate/ aggression)
  • Ego: conscious/ rational part mind, makes decisions/ deals reality
  • SuperEgo: “conscience”. Store-house rules/ taboos about should/ shouldn’t --> mainly internalisation of parents attitudes
  • Defense mechanisms: developed by mind to protect ego from pressure from constant conflict id/ superego
  • Transference: fundamental cornerstone psychodynamic theory/ practice --> form free association, Freud discovered patients view of him was not objective/ rational response to his actual behaviour --> patients perceived him lens/ filter constructed previous relationships
  • Task of the therapist: behave differently from original characters in patients life --> client aware new different possibilities around relationships with others
  • Aim therapist: where id was, let ego be
  • Catharsis: when person truly understands issue, experience release of emotional tension associated with repressed/ buried memories of the issue
  • Mechanisms of defence:
  • Repression (motivated forgetting): removal from awareness any threatening impulse/ idea/ memory
  • Denial (motivated negation): blocking external events/ info from awareness
  • Projection (displacement outwards): attribute other own unacceptable desires/ thoughts
  • Displacement (redirection of impulses): channelling impulses to different target
  • Reaction formation (asserting the opposite): defending against unacceptable impulses by turning them into the opposite
  • Sublimination (finding an acceptable substitute): transforming impulses into more socially acceptable form of behaviour
  • Regression (developmental retreat): response internal feelings triggered by external threat, by reverting behaviour form earlier stage of development
  • Techniques/ strategies used in psychodynamic/ psychoanalytic therapy:
  1. Therapist self-awareness: use feelings/ fantasies/ action tendencies therapist experience in response to client --> valuable information everyday way of being with others of client
  2. Interpretation: important to consider timing/ correctness of interpretation/ understandability interpretation
  3. Expression/ projective technique: as means of exploring past/ present circumstances

Psychodynamic tradition:

  • Early pioneers:
  • Jungian approach (analytic psychology): diverged sexual development of Freud
  • Collective unconscious:
  • Archetypes: symbolic representations universal facets human experience
  • Shadow: aspects of self denied to conscious awareness
  • Individualisation: human development --> lifelong quest for fulfilment.
  • Object relations (Melanie Klein): relationship-oriented therapy, direct observations behaviour babies and mothers-infant interaction
  • Objects: can be the mother. Composed internalised image/ memory of person, with all the parts of that person
  • Part-object: breast --> good/ bad object, depending if baby needs are being met
  • Paranoid-schizoid period: baby feels little security world because recovering from trauma birth
  • Depressive reaction: deep sense disappointment/ anger when realise loved person can be good and bad
  • Self-centeredness: grandiose/ narcissistic patterns of relating to others --> underlying cause problems adult life
  • Projective identification: when person whom feelings/ impulses are being projected is manipulated into believing that they have these feelings/ impulses
  • Dependency: actively seeking assistance from other --> need of assistance motivates by projective fantasy (sense of self-in-relationship originating in disturbed object relations in early childhood)
  • The real relationship: beyond transference and countertransference
  • Inner worlds: closed systems, psychoanalysis aims to break through, to allow patient to become accessible to the influence of outer reality
  • Countertransference: reaction to the client or client's transference
  • American post-Freudian tradition:
  • Self-theory: set of perceptions individual has for himself/ relationships/ other aspects of life
  • Narcissism: other people experienced as “self-objects”, extensions of the self
  • Optimal frustration: therapist can never achieve complete empathy and acceptance (same for parents)
  • European tradition:
  • Jacques Lacan: consciousness in apprehending the world categorized into 3 models: imaginary/ symbolic/ real (non-linguistic realms).
  • Lacanian theory: limits of understanding based on language
  • Attachment theory: therapist make use of therapist relationship to become an internalized “secure base” for client
  • John Bowlby: humans basic need form of attachment, will not function well unless such attachment is available
  • Internal working model: internal representation of social world --> main attachment figures/ themselves/ links between these elements
  • Strange situation: infants systematically observed while mother leaves/ returns
  • Secure: missing parent --> seeks contact when she returns, and then back to play normally
  • Insecure-avoidant: few signs missing parent, avoid her in reunion
  • Insecure-ambivalent: distressed/ angry parent leaves, cannot settled she returns
  • Insecure-disoriented
  • Adult Attachment interview: means assessing patterns of attachment later in life --> aim to surprise the unconscious, then person will find themselves saying things beyond conscious control
  • Secure/autonomous: story coherent/ consistent/ objective
  • Dismissive: not coherent, dismissive of attachment-related experiences and relationships
  • Preoccupied: incoherent, angry, preoccupied with past experiences
  • Unresolves/disorganised: similar dismissive + preoccupied, but include long silences or erroneous statements (talking as though someone who died still alive)
  • Metacognitive monitoring: people step back form situation and reflect what they are saying --> characteristic securely attached
  • Mentalisation: capacity to learn how to reflect on experience
  • Reflective function: ability think about/ talk about painful past events --> helps protect themselves from raw emotional impact without use defences
  • The concept of the “third”: authoritative figures from earlier periods
  • Triangular relationship: transference interpretation

Brief psychodynamic therapy:

Commences with assessment interview (explores readiness/ capability of client to engage productively in therapy)

Transference neurosis: strong transference reaction, encouraged in long-term analysis, allow evidence of childhood relationship patterns to emerge

  • Psychodynamic-interpersonal therapy: meaning and role of language. Core approach is that people need to be able to talk about their feelings --> dissolves loneliness associated with holding feelings to oneself
  1. Start identification core problem that underpins depression
  2. This is explored as to enable client to mentalise/ reflect productively on their experience, then client helped to consider other ways of feeling/ thinking in situation that evoke depression
  3. Written statement by therapist, summarising work together, preventing future relapse
  • Other forms of brief psychodynamic therapy:
  • Intensive short-term dynamic psychotherapy: unlocking the unconscious by challenging ways in which client defend himself against difficult emotions
  • Affect phobia therapy: attention to the ways repressed emotions are expressed in non-verbal behaviour/ body awareness
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