Psychoanalytic witnessing as a prerequisite to psychotherapy with a severely sexually abused young adolescent male ex-inner city gang member |
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Authors: | Andrew Briggs |
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Affiliation: | 1. Sussex Partnership NHS Foundation Trust, Unit 1, Twisleton Court, Dartford, Kent, DA1 2EN, UKandrew.briggs55@btinternet.com |
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Abstract: | This paper discusses psychoanalytic witnessing as the prerequisite for psychoanalytic psychotherapy with a severely sexually traumatised young adolescent boy, Dean. This form of witnessing acted as a prior stage for treatment through the psychotherapist acknowledging Dean’s trauma, without seeking to symbolise its registration in the psychotherapeutic relationship. As sexual abuse is about something done to the person, this acknowledging crucially conveys belief in the truth of what has happened to the patient at the hands of the external world. My work with Dean taught me that such acknowledgment allows for such traumatised patients to then feel more able to accept interpretations based upon what they are doing to the external world, encapsulated in the transference to their psychotherapist. Because trauma is often so deeply felt, and leaves patients dissociated or fragmented, seeking evidence of its presence needs keen observation. Here the paper discusses an experience of bodily countertransference that alerted me to the location of Dean’s trauma’s registration in our relationship. Overall, the paper seeks to demonstrate the importance of psychoanalytic witnessing as a form of containment in itself, and the essential basis for psychotherapeutic work using symbolisation and the transference. |
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Keywords: | bodily countertransference containment projective identification psychoanalytic witnessing sexual abuse trauma |
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