In dialogue with Daniel Stern: A review and discussion of The Present Moment in Psychotherapy and Everyday Life |
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Authors: | Lennart Ramberg MD |
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Affiliation: | 1. Training analyst , Swedish Psychoanalytical Association , Stockholm , Sweden lennart.ramberg@telia.com |
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Abstract: | Abstract Daniel Stern's concepts of “present moment” and “now moment,” with impending kairos, are described. In the latter, the patient demands the authentic presence of the analyst. If the analyst can open himself to the patient, he proposes that this will result in more profound changes in the patient's implicit knowing than verbal interpretations in the narrative domain would lead to. The value of intersubjectively relating and dwelling more in the phenomenal than in the narrative dimension is highlighted. A similarity to the works of the existential psychoanalyst Harold Kelman is shown. The author agrees with, but also problematises, a tendency to favour the implicit, devaluing verbal understanding and interpretation, which may result in the patient not seeing the primitive levels in his inner life. For this purpose, works from D. W. Winnicott, Jessica Benjamin and Christopher Bollas, as well as others, are used. The author concludes that object relations and intersubjective theory need to complement each other that further, there is a need to give words to the middle-ground between the phenomenal and narrative dimensions. |
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Keywords: | Existential psychoanalysis intersubjectivity kairos now moment object relations |
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