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Death anxiety: A hidden factor in countertransference hate
Authors:Pierre-Emmanuel Lacocque Ph.D.  Anthony J. Loeb
Affiliation:(1) Developmental and Psychiatric Services (Outpatient Psychiatry) in Park Ridge, Lutheran General Hospital, Suite 360, 1875 Dempster Street, 60068 Parkridge, Illinois;(2) the Film and Video Department at Columbia College, Chicago, USA;(3) the Illinois School of Professional Psychology in Chicago, Chicago, USA
Abstract:We suggest that when diffucult patients attack our grandiosity and sense of self, we are vulnerable to countertransference anxieties similar, if not identical, to the kind existentialists refer to as ldquoontologicalrdquo. The latter refers specifically to a threat to our psychological equilibrium and is meant to describe the utter ambivalence we associate with death anxiety. In this paper, we are proposing the presence, in certain therapeutic situations, of just such counter-transference reactions to so-called ldquoaversiverdquo patients. We believe that terms like ldquoaversiverdquo, ldquoobnoxiousrdquo, or ldquoimpossiblerdquo are professional euphemisms used to mask the degree of anxiety we often feel, and that there is a collusion present both within and without our profession, especially in psychotherapeutic and psychoanalytic centers, which keeps us from exploring death-related issues within ourselves as well as in our patients.He is Director of Psychological Services at the Parkside Weight Loss Clinic, an interdisciplinary eating disorders program affiliated with the Lutheran General Health Care System.
Keywords:
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