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Exploring a patient's shift from relative silence to verbal expressiveness: Observations on an element of the analyst's participation
Authors:Steven Cooper
Affiliation:875 Massachusetts Avenue, Suite 54, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA -stevencooper03@gmail.com.
Abstract:By tracing a portion of close process of a patient's shifts from a relatively silent and inhibited stance to one in which he is beginning to verbalize more about his experience and fantasy, I will illustrate some tensions between the analyst's role as facilitating expressiveness and as occupying a place in the patient's internalized world. Since the analyst's functions as facilitator and as internal object (often an obstacle to the patient's expressiveness) are sometimes in conflict with one another, it is important for the analyst to be able to work internally with this conflict as he works with his patient. Splitting processes between these two functions may provide the analyst with cues related to the patient's and the analyst's resistance to understanding the patient's communication of unconscious conflict and the patient's recruitment of the analyst into the patient's internalized world.
Keywords:character  countertransference  defense  enactment  interpretation  resistance  therapeutic alliance  transference
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