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THE PATIENT'S OBJECTS IN THE ANALYST'S MIND
Authors:NANCY KULISH
Affiliation:Adjunct Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at Wayne State Medical School.
Abstract:In every analysis, the analyst develops an internal relationship with the patient's objects—that is, the people in the patient's life and mind. Sometimes these figures can inhabit the analyst's mind as a source of data, but at other times, the analyst may feel preoccupied with or even invaded by them. The author presents two clinical cases: one in which the seeming absence of a good object in the patient's mind made the analyst hesitate to proceed with an analysis, and another in which the patient's preoccupation with a “bad” object was shared and mirrored by the analyst's own inner preoccupation with the object. The use and experience of these two objects by the analyst are discussed with particular attention to the countertransference.
Keywords:Internal objects  transference‐countertransference  analytic interaction  analytic relationship  characters  self‐ and object representation  internal world  unconscious identification  gaslighting  introjection  object relations  analytic narrative
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