Better Late than Never: The Reparative Therapeutic Relationship in Regression to DependenceThis book is concerned with an enigmatic set of experiences which theorists in the Object Relations tradition have characterised as regression to dependence, a return to a primitive, pre-verbal relational process presenting in some clients in psychotherapy. It highlights the effects of early infantile trauma resulting in the experience of failed dependency. Clients who present with chronic anxiety, relational failures and an inner emptiness are considered, and the opportunity for a therapeutic repair is explored with recommendations for the therapeutic stance being made. Written from an Integrative Psychotherapy perspective, it addresses the current absence of writing in the field from a relational / developmental viewpoint on concepts more usually addressed in psychoanalytic writing. The insights of Winnicott are particularly highlighted in relation to failed dependency and maternal failure. This work aims to offer a way forward to successfully work with this client group. |
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able adult allow Analysis Journal analyst annihilation anxiety appropriate aspects attachment theory attunement baby Balint become behaviour Bollas boundaries child childhood client’s needs clinical concept considers couldn’t countertransference cumulative trauma developmental needs dissociation dyadic early infancy early relational effects emerge emotional empathy Erskine experience experienced explore facilitating environment failure fear feelings Ferenczi Freud highlights holding identifies important individual infant infant development infantile integrative psychotherapy Jason Aronson Kalsched London maternal metaphor misattunements mother narrative object relations Object relations theories occurring offer one’s organisation participant describes patient physical potential practitioners pre-verbal primitive defences psychic psychoanalytic psychological psychosis re-emerge re-experiencing recognises regressed clients regression to dependence regressive process relational needs repair research participants result sense sessions shame Sigmund Freud stance story Sweden terror theoretical theorists theory therapeutic relationship therapeutic touch therapist and client therapy touch Transactional Analysis transference transform transitional object Tustin unconscious understanding Winnicott York
