By Thomas H. Ogden
Explains the patient's identity in remedy with an important different for reasons of gaining knowledge of irritating experiences.
Two stuff you may still learn about this booklet: the 1st is that Dr. Ogden illuminates a few of the reports with sufferers that we needs to endure so that it will be of aid. the second one is that Dr. Ogden's writing deals us a feeling of the attitudes and aptitudes that are the attainment of such notable clinicians as Elvin Semrad. This latter element of the booklet makes it fairly specific, for to bring in print the sensation and spirit of the best medical considering is a extraordinary success. The present isn't a standard one. (Jeffry J. Andersen, M.D. modern Psychiatry)
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Additional resources for Projective Identification and Psychotherapeutic Technique
Sample text
Mr. C. imagined that the colleague was more competent and successful than the therapist and that the therapist was getting advice of some sort from the colleague. T h e patient said he felt guilty for saying this to the therapist and did not want to hurt him, but that was the way he felt. The therapist, although not usually rattled by insults from his patients, began to feel increasingly uneasy as time went on. H e began to feel that his voice sounded thin when the patient allowed him an opportunity to speak.
Depending upon the projector's maturational level, the type of internalization process employed may range from primi- Projective ldentification and Psychotherapeutic Technique tive introjection to mature types of identification. In introjection, the internalized aspect of the recipient is poorly integrated into the remainder of the personality system and is experienced as a foreign element ("a presence") inside the self. In identification, there is a modification of motives, behavior patterns, and selfrepresentations, in such a way that the individual feels that he has become "like" or "the same as" the recipient with regard to a given aspect of that person.
Mr. C. imagined that the colleague was more competent and successful than the therapist and that the therapist was getting advice of some sort from the colleague. T h e patient said he felt guilty for saying this to the therapist and did not want to hurt him, but that was the way he felt. The therapist, although not usually rattled by insults from his patients, began to feel increasingly uneasy as time went on. H e began to feel that his voice sounded thin when the patient allowed him an opportunity to speak.