The patient “employs” and “enlists” the analyst in his various transference forms, not so much by attributing a role to him, but by inducing subtle and deep changes in his person. What the patient makes us experience transforms our potential interpretation into words that arise from the emotional “turbulence” established between the patient and the analyst, prompted by the patient's suffering, made “real” by the analyst’s temporary suffering. Interpretation can become alive, meaningful, usable by the patient, only if the analyst allows that turbolence to temporarily become his own, not just to understand the patient, but to transform him through a partial transformation of the analyst himself. To realize this, we have to maintain an ongoing...
One of the major contributions of Veikko Tähkä to psychoanalysis is his illustration of how some hal...
Focusing on the analyst's internal world, the author reflects on the most complex of the inherent di...
The role of interpretation as a core intervention promoting good outcomes in psychotherapy is well ...
The patient “employs” and “enlists” the analyst in his various transference forms, not so much by at...
The patient’s efforts to enter into a collaborative relationship with the analyst, to become an anal...
Abstract The author focuses on the person of the analyst and particularly how it helps shape two key...
The author discusses the vicissitudes of working analytically with patients who present with monolit...
Psychoanalytic interpretation is normally understood as a sequence of two utterances: the analyst gi...
To clarify the concepts of critical realism, subjectivity, and subjectivism, distinctions are drawn ...
Recognition of the analyst’s subjective involvement has led to pro-found reconsideration of the natu...
The author postulates that challenges related to ending an analysis may reflect the fact that the an...
This article reflects on pivotal concepts of psychoanalytic practice and theory, applied to a single...
This reflection addresses a very important topic for care professions, with a special look at psycho...
For certain patients who approach analysts for treatment, analysis remains the only treatment that c...
Subjectivity in a therapeutic process as a predictor of psychotherapeutic success Reflections on the...
One of the major contributions of Veikko Tähkä to psychoanalysis is his illustration of how some hal...
Focusing on the analyst's internal world, the author reflects on the most complex of the inherent di...
The role of interpretation as a core intervention promoting good outcomes in psychotherapy is well ...
The patient “employs” and “enlists” the analyst in his various transference forms, not so much by at...
The patient’s efforts to enter into a collaborative relationship with the analyst, to become an anal...
Abstract The author focuses on the person of the analyst and particularly how it helps shape two key...
The author discusses the vicissitudes of working analytically with patients who present with monolit...
Psychoanalytic interpretation is normally understood as a sequence of two utterances: the analyst gi...
To clarify the concepts of critical realism, subjectivity, and subjectivism, distinctions are drawn ...
Recognition of the analyst’s subjective involvement has led to pro-found reconsideration of the natu...
The author postulates that challenges related to ending an analysis may reflect the fact that the an...
This article reflects on pivotal concepts of psychoanalytic practice and theory, applied to a single...
This reflection addresses a very important topic for care professions, with a special look at psycho...
For certain patients who approach analysts for treatment, analysis remains the only treatment that c...
Subjectivity in a therapeutic process as a predictor of psychotherapeutic success Reflections on the...
One of the major contributions of Veikko Tähkä to psychoanalysis is his illustration of how some hal...
Focusing on the analyst's internal world, the author reflects on the most complex of the inherent di...
The role of interpretation as a core intervention promoting good outcomes in psychotherapy is well ...