A Primer of Handling the Negative Therapeutic Reaction

A Primer of Handling the Negative Therapeutic Reaction

by Jeffrey Seinfeld
A Primer of Handling the Negative Therapeutic Reaction

A Primer of Handling the Negative Therapeutic Reaction

by Jeffrey Seinfeld

Hardcover

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Overview

In a negative therapeutic reaction the progress of treatment triggers a particular destructive dynamic in the patient. Initially, therapists considered it to be a result of the patient’s pathology, but contemporary clinicians recognize that the therapist may significantly contribute to this process.

Object relations clinicians see the individual as a social being that develops in relation to others whom the individual internalizes as good and bad objects. Jeffrey Seinfeld explores how an internal sabotaging self is identified with a rejecting object. This self is a reservoir of memories of how original caregivers rejected the child's needs, and the patient now expects the world to reject and disappoint her. If patients experience the therapist as a kind or caring person, they may feel that they are being lured into dependency and subsequent disappointment. Paradoxically, if patients feel attached to the therapist, this same attachment is experienced as a threatening dependency that must be destroyed. A relationship that could eventually strengthen the personality is rejected, and instead a negative reaction to the therapist and the therapeutic process is established.

Jeffrey Seinfeld shows that in order for patients to heal, they must separate from the internal bad objects.This is often done with aggression against the therapist, who must be able to withstand the intense hostility, rage, and abuse of the patient. Only by surviving this aggression in the negative therapeutic reaction can the therapist allow the patient to integrate good and bad part objects in the transference.

The therapist can eventually serve as a bridge in the integration of the divided good and bad selves and objects. Through case histories Seinfeld illustrates his way of entering into the patient’s internal world. By helping patients understand the transference of their internal objects, they begin to understand their own experience of self and others, which leads to character change.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780765703637
Publisher: Aronson, Jason Inc.
Publication date: 08/01/2002
Pages: 254
Product dimensions: 6.38(w) x 9.22(h) x 1.05(d)

About the Author

Jeffrey Seinfeld, Ph.D. is a full-time professor at New York University School of Social Work and a private consultant of the Jewish Board of Family and Children’s Service. Dr. Seinfeld is a Scientific Member of the Object Relations Institute. He received his Ph.D. from New York University of Social Work and his M.S.W. from Hunter College of Social Work. He has authored and co-edited works in the fields of psychotherapy and clinical social work, including Interpreting and Holding: The Paternal and Maternal Functions of the Psychotherapist, The Bad Object: Handling the Negative Therapeutic Reaction in Psychotherapy, and The Empty Core: An Object Relations Approach to Psychotherapy of the Schizoid Personality. Dr. Seinfeld is in the private practice of psychotherapy in New York City.

Table of Contents

Introductionvii
1.The Historic View of the Negative Therapeutic Reaction1
2.Object Relations and the Negative Therapeutic Reaction15
3.Intervention with the Out of Contact Patient31
4.Manifestations of the Negative Therapeutic Reaction57
5.Working with Severe Borderline Patients73
6.Intersubjective Aspects in the Treatment of Schizoid Patients101
7.The Dynamics of the Bad Object117
8.The Negative Therapeutic Reaction in the Treatment of Children153
9.Interpreting the Tie to the Bad Internal Object173
10.Interpreting Splitting of the Transference195
11.Internalizing a Containing Object217
References243
Index247
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