Suppr超能文献

早期客体关系转变为新的客体。

Early object relations into new objects.

作者信息

Downey T W

机构信息

Yale School of Medicine, Yale Child Study Center, Western New England Institute for Psychoanalysis, New Haven, Connecticut, USA.

出版信息

Psychoanal Study Child. 2001;56:39-67; discussion 68-75. doi: 10.1080/00797308.2001.11800664.

Abstract

Two strands of change are suggested by this review, one maturational, the other therapeutic or developmental (Hartmann and Kris, 1945). By "maturational" I mean to suggest energies that infuse the individual from earliest life in a manner that includes object relations, but for the healthy exercise of which object relations per se need not be of central and crucial importance. Within wide limits such energies may be delayed until growth conditions prevail without significant distortion of certain of the organism's ego functions. Therapeutic change is analogous to developmental change in that both involve the crucial presence of another to release energies. In therapeutic change these are energies that have been repressed beyond the reach of developmental dynamics. In everyday development crisis and synthesis alternate in conjunction with new and emerging objects to add to the psychological structures brought to the fore by maturation. In many instances, as we see with John, over time and in a less focussed manner, developmental changes can approximate therapeutic change and visa versa. Freud-Dann in their "experiment" pursued one line, in which the equipmental delay brought on by extremely adverse living circumstances was redressed by providing an interpersonally enriching, loving, developmentally facilitating milieu. The sketches of individual children and John's subsequent story provide a perspective into what becomes the stuff of growth and what remains the stuff of neurosis. The developmental reserves and ego resilience of these children were impressive but probably not extraordinary. Usual growth ensued as soon as they were provided with the rich soil of Bulldogs Bank instead of the desert sand of the Tereszin concentration camp. However, no one can escape such adverse circumstances without having taken in the stuff of neurosis. Affects and percepts that were not assimilatable or even available to consciousness at the time remain buried in the unconscious. Pain deprived of meaning is buried as neurosis. As we see in John's story, experience that cannot be integrated at the time is locked away from whatever developmental progression has occurred. Intolerable affects and ideas require particular circumstances of object relation and verbalization such as are found in the context of psychoanalysis and arrived at through psychoanalytic interpretation. Or, as in John's case, they may give way only slowly and irregularly over long stretches of time, when subjected to life experiences in the company of new object relations. Broadly stated, the Freud-Dann paper helps us to appreciate that there are several pathways of protection and growth in the ego that involve the discovery or construction of new objects. Family-romance fantasies are a common manifestation of new-object phenomena. Transitional object phenomena are also related. For some individuals at a particular time or over a span of time, providing the right circumstances for the resumption of maturational and developmental growth is all it takes to make them whole. Changes in the adaptive ego are sufficient to alleviate the conflicts stemming from the neurotic ego. For others, depending upon the degree of their neurotic impairment, or for the same individual under other circumstances, therapeutic change in the deepest sense demands the relatively unconditional presence of the interactive and interpreting other. Children of the storm who come in for shelter and warmth may thrive, but they also require a means of getting at the storm in their core that has been internalized as part of the ego's survival mechanism. What can be extracted from the poignant story of the Bulldogs Bank children about current child-analytic technique? The psychoanalytic piano now may be more formally conceptualized as having white as well as black keys. Most analyses, adult and child, have been conducted as though the "black keys"--pressure to mastery through repetition and its subsequent interpretation in relation to the transference--were the sole agents of therapeutic change. Reviewing maturation and development in relation to the resumption of psychological growth suggests that the provision of a beneficient environment, the "white keys," may lead to the resumption of maturational growth and change. The difference between the two modalities would be in the relative need for a significant other to bring about such change. Expanding on Hartmann and Kris, we can say that maturation requires a certain level of human stimulation and a supportive environment to unfold. At times in our work we encounter a psychoanalysis of and about maturation rather than primarily transference and interpretation. By and large the structure and functions of the ego that have been impeded in their exercise by traumatic circumstances in the environment are reactivated by a generalized holding environment rather than a relationship. In the practice of psychoanalysis this means that the child analyst may be more relaxed about the nonverbal play and relational aspects of the work; he need not fear that dynamics not captured in secondary process are lost to change. To the extent that the analysis provides an opportunity for maturational expression, growth will occur. When growth has been impeded by direct and significant interpersonal factors, the standard interpretative clarifications of defense, drive, and object relations in the context of removing the transference distortions regarding the analyst (and the world) are essential for recovery. Where the sequence of repetition through practice to mastery has become frozen by thwarting and stunting relationships, these potentially dead-end examples of neurotic object constancy must be played out on the "black keys." The amalgamation of the black of transference developments and the white of maturational emergence is paradigmatic for the discovery of new objects and new senses of self. In everyday life and analysis, maturation may lead to dramatic change that has hitherto been poorly identified and conceptualized. In child analysis, play is the medium for picking the lock of both arrested maturation and stultified development. Realizing that should permit the child analyst to engage more freely with the child in their own style of play without being overly concerned about the presence or absence of relational dynamic material. Non-dynamic play may not usually be defensive play, though it has often been misinterpreted as such. It may represent activity supporting renewed maturation--practice play in the service of memory, motility, or small or large motor function rather than in the service of the playful, repetitive externalization of threatening introjects. Dynamic play highlights the stagnant or emerging functions of the ego with regard to defense and affect management, which may then be interpreted using the play as key or using words as key to unlock the troubled relationship that is being dramatized. The analyst remains in a non-defensive stance, assigned by the analysand as audience or benign participant. Similarly, in adult analyses some individuals come pre-programmed not so much for interpretation as to discover the analyst as new object. They are in search of near psychobiological maturational closure on an object, already constituted in fantasy, that is respectful, attentive, objective, interested, and sometimes enlightening in their attempts at analytic understanding and developmental homeostasis. This phenomenon is akin to love at first sight, though without the flagrant libidinal romantic element. It occurs as the analytic narrative unfolds and the patient comes to a new sense of self, often around some developmental role or mix of roles, such as spouse, lover, mother, student, sibling, or worker. The point is that playing on the black and white keys of development and maturation leads to the appreciation of a psychoanalytic instrument that is at once more complex and yet easier to get music out of. And development continues from early objects to new objects. New and renewed understandings of analytic events necessarily guide the analyst in the timing of his traditional activities of attending, listening, talking, and relating. A contemporary surge of clinical understanding has led to a more active and informed relatedness on the part of the analyst that allows for a more compassionate approach to verbalization, whether with adults or children. We now know that not every word and every dynamic needs to be funneled through interpretation. The spontaneous powers for recovery that are stimulated by the analytic ground and the analytic process may come to be more accepted as a component of therapeutic gain. Appreciation of the balance of power between the verbal and nonverbal aspects of the analytic process in bringing about therapeutic change has increased. This has led to a greater parity of power and responsibility in the therapeutic alliance. The idea of a "tilted partnership" in which both members work for or against the powerful forces of the analytic process, or of a reciprocal relationship between analyst and analysand has become available to replace the former emphasis on the "tilted relationship." The analyst need no longer be so much in charge of the proceedings whether through deep interpretations of the unconscious or by obsessive attention to associational detail. The ongoing process of developing a body of theoretical and technical understanding that is both reliable and plastic demands an openness that at times flies in the face of the imperative needs of our patients and our profession for clinical confidence and certainty. The analytic clinician, part artist and part scientist, is forever struggling to balance the interminable task of culling new understanding from experience while imposing previously derived understandings that while sure are yet subject to changes stimulated by analytic experience. (ABSTRACT TRUNCATED)

摘要

本综述提出了两条变化线索,一条是成熟性的,另一条是治疗性或发展性的(哈特曼和克里斯,1945)。所谓“成熟性的”,我指的是从生命最初阶段就注入个体的能量,这种注入方式包含客体关系,但对于这些能量的健康发挥而言,客体关系本身并非至关重要。在很大范围内,这些能量可能会被延迟,直到成长条件具备,而不会对有机体的某些自我功能造成重大扭曲。治疗性改变与发展性改变类似,因为两者都涉及另一个体的关键存在以释放能量。在治疗性改变中,这些能量是被压抑到发展动力无法触及的程度的能量。在日常发展中,危机与整合与新出现的客体交替出现,以增添成熟过程中凸显的心理结构。在许多情况下,正如我们在约翰的例子中看到的,随着时间推移且方式较为不聚焦,发展性改变可以近似于治疗性改变,反之亦然。弗洛伊德 - 丹恩在他们的“实验”中采用了一条路线,即在极端恶劣的生活环境导致的机能延迟,通过提供一个人际丰富、充满爱且促进发展的环境来得到纠正。对个别儿童的描述以及约翰随后的故事,为我们提供了一个视角,了解哪些成为了成长的素材,哪些仍然是神经症的素材。这些儿童的发展储备和自我复原力令人印象深刻,但可能并非异乎寻常。一旦他们被给予像斗牛犬银行那样肥沃的土壤,而非特雷津集中营的沙漠沙地,正常的成长就随之而来。然而,没有人能够在不吸收神经症素材的情况下逃脱这种恶劣环境。当时无法被同化甚至无法进入意识的情感和感知,仍然被埋在无意识中。失去意义的痛苦被埋藏为神经症。正如我们在约翰的故事中看到的,当时无法整合的经历,无论发生了何种发展进程,都被封存起来。无法忍受的情感和想法需要特定的客体关系和言语表达情境,比如在精神分析的背景下,并通过精神分析解释来实现。或者,就像约翰的情况,当处于新的客体关系陪伴下的生活经历时,它们可能只会在很长一段时间内缓慢且不规则地得到缓解。宽泛地说,弗洛伊德 - 丹恩的论文帮助我们认识到,自我中有几种保护和成长的途径,涉及新客体的发现或构建。恋亲情结幻想是新客体现象的常见表现。过渡性客体现象也与之相关。对于某些个体在特定时间或一段时间内,提供恢复成熟性和发展性成长的合适环境,就足以使他们完整。适应性自我的改变足以缓解源于神经症自我的冲突。对于另一些人,取决于他们神经症损伤的程度,或者对于同一个人在其他情况下,最深刻意义上的治疗性改变需要相对无条件地存在互动和进行解释的他人。那些寻求庇护和温暖的风暴中的孩子可能会茁壮成长,但他们也需要一种方式来触及作为自我生存机制一部分而内化的内心深处的风暴。从斗牛犬银行儿童的辛酸故事中,我们能提取出关于当前儿童分析技术的哪些内容呢?现在,精神分析这架钢琴可以更正式地被概念化为既有白键也有黑键。大多数成人和儿童分析的进行方式,就好像“黑键”——通过重复实现掌控的压力及其随后在移情关系中的解释——是治疗性改变的唯一因素。回顾与心理成长恢复相关的成熟和发展表明,提供一个有益的环境,即“白键”,可能会导致成熟性成长和改变的恢复。这两种方式的区别在于实现这种改变对重要他人的相对需求。在哈特曼和克里斯观点的基础上进一步拓展,我们可以说,成熟需要一定水平的人际刺激和支持性环境才能展开。在我们的工作中,有时会遇到关于成熟的精神分析,而不仅仅是关于移情和解释。总体而言,因环境中的创伤性情况而在发挥中受到阻碍的自我结构和功能,会被一个普遍的容纳性环境而非一段关系重新激活。在精神分析实践中,这意味着儿童分析师可能对工作中的非言语游戏和关系方面更加放松;他不必担心未在次级过程中捕捉到的动力会在改变中丧失。只要分析提供了成熟性表达的机会,成长就会发生。当成长因直接且重要的人际因素而受阻时,在消除关于分析师(以及世界)的移情扭曲的背景下,对防御、驱力和客体关系进行标准的解释性澄清对于康复至关重要。当通过实践到掌控的重复序列因受阻和发育迟缓的关系而冻结时,这些潜在的神经症客体固着的死胡同例子必须在“黑键”上展开。移情发展的黑色与成熟出现的白色的融合,是发现新客体和新自我感的典范。在日常生活和分析中,成熟可能会导致迄今为止未被很好识别和概念化的戏剧性变化。在儿童分析中,游戏是打开成熟停滞和发展迟滞这两把锁的媒介。意识到这一点应该会让儿童分析师更自由地以他们自己的游戏风格与孩子互动,而不必过于担心关系动力材料的有无。非动力性游戏通常可能不是防御性游戏,尽管它常常被误解为防御性游戏。它可能代表支持重新成熟的活动——为记忆、运动能力或大小肌肉功能服务的练习性游戏,而不是为威胁性内投射的嬉戏性、重复性外化服务。动力性游戏突出了自我在防御和情感管理方面停滞或出现的功能,然后可以用游戏作为关键或用言语作为关键来解释正在被戏剧化的困扰关系。分析师保持一种非防御性的立场,被分析者指定为观众或良性参与者。同样,在成人分析中,一些个体预先设定的目标与其说是解释,不如说是发现分析师这个新客体。他们在寻找对一个客体的近乎心理生物学成熟的终结,这个客体在幻想中已经构成,在他们尝试进行分析理解和发展性平衡时,是尊重的、专注的、客观的、感兴趣的,有时还具有启发性。这种现象类似于一见钟情,尽管没有明显的力比多浪漫元素。它发生在分析叙述展开时,患者获得新的自我感,通常围绕着一些发展角色或角色组合,如配偶、爱人、母亲、学生、兄弟姐妹或工人。关键在于,在发展和成熟的黑白键上弹奏,会让我们认识到一种精神分析工具,它既更复杂又更容易弹奏出音乐。而且发展从早期客体持续到新客体。对分析事件的新的和更新的理解必然会指导分析师在其传统的参与、倾听、交谈和建立关系活动的时机把握上。当代临床理解的热潮导致分析师更积极且明智地建立关系,从而在与成人或儿童的言语表达上采取更具同情心的方法。我们现在知道,并非每个词语和每种动力都需要通过解释来引导。由分析基础和分析过程激发的自发恢复力量,可能会更被接受为治疗收益的一个组成部分。对分析过程中言语和非言语方面在带来治疗性改变时的力量平衡的认识有所增加。这导致治疗联盟中权力和责任的更大平等。“倾斜的伙伴关系”的概念,即双方为分析过程的强大力量而努力或与之对抗,或者分析师与被分析者之间的互惠关系,已经可以用来取代以前对“倾斜关系”的强调。分析师不再需要通过对无意识的深入解释或对联想细节的过度关注来过多掌控进程。发展一套既可靠又灵活的理论和技术理解的持续过程,需要一种开放性,而这种开放性有时与我们的患者和我们的专业对临床信心和确定性的迫切需求背道而驰。分析临床医生,兼具艺术家和科学家的部分特质,永远在努力平衡从经验中筛选新理解这一无尽任务,同时应用先前得出的理解,而这些理解虽然确定,但仍会受到分析经验激发的变化影响。 (摘要截断)

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验