Sloate Phyllis L
New York University Postdoctoral Program in Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, NY, USA.
J Am Acad Psychoanal Dyn Psychiatry. 2008 Spring;36(1):69-88. doi: 10.1521/jaap.2008.36.1.69.
This paper challenges the view that food, or the patient's own body, functions as a transitional object for bulimics during the binge-purge cycle or symptomatic equivalents of self-harm. The author proposes that the bulimic patient's actions in and on her body more closely approximate the use of a fetish, which temporarily enhances a deficient and unstable body image and assuages separation anxiety, but does not promote progressive development. To illustrate these distinctions, the author presents an analysis of a self-mutilating bulimic patient who used her body as a fetish until a more integrated "me" evolved within the "shared skin" of her treatment. At that point, a transitional object and an idealizing selfobject fantasy were created, and the patient was able to engage the question of "not me," relinquish her self-mutilation, and resume the process of separation and growth.
在暴饮暴食-清除循环或自我伤害的症状等同行为中,食物或患者自身身体充当了贪食症患者的过渡性客体。作者提出,贪食症患者对自身身体的行为更近似于恋物癖的行为,它暂时增强了有缺陷且不稳定的身体意象,并缓解了分离焦虑,但不会促进渐进发展。为了阐明这些区别,作者对一名自残的贪食症患者进行了分析,该患者将自己的身体当作恋物对象,直到在治疗的“共享肌肤”中逐渐形成了一个更完整的“我”。此时,一个过渡性客体和理想化的自体客体幻想被创造出来,患者能够面对“非我”的问题,放弃自残行为,并重新开始分离与成长的过程。