Methods of Relationship Therapy and Object Relations Within a Therapy Session
My client, Sue, had been in therapy with me for approximately six months on a weekly individual basis. She saw me at the Institute and the sessions were of 55 minutes duration. The long term therapeutic contract with me was that she warned to be less agitated and more relaxed in her life.
This
particular session was at 10.00 am on a Thursday morning. I opened the door to
her, invited her into my consulting room and asked her if she wanted a cup of
tea. She said yes and, after some casual transactions, I asked her what she
wanted from this particular session. She told me that she wanted to take the
Negative aspects of her father off me, and to be able to act in a Positive
healthy way with me. online marriage counseling
I
asked Sue the reasons that she wished to do this, and she answered, so that she
could feel safe and secure with me in the therapy session. I inquired further
and asked what benefit it was for her to feel safe and secure with me. She
replied that the process would help her positively enhance her life and this
was the first step for her in this specific direction. She also added that she
would not be able to work in a therapeutic way with a therapist that she did
not feel safe with! Psychotherapy
I
agreed with her that this was vital for a positive, Therapeutic relationship to
form between both of us. I then asked her how she was feeling.
She
replied that she felt more relaxed and warm inside since we had some contact
between us and that even as we spoke, she was beginning to take some of the
negative qualities of her father off me. marriage counseling
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I
asked her how she was doing that, and she answered that the response from me
was different than from her father's, that he would not be with her as I was
being. I then asked her to explain more and she went on to say that, with her
father, there would be no dialogue, no real conversation. He would not take her
into account in any real way, whereas she felt that I was, at the moment, honouring
her by being sensitive to her needs. I replied to Sue that I was pleased that
she had already begun the important process of separating me from her father. marriage
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At
this point, I decided to use physical and visual comparisons with myself and
her father as a methodology for Sue to differentiate between us. To this end, I
asked Sue how different visually and physically I was from her father. She went
on describe some of the differences. For example, she told me that I had
different coloured hair than her dad's hair, my nose was larger, though for
her, my mouth and lips were similar in some ways. She said, that my smile
seemed much warmer to her than her father's. the marriage counselor
Particularly,
at this thought, she seemed to me to be much more relaxed and as the process of
differentiation continued her whole posture changed and she was sitting in
relaxed manner. She did not appear to be as stiff and rigid as she had been at
the beginning of the session.
I
logged this mentally and then went on to encourage her to anchor how she felt
now and to integrate and remember the warmth of her visual memories of me and
how I am different from her father, so that she could take those different
memories away from die session with her.
Sue
went on to say that she felt much better than earlier on in the session and now
felt much more positive towards me. She reported feeling relaxed and secure
with me and said that she was happy at that. She then asked me for a hug -
which I gave her and we completed the session in this symbolic way. diversity
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In
analyzing this session, I intend to comment on this particular piece of work,
firstly from an Object Relations' framework and secondly from a 'Relationship'
frame of reference.
By
looking at this work from an Object Relations framework, the primary goal of
the session for Sue was to move from her negative self object to a positive
self object. The negative self object that she was transferring onto me was her
father, who physically and emotionally abused her in her childhood. By Sue
placing me as the negative self object within the therapeutic relationship, she
was replaying the abuse within her own internal structure. She was reinforcing
the past as in the here and now reality. family therapy
Sue
recognised that, for her, I was taking on this archaic role. She did not want
this, she did not want to replay her past patterns and responses. She wanted to
see me and to respond to me as a positive self object. This was very important
to her.
Indeed
it was vital in the area of Sues healing and cure.
she
wanted me to be a healthy self object that would be secure, nurturing and dependable
in a soothing and growth-full way. Seeing me in this way would be helpful, not
only in an internal soothing way, but also this internal security would mean
that, externally, she would feel safer to contact others within her life in her
present day functioning. family therapy near me
This
process could be seen within an Object Relations framework as an 'Idealizing
transfer' from Sue to myself This process was helpful to Sue as she reported
feeling more relaxed and contented, more secure within herself as she left the
session. This indicated to me that she had begun to take me on board as a self
soothing; self object that she wanted and needed to enable her to have the
internal base to confront the memories and effects of the childhood abuse she
suffered at the hands of her father. This then, provides a positive and
necessary platform for future therapy. Depression treatment
In
explaining the same piece of work from a 'Relationship' framework", it is
necessary first to define what we mean by Relationship therapy'.
Relationship
therapy, for me, has three major concepts which need to be mentioned here. They
are the cornerstones for any relationship therapy. Erskine (1991) talks of the
need for Inquiry, Attunement and Involvement as the major prerequisites for any
therapist working from a Relational standpoint..
Turning
to this methodology then, Inquiry is a gentle contactful method of coming alongside
the client in order to unpack and discover the roots of the past. Inquiry is
about finding out. In some ways you must become the Sherlock Holmes of the
therapy process, in a respectful way of course, not a shaming way. existential
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If
we analyze the dialogue with Sue and myself in our therapy session, we can see
that I am Inquiring in the following ways:
Firstly
I Inquire respectfully what she wants from the session, to which she replied
that she wished to take the negative aspects of her father off me. I went on to
further inquire as to her reasons for doing this. Her reasons were that she
wanted to feel safe and secure with me in the therapy sessions. Further Inquiry
was to find out how she would benefit from feeling safe and secure with me. To
which she replied it would enhance her personal growth.
This
use of inquiry by me was vitally important for the Relationship to begin to
bond and for the attachment process to begin between Sue and myself. Indeed, it
is in the Inquiry process that the solid foundations for Relationship therapy
begins.
Attunement
is concerned with the therapist being there with the client, seeing her,
hearing her and validating her experiences and feelings. It is the sense of
'being with' instead of 'doing to'. Attunement is about 'getting into the skin
of the client'. It is about the therapist being in touch as fully as possible
with the needs and feelings of the other person. As Erskine (1991) says, 'the communication
of attunement validates the client's needs and lays the foundation for
repairing the failures of previous relationships". antisocial
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With
Sue, i attuned to her in the following ways:
Firstly,
when Sue said she would not be able to work in a therapeutic way with a
therapist she did not feel safe with, I agreed with her that it was vital that
she felt safe with me in order that she have a positive therapeutic
relationship. I validate here, her thinking linked to her past experiences and
it is important for her that I have a full understanding of her process and
show it in some way, either verbally or physically. I chose the verbal method. online marriage
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Another
example of Sue being Attuned to me in this session was that she dialogued with
me in a way that she would not have done with her father. This was mainly
because she saw me as validating her 'sense of being' and that I was sensitive
to her fundamental needs. Psychotherapy
Involvement,
as with Inquiry and Attunement, is basically about the therapist being hilly
present and in full contact with the client. It is through involvement that we
validate and Normalize the client's experiences. In other words we involve
ourselves through the use of Inquiry and Attunement in the world of the client.
It is through Involvement with the client that we come to understand the very
nature of the person that we are working with. marriage counseling
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An
example of how I used the method of Involvement with Sue was specifically
evident at the end of the session when I asked how she felt now, and encouraged
her to integrate and to remember the warmth of her visual images of me and how
I am different from her father. My involvement was very much anchored through
the bonding that I undertook to anchor the feeling of warmth that Sue had developed
towards me through the session. marriage counseling
This
was symbolized by the hug that she asked for from me, and that I gave her at
the very end of the work.
This
hug is true involvement of Contact at the somatic level, which she can then
carry away from the therapy session with her into her present day life.
The
active Relationship therapy model that I followed with Sue can be summarized as
follows:
Through
Inquiry I have found out what Sue wanted, and by Attunement with her, we got
into the feel of the therapeutic process and therefore helped facilitate what
she wanted to experience, which has made it possible for me to be me, and her
to be her. Involvement is me using my presence to help anchor arid encourage
what has happened between us within the therapy process. The hug encapsulated
the involvement which existed within the whole of the therapeutic session. the
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Indeed
it was through her" Relationship" with me in the "here and now!
that the "Rea"l healing took place and could be worked through within
the different aspect of the Self!
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