Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy Flashcards
Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy
Theory of Change
Change occurs through both reparative experiences within the treatment relationship and from new insight into and modification of entrenched object relations pathology.
Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy
Role of the Therapist
- Neutral
- Emphasis on transference and countertransference.
- Therapist as a new and good object
Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy
Treatment Goals
- Providing reparative experiences and building new internal structures.
- Gaining insight to how past relationships impact client’s functioning
- Improving relationships with self and others
Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy - Key Concepts
Objects
Refers to persons in the external world Individuals seek objects (others) from birth.
Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy- Key Concepts
Internalization
Early infant-caretaker interactions lead to the person
internalizing basic attitudes toward self and other, characteristic relational patterns and a repertoire of defenses and internal capacities.
Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy- Key Concepts
Self and Object Representations
Infants form images of themselves and others. Once formed, they are fundamental internal structures that affect the ways in which individuals view themselves and others.
Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy- Key Concepts
Ego
The structure responsible for dealing with the world, for instituting defense mechanisms, for internalizing external objects and for integrating and
synthesizing self-and object-representations.
Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy- Key Concepts
Splitting
When two contradictory states, such as l
ove and hate, are compartmentalized and not integrated.
Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy- Key Concepts
Projection
Involves projecting undesirable feelings or emotions onto someone else, rather than admitting to or dealing with the unwanted feelings.
Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy- Key Concepts
Projective Identification
Refers to a psychological process in which a
person will project a thought or belief that they have onto a second person. Then, in most common definitions of projective identification, there is another action in which the second person is changed by the projection and begins to behave as though he or she is in fact actually characterized by those thoughts or beliefs that have been projected.
Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy- Key Concepts
Introjection
Where the subject replicates in themselves behaviors, attributes or other fragments of the surrounding world, especially of other people.
Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy
Phase of Treatment/Intervention
Beginning
Establish a holding environment. Build rapport and therapeutic alliance through listening, exploration of client’s experience, empathy, and maintaining neutrality.
Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy
Phase of Treatment/Intervention
Middle
Promote insight and growth through interpretation. Confront resistance and primitive defense mechanisms. Focus on transference/countertransference
dynamic. Identify and process projective identification.
Object Relations Psychodynamic Therapy
Phase of Treatment/Intervention
End
Work through termination and abandonment is
sues. Consolidate interpretations. Review insights gained in therapy