How did object relations theory develop?
-Klein tried to integrate drive theory with internal object relations. Subsequent thinkers such as Fairbairn (1941) and Winnicott (1951) developed what is known as British Independent Perspective which argued that the primary motivation of the child is object seeking rather than drive gratification
Object relations theorists place an emphasis on:
McWilliams (1994)
“what the main objects in the child’s world had been like, how they had been experienced, how they and felt aspects of them had been internalized, and how internal images and representations of them lived on in the unconscious lives of adults.”
Bowlby (1969) and Fonagy (1998) also stressed
importance of attachment as a primary motivational force and how internal working models or mental representations of self and other are formed through repetitive childhood experiences.
Transference
patient experiences the therapist as an old, bad object
Basic assumptions and prototypes of human connections are established _____
in the past and presented in internal object relations shape the experience with the therapist
What imprisons the patient?
neurosis is the only form of relation the patient believes in
How does patient feel connected to others?
only through painful states of mind and self defeating behaviors, patient believes getting rid of these states would lead to abandonment and isolation
-patient must believe in new, less constrained patterns of relatedness to renounce old forms of connections
Pathological ties to old objects
-will be highlighted in the work and held in contrast against new and more adaptive relationships
Patient will develop:
Therapist neutrality
-intended to communicate a supportive stance without an expressed preference for a particular aspect of the patients personality
Pine (1990)
Key concepts
View of pathology
-Place emphasis on relational pathology – contact disturbances not symptoms- Kaiser
-Instead of suffering from an inability to reconcile inner impulses, patient has an inability to meaningfully engage others in sustained and/or gratifying relations
-The meaning of psychiatric symptoms, such as depression and anxiety, is that the patient’s relationships are deteriorating or threshing in the patient’s sense of self (Cashdan, 1988)
-The relationships with others constitute the basic motivational force in humans
-Pine (1990)
The individual is seen in terms of an internal drama, derived from early childhood, that is carried around within as a memory (conscious or unconscious) and in which the individual enacts one or more (or all) of the roles. These internal images, loosely based on childhood experiences, also put their stamp on a new experience in that they are assimilated to the old dramas rather than being experienced fully in their contemporary form.
The greater the level of enactment the greater the pathology.
Goals
Pine (1990) - Emphasis is on what the main objects in the child’s world had been like, how they had been experienced, how aspects of them had been internalized (introject) and how internal images and representations of them had lived on in the unconscious lives of adults.
Curative factors
Fairbairn’s (1952) curative factors
For Fairbairn, insight is
Curative factors (Fairbairn, 1952)
-Fairbairn located analytic change in a changed capacity for
relatedness, an ability to connect with the therapist in new ways
Curative factors (Fairbairn, 1951) related to when the patient’s early relational patterns are reenacted within the analytic treatment
Fairbairn’s conceptualization of presenting problem
Winnicott’s ideas on pathology
1949, 1951, 1958, 1960, 1965, 1969, 1971
How do patient’s shape the therapeutic relationship according to Winnicott (1949, 1951)
Winnicott’s holding environment
– psychic and physical space with in which the infant or pt. is protected. It is an environment in which the individual is free to move and learn.
-Too much stimulation or impingement means not providing adequate holding environment – this can be traumatizing for child
Winnicott’s good enough mothering