The Metropolitan Institute for Training in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, The Metropolitan Center for Mental Health and
The Metropolitan Society of Psychoanalytic Psychotherapists
Invite you to a Scientific Meeting Friday, October 25, 2019 – 7:30 PM
DEVELOPING TRANSITIONAL PHENOMENA IN AN ADULT PATIENT: THE ANALYST’S ROLE PRESENTER: Debra Gill, LCSW
Winnicott’s 1953 paper, Transitional Objects and Transitional Phenomena is widely recognized as contributing seminal ideas that have been further developed by generations of psychoanalysts. In his original description, Winnicott emphasized the impact of the environmental mother who is central to the infant’s development and its capacity to make use of the transitional object. The mother’s breast is made available just when the infant is ready to receive, which allows for a period of omnipotence where the infant is the creator of its own reality. Through her adaptations, the mother facilitates an illusion that the breast is part of the infant and therefore under its magical control. This is considered foundational for healthy development, but inevitably the environment fails resulting in disillusionment. Since disillusionment is not easily accepted, it is suggested by Winnicott, and others, that we live in an intermediate area that, like transitional phenomena, belongs to both internal and external reality. An individual’s creativity can be maximized by the capacity to make use of the inherent paradoxes of this intermediate area, one that juxtaposes phantasy and reality, or, can be completely stifled, as is the case with some patients who are unable to manage the uncertainties of actual experience.
Through the lens of Winnicott’s thinking, a case will be presented where the development of transitional aims in early childhood were derailed, primarily by insufficiently adapting to an environment where early illusions were disrupted too quickly. Having lost a sense of security, a prolonged relationship to transitional objects developed that later in life, through projection, assumed magical qualities that were relied upon for functioning. A psychic structure, centering on a fetishized control over the self and object world deepened and evolved. To treat this patient, the analyst occupied a transitional function, offering adaptation to accommodate some illusion, while still holding a secure frame. This structure has attenuated omnipotence and expanded the patient’s capacity to use intermediate space.
Learning Objectives
Participants will: 1) Discuss Winnicott’s ideas about transitional objects and transitional phenomena,
2) Define the purpose of the “intermediate area” as posited by Winnicott, and 3) Identify when frame adaptations might facilitate an analytic process.
PRESENTER: Debra Gill, LCSW Certificate in Psychoanalysis, Psychoanalytic Training Institute of the Contemporary Freudian Society. Certificate in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, Metropolitan Institute for Training in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy. Faculty and Supervisor: Metropolitan Institute for Training in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy, Adult Program. Faculty, Training and Supervising Analyst: Psychoanalytic Training Institute of the Contemporary Freudian Society. Fellow: International Psychoanalytical Association. Member: Confederation of Independent Psychoanalytic Societies; American Psychoanalytic Association.
The New York State Education Department has approved this meeting for 2 contact hours (CEUs) for LMSWs, LCSWs, LMHCs and LPs. A certificate will be emailed to those who sign the attendance sheet at the end of the meeting, complete an evaluation and pay an administrative fee of $15. There is no charge for those affiliated with MITPP, MCMH or MSPP.
No registration or fee required. Refreshments served following the presentation.
LOCATION OF MEETING – PLEASE NOTE NEW LOCATION:
Community Room
205 West End Avenue
(entrance on West 70th Street, just west of West End Avenue)
For further information: info@mitpp.org, www.MITPP.org or (212) 496-2858
Program Committee: Gino Benza, LCSW, Chair * Carmen Bracero, LCSW * Joyce A. Lerner, LCSW * Carol Mazor, LCSW * Barbara Reichenthal, LCSW, BCD * Ivy Vale, BFA