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Doubt Conviction and The Analytic Process Selected Papers of Michael Feldman 1st Edition Michael Feldman Download

In 'Doubt, Conviction and the Analytic Process', Michael Feldman examines the intricate dynamics between psychoanalysts and their patients, emphasizing the importance of communication and the mutual influence they exert on each other during therapy sessions. The collection of essays provides insights into fundamental psychoanalytic techniques and the process of psychic change, making it essential reading for both practitioners and those interested in the therapeutic relationship. Feldman, a seasoned psychoanalyst, draws on the works of notable figures in the field to enrich his exploration of these themes.

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
37 views61 pages

Doubt Conviction and The Analytic Process Selected Papers of Michael Feldman 1st Edition Michael Feldman Download

In 'Doubt, Conviction and the Analytic Process', Michael Feldman examines the intricate dynamics between psychoanalysts and their patients, emphasizing the importance of communication and the mutual influence they exert on each other during therapy sessions. The collection of essays provides insights into fundamental psychoanalytic techniques and the process of psychic change, making it essential reading for both practitioners and those interested in the therapeutic relationship. Feldman, a seasoned psychoanalyst, draws on the works of notable figures in the field to enrich his exploration of these themes.

Uploaded by

lxgxqik3452
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Doubt, Conviction and the Analytic Process

In this profound and subtle study, a practising psychoanalyst explores


the dynamics of the interaction between the patient and the analyst.
Michael Feldman draws the reader into experiencing how the clinical
interaction unfolds within a session. In doing so, he develops some of
the implications of the important pioneering work of such analysts as
Klein, Rosenfeld and Joseph, showing in fine detail some of the ways
in which the patient feels driven to communicate to the analyst, not
only in order to be understood by him, but also in order to affect him.
The author’s detailed descriptions of the clinical process allow the
reader to follow the actual process that enables the patient to get into
contact with thoughts and feelings of which he or she was previously
unconscious or only vaguely aware.
Feldman makes the reader aware of the constant dynamic inter-
action between the patient and the analyst, each affecting the other.
He shows how the analyst has to find a balance between doubt,
uncertainty and confusion in himself and through this process may
arrive at an understanding of what is happening, and by formulating
this understanding the analyst can make a significant contribution to
the process of psychic change.
This collection of essays not only throws light on fascinating ques-
tions of technique, but also reflects on elements that are fundamental
to psychoanalytic work. It is essential reading for practising psycho-
analysts and those in training, as well as anyone with a general interest
in the psychoanalytic relationship between the client and the therapist
in the consulting room.

Michael Feldman studied psychology and medicine, and worked


for many years in the Psychotherapy Unit at the Maudsley in
London. He is now a training analyst of the British Psychoanalytical
Society and lectures and supervises clinical work in several centres in
Europe and the USA. He has published numerous psychoanalytical
papers, and has co-edited, with Elizabeth Spillius, Psychic Equilibrium
and Psychic Change: Selected Papers of Betty Joseph (Routledge 1989).
THE NEW LIBRARY OF PSYCHOANALYSIS
General Editor Dana Birksted-Breen

The New Library of Psychoanalysis was launched in 1987 in associ-


ation with the Institute of Psychoanalysis, London. It took over from
the International Psychoanalytical Library which published many of
the early translations of the works of Freud and the writings of most
of the leading British and Continental psychoanalysts.
The purpose of the New Library of Psychoanalysis is to facilitate a
greater and more widespread appreciation of psychoanalysis and to
provide a forum for increasing mutual understanding between psy-
choanalysts and those working in other disciplines such as the social
sciences, medicine, philosophy, history, linguistics, literature and the
arts. It aims to represent different trends both in British psychoanalysis
and in psychoanalysis generally. The New Library of Psychoanalysis is
well placed to make available to the English-speaking world psycho-
analytic writings from other European countries and to increase the
interchange of ideas between British and American psychoanalysts.
The Institute, together with the British Psychoanalytical Society,
runs a low-fee psychoanalytic clinic, organizes lectures and scientific
events concerned with psychoanalysis and publishes the International
Journal of Psychoanalysis. It also runs the only UK training course in
psychoanalysis which leads to membership of the International Psy-
choanalytical Association – the body which preserves internationally
agreed standards of training, of professional entry, and of professional
ethics and practice for psychoanalysis as initiated and developed by
Sigmund Freud. Distinguished members of the Institute have included
Michael Balint, Wilfred Bion, Ronald Fairbairn, Anna Freud, Ernest
Jones, Melanie Klein, John Rickman, and Donald Winnicott.
Previous General Editors include David Tuckett, Elizabeth Spillius
and Susan Budd. Previous and current Members of the Advisory
Board include Christopher Bollas, Ronald Britton, Catalina Bronstein,
Donald Campbell, Sara Flanders, Stephen Grosz, John Keene, Eglé
Laufer, Juliet Mitchell, Michael Parsons, Rosine Jozef Perelberg,
David Taylor and Mary Target, and Richard Rusbridger, who is now
Assistant Editor.
ALSO IN THIS SERIES

Impasse and Interpretation Herbert Rosenfeld


Psychoanalysis and Discourse Patrick Mahony
The Suppressed Madness of Sane Men Marion Milner
The Riddle of Freud Estelle Roith
Thinking, Feeling, and Being Ignacio Matte-Blanco
The Theatre of the Dream Salomon Resnik
Melanie Klein Today: Volume 1, Mainly Theory Edited by Elizabeth Bott
Spillius
Melanie Klein Today: Volume 2, Mainly Practice Edited by Elizabeth Bott
Spillius
Psychic Equilibrium and Psychic Change: Selected Papers of Betty Joseph
Edited by Michael Feldman and Elizabeth Bott Spillius
About Children and Children-No-Longer: Collected Papers 1942–80 Paula
Heimann. Edited by Margret Tonnesmann
The Freud–Klein Controversies 1941–45 Edited by Pearl King and
Riccardo Steiner
Dream, Phantasy and Art Hanna Segal
Psychic Experience and Problems of Technique Harold Stewart
Clinical Lectures on Klein and Bion Edited by Robin Anderson
From Fetus to Child Alessandra Piontelli
A Psychoanalytic Theory of Infantile Experience: Conceptual and Clinical
Reflections E. Gaddini. Edited by Adam Limentani
The Dream Discourse Today Edited and introduced by Sara Flanders
The Gender Conundrum: Contemporary Psychoanalytic Perspectives on
Feminitity and Masculinity Edited and introduced by Dana Breen
Psychic Retreats John Steiner
The Taming of Solitude: Separation Anxiety in Psychoanalysis Jean-Michel
Quinodoz
Unconscious Logic: An Introduction to Matte-Blanco’s Bi-logic and its Uses
Eric Rayner
Understanding Mental Objects Meir Perlow
Life, Sex and Death: Selected Writings of William Gillespie Edited and
introduced by Michael Sinason
What Do Psychoanalysts Want?: The Problem of Aims in Psychoanalytic
Therapy Joseph Sandler and Anna Ursula Dreher
Michael Balint: Object Relations, Pure and Applied Harold Stewart
Hope: A Shield in the Economy of Borderline States Anna Potamianou
Psychoanalysis, Literature and War: Papers 1972–1995 Hanna Segal
Emotional Vertigo: Between Anxiety and Pleasure Danielle Quinodoz
Early Freud and Late Freud Ilse Grubrich-Simitis
A History of Child Psychoanalysis Claudine and Pierre Geissmann
Belief and Imagination: Explorations in Psychoanalysis Ronald Britton
A Mind of One’s Own: A Kleinian View of Self and Object Robert
A. Caper
Psychoanalytic Understanding of Violence and Suicide Edited by Rosine
Jozef Perelberg
On Bearing Unbearable States of Mind Ruth Riesenberg-Malcolm
Psychoanalysis on the Move: The Work of Joseph Sandler Edited by Peter
Fonagy, Arnold M. Cooper and Robert S. Wallerstein
The Dead Mother: The Work of André Green Edited by Gregorio Kohon
The Fabric of Affect in the Psychoanalytic Discourse André Green
The Bi-Personal Field: Experiences of Child Analysis Antonino Ferro
The Dove that Returns, the Dove that Vanishes: Paradox and Creativity in
Psychoanalysis Michael Parsons
Ordinary People, Extra-ordinary Protections: A Post-Kleinian Approach to
the Treatment of Primitive Mental States Judith Mitrani
The Violence of Interpretation: From Pictogram to Statement Piera
Aulagnier
The Importance of Fathers: A Psychoanalytic Re-Evaluation Judith Trowell
and Alicia Etchegoyen
Dreams That Turn Over a Page: Paradoxical Dreams in Psychoanalysis
Jean-Michel Quinodoz
The Couch and the Silver Screen: Psychoanalytic Reflections on European
Cinema Edited and introduced by Andrea Sabbadini
In Pursuit of Psychic Change: The Betty Joseph Workshop Edited by Edith
Hargreaves and Arturo Varchevker
The Quiet Revolution in American Psychoanalysis: Selected Papers of
Arnold M. Cooper Arnold M. Cooper. Edited and introduced by
Elizabeth L. Auchincloss
Seeds of Illness and Seeds of Recovery: The Genesis of Suffering and the Role
of Psychoanalysis Antonino Ferro
The Work of Psychic Figurability: Mental States Without Representation
César Botella and Sára Botella
Key Ideas for a Contemporary Psychoanalysis: Misrecognition and
Recognition of the Unconscious André Green
The Telescoping of Generations: Listening to the Narcissistic Links Between
Generations Haydée Faimberg
Glacial Times: A Journey Through the World of Madness Salomon Resnik
This Art of Psychoanalysis: Dreaming Undreamt Dreams and Interrupted
Cries Thomas H. Ogden
Psychoanalysis as Therapy and Storytelling Antonino Ferro
Psychoanalysis and Religion in the 21st Century: Competitors or
Collaborators? Edited by David M. Black
Recovery of the Lost Good Object Eric Brenman
The Many Voices of Psychoanalysis Roger Kennedy
Feeling the Words: Neuropsychoanalytic Understanding of Memory and the
Unconscious Mauro Mancia
Projected Shadows: Psychoanalytic Reflections on the Representation of Loss
in European Cinema Edited by Andrea Sabbadini
Encounters with Melanie Klein: Selected Papers of Elizabeth Spillius
Elizabeth Spillius. Edited by Priscilla Roth and Richard
Rusbridger
Constructions and the Analytic Field: History, Scenes and Destiny
Domenico Chianese
Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow Hanna Segal
Psychoanalysis Comparable and Incomparable: The Evolution of a Method to
Describe and Compare Psychoanalytic Approaches David Tuckett et al.
Time, Space and Phantasy Rosine Jozef Perelberg
Rediscovering Psychoanalysis: Thinking and Dreaming, Learning and
Forgetting Thomas H. Ogden
Mind Works: Technique and Creativity in Psychoanalysis Antonino Ferro

TITLES IN THE NEW LIBRARY OF PSYCHOANALYSIS


TEACHING SERIES

Reading Freud: A Chronological Exploration of Freud’s Writings


Jean-Michel Quinodoz
Listening to Hannah Segal: Her Contribution to Psychoanalysis
Jean-Michel Quinodoz
Page Intentionally Left Blank
THE NEW LIBRARY OF PSYCHOANALYSIS

General Editor: Dana Birksted-Breen

Doubt, Conviction and the


Analytic Process
Selected Papers of Michael Feldman

Michael Feldman

Edited by Betty Joseph


First published 2009
by Routledge
27 Church Road, Hove, East Sussex BN3 2FA
Simultaneously published in the USA and Canada
by Routledge
711 Third Avenue, New York, NY 10017 (8th Floor)
Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, an Informa business
© 2009 Michael Feldman
Typeset in Bembo by RefineCatch Limited, Bungay, Suffolk

Paperback cover design by Sandra Heath


All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or
reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic,
mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter
invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any
information storage or retrieval system, without permission in
writing from the publishers.
This publication has been produced with paper manufactured to
strict environmental standards and with pulp derived from
sustainable forests.
British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Feldman, Michael.
Doubt, conviction, and the analytic process : selected papers of
Michael Feldman / Michael Feldman.
p. ; cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1. Psychoanalysis. I. Title.
[DNLM: 1. Physician-Patient Relations—Essays.
2. Psychoanalytic Therapy—Essays. WM 460.6 F312d 2009]
RC504.F36 2009
616.89′17—dc22
2008035057

ISBN 978–0–415–47934–9 (hbk)


ISBN 978–0–415–47935–6 (pbk)
For my wife and our family
Page Intentionally Left Blank
Contents

Preface
  xiii

Introduction
  xv

Acknowledgements xix

1 The Oedipus complex: manifestations in the inner


world and the therapeutic situation 1

2 Splitting and projective identification 21

3 Projective identification: the analyst’s involvement 34

4 The dynamics of reassurance 54

5 The illumination of history 72

6 Manifestations of the death instinct in the


consulting room 96

7 Envy and the negative therapeutic reaction 118

8 Addressing parts of the self 138

xi
Contents

9 ‘I was thinking . . .’ 159

10 The defensive uses of compliance 177

11 Grievance: the underlying Oedipal configuration 194

12 Filled with doubt 216

13 The problem of conviction in the session 232

References 255
Index 261

xii
Preface

Reading Michael Feldman, one has a sense of having been welcomed


into the workshop of a master analyst to think with him as he reflects
on key concepts and clinical problems. Few psychoanalytic writers
convey as vividly as he does a sense of remaining accountable to
himself. Implicitly if not explicitly, Feldman often pauses to press such
questions as, ‘What am I doing? Why do I think it’s the best thing to
do? How might I do it better? How much is coming from me and
how much from the patient?’
In setting a standard for self-supervision, Feldman consistently
foregrounds the intellectually and emotionally destabilizing aspects of
clinical psychoanalysis. He steadily risks uncertainty as he works his
patient way toward sound insight and deft intervention. And we go
with him as he enters clinical situations filled with problems for
patients and therapists alike. To give only a partial list: situations that
feature doubt, negative therapeutic reactions, conflictual termination,
aggression and destructiveness, misfiring of reassurance, envy, pride,
and the uses of reconstructions and life histories that are always
in flux.
Feldman’s questions and formulations give equal opportunity to
keen understanding and reasonable doubt. He maintains a steady
focus on the complex mix of transference and countertransference
that makes up the clinical process; in this mix lie the hazards and
opportunities to be thought through and worked through en route to
the construction of analytic evidence, evidence about which it is
possible to feel some conviction. Success in this undertaking, depends
on the ability – and the courage – to contain the inevitable narcissistic

xiii
Preface by Roy Schafer

temptations that beset analytic writers and practitioners: the tempta-


tions to seem to have already thought through the problems
encountered and resolved them, to substitute assertion and authority
for argument and demonstration, and thus to appear to be so on top
of it all that one is ready to act correctly and decisively but actually in
the end to obstruct and muddy psychic change.
The reader must credit Feldman with having achieved an unusually
high degree of success in containing these temptations. He is truly
dedicated to learning – and teaching – from experience. In his case
studies he pays close attention to problems he has introduced or in
which he has been stimulated to participate by the patient’s projective
identifications. Close reading of these clinical studies is invariably
rewarding, for the problems covered are those that arise one way or
another in the work of all psychoanalytic practitioners. Further to his
credit, Feldman generously presents the reader with the conceptual
and technical tools and the occasions to assess critically the twists and
turns of his work. No small gift.
To read Michael Feldman is to experience more than the pleasure
of good analytic company and great admiration and gratitude; it is
also to come away with a deepened respect for psychoanalysis itself.

Roy Schafer, New York, 2008

xiv
Introduction

Michael Feldman has a particular and individual way of looking at and


dealing with clinical material, based securely on an established theor-
etical model. Fundamental to his understanding is his awareness that
there are always two people in the room in a psychoanalytic encounter,
the patient and the analyst, and that their interaction must always be
taken into account – each has an effect on the other, each operates
only so far as his or her personality permits, as his or her phantasies,
anxieties and defences, allow. The details of the clinical material in this
book allow us to see Feldman’s use of this awareness, and his ability to
be open to whatever the patient needs to communicate.
This openness, which Bion saw as the capacity to ‘contain’, enables
Feldman to respond to the patient’s needs and projections. Increas-
ingly he becomes aware, as he shows for example in his chapters on
projective identification, of how the patient’s projections may give
rise to subtle, as well as not-so-subtle, responses within the analyst. He
indicates some of the defensive mechanisms that the analyst may use
in an attempt to maintain his psychic equilibrium. Thus the reader
can follow, and to some extent experience, the actual process that
enables the patient to get into contact with thoughts and feelings
of which he or she was previously unconscious or only vaguely aware.
In this sense the reader becomes a participant in what might be
described as the research going on in the session, research into clinical
processes that may contribute to psychic change.
Feldman’s approach depends on his close observation of his patients
and their experiences, and this has led him to feel that understanding
has to come from what can be seen in the immediate present. He

xv
Introduction by Betty Joseph

shows how the analyst has the opportunity to observe the way in
which patients deal with the analytic situation from moment to
moment, how they project objects from their internal world into the
analyst, thus dynamically indicating how they have been and are deal-
ing with their life and their objects, and history starts to reconstruct
itself in the present. This puts a rather different gloss on the use of
history as Freud saw it, but the studying of the patient’s past by trying
to unravel what is going on in the present brings it very much alive.
Further, it helps the analyst to empathize with what is going on in the
patient, to see how and why certain aspects of the patient have been
and are being built up – whether these are angry, compliant or
grateful and valuing aspects. This type of empathy is a hallmark of
Feldman’s work.
Another striking aspect of Feldman’s approach is his curiosity – his
interest in the day-to-day, minute-to-minute things going on in his
work. This can be seen clearly even in the chapter headings. One
chapter is headed ‘I was thinking . . .’ because he had been struck by
the number of patients who started the session with this or a similar
phrase – and he began to wonder whether this might be a way for
such patients to keep a distance and thus avoid claustrophobic anx-
ieties. Or to take another example, he notices the pull from the patient
and from within the analyst himself to give interpretations that have a
vaguely reassuring quality – interpretations that are comfortable to
both parties, patient and analyst, and thus avoid tension, aggression,
anxiety in both, but also evade what is really felt, evade facing psychic
truth. Feldman’s concern for psychic truth and his belief that with-
out this concern analysis is vitiated runs throughout this book. He
emerges as a very serious and real analyst, who is willing to share with
the reader the awful difficulties of the work.
Since Feldman describes in detail not only the cases but also his
handling of them, the book gives a vivid picture of his technique. His
interest in the actual process of interpreting is clear – the chapter on
‘Addressing parts of the self ’, for instance, shows the analyst struggling
to find a way to use a valuable piece of theory about the various
conflicting parts of the self in a way that is convincing and thus useful
to the patient.
Feldman’s careful monitoring of the movement in the session is an
inherent part of his work – we can see how he tries to remain alert to
how the patient responds to interpretations, how they are received or
not received, whether they lead to a sense of relief or greater anxiety.

xvi
Introduction by Betty Joseph

But he also becomes interested in the analyst’s relationship to his own


interpretations, whether they become reified, ‘overvalued ideas’
(following the work of Britton and Steiner) that are held on to as if of
narcissistic importance to the analyst. Of particular significance is his
awareness of the importance of movement, how from moment to
moment, following the giving or not giving of an interpretation,
there will always be change, both in the patient and analyst. Nothing
can remain static. This he illustrates movingly in the quotation from
Heraclitus: ‘No man ever steps in the same river twice, for it’s not the
same river and he’s not the same man.’
Central to Feldman’s considerable contribution to psychoanalysis
is his awareness of the analyst’s struggles to maintain a balance between
doubt and conviction, reflected in the title of this book, and the
approach to the clinical process to which this gives rise. This gives his
writing a sense of real conviction and shows us something of the
workings of one analyst’s mind, with its dissatisfaction with the limita-
tions of what is known or understood, its curiosity about how it can
be taken further, and its delight in the process of inquiry.

Betty Joseph

xvii
Page Intentionally Left Blank
Acknowledgements

I was fortunate to come into the psychoanalytic world at a time of


lively and creative debate, research and consolidation. Melanie Klein
had been active in London until shortly before her death in 1960, and
Wilfred Bion had only recently left for Los Angeles. An impressive
group of people in London, many of them students and colleagues of
Klein, were actively exploring the implications of the original obser-
vations and theories of Klein and her contemporaries. The figures of
greatest immediate importance to me in my psychoanalytic training
were Herbert Rosenfeld, Hanna Segal and Betty Joseph. As well as
possessing great knowledge and clinical experience, they offered me
generous help and support.
In parallel with my psychoanalytic training and practice, I also
spent a number of years working in the Psychotherapy Unit at the
Maudsley Hospital, where Henri Rey proved an inspiring teacher and
colleague. Many of his perceptive ways of understanding patients and
his vivid illustrative vignettes remain with me still. I also appreciated
my contact with Joe Sandler and Leslie Sohn, both at the Maudsley
and in the Psychoanalytic Society.
For many years I have been a member of Betty Joseph’s clinical
workshop. This is a special forum in which a group of experienced
and talented psychoanalysts discuss ideas and theory arising from clini-
cal material. It provides an opportunity for close colleagues to share
in the fascination of the psychoanalytic process, to explore the nature
of the difficulties we encounter and the limitations of our understand-
ing. It is an enriching and enlivening experience. Indeed, it is the
support of such colleagues, personally and professionally, that allows

xix
Acknowledgements

one to go on struggling with the difficult, demanding and engrossing


work.
My relationships with John Steiner and Ron Britton, two col-
leagues I particularly respect and admire, have been of great value to
me over many years. I have worked especially closely with John
Steiner, sharing ideas, clinical problems and the ordinary pleasures and
worries of life.
Since 1995, Ron Britton, John Steiner and I have organized an
annual conference at West Lodge Park, on the edge of London. We
each present a new clinical paper, which we discuss among ourselves,
and with colleagues from Europe and America. These meetings give
us an opportunity to try out new, not fully worked-out ideas with one
another. Indeed, many of the chapters in this book began life as West
Lodge papers.
I am indebted to Betty Joseph, who has been of great help in
preparing this book. It has been enjoyable and immensely enriching
to work with her.
I would also like to acknowledge the patient support and encour-
agement I have received from Dana Birksted-Breen, as Editor of the
New Library Series, and Kate Summerscale, who kindly read through
the manuscript for me.
To preserve confidentiality, I have changed biographical and other
details relating to the patients I have described.

xx
1
The Oedipus complex: manifestations
in the inner world and the
therapeutic situation

Freud used the concept of the Oedipus complex to represent the


central constellation of impulses, phantasies and anxieties that arise
out of the conflicts in the child’s relationship with his or her parents.
He began to develop the notion that the child internalizes versions of
the parental figures, modified by the anxieties and phantasies that
attach to them. Such internal figures affect, in turn, the child’s emo-
tional life, and his relations to the world. Building on this model,
Melanie Klein substantially developed the concept of the child’s
internal world, internal objects built up through the mechanisms
of introjection and projection. She described how, in the child’s phan-
tasy, these figures relate to one another in complex ways, and that
some of these relationships constitute early versions of the Oedipus
complex (Klein 1928, 1932, 1945). Her clinical theories about the
nature and the relationships of these internal figures to one another,
and the way they were projected into new relationships enabled her
better to understand what was being experienced by the child, and
what she could observe in the transference.
In this chapter and those that follow I hope to illustrate the way in
which it is possible to explore these dynamics within the closely
observed framework of the psychoanalytic session. In particular, I
believe it is possible to observe the familiar but compelling way in
which the patients’ experiences of the figures of their childhood
remain alive in their mind and influence their current relationships,
including the way they experience and use the analyst.
One of the characteristics of the Oedipal situation, which is

1
The Oedipus complex

reflected in the analysis, is that the participants often find themselves


pulled in more than one direction. Each option seems to involve
a compromise and may require a blurring or avoidance of aspects
of reality that arouse too much pain or guilt. In Sophocles’ play,
Oedipus did not make a conscious decision to kill his father and
marry his mother; the choices that presented themselves to all
the participants seemed to be the best ones at the time, and the mar-
riage had the approbation of the people of Thebes, even though there
were those who knew the truth and presumably considered it best to
remain silent. The awful reality emerged only slowly, with difficulty,
and at considerable cost (Vellacott 1971; Steiner 1985).
I hope to illustrate not only the way in which these subtle dilemmas
are conveyed in the analytic material, but also how the analyst often
finds himself drawn into a re-enactment of the dilemma that was
originally the child’s, but in which the parent has become inescapably
involved. The development of our understanding of the processes of
projective and introjective identification, which we owe to Klein
and a number of research workers who followed, makes it clear that
some of these complexities are inevitable. There is often a partial and
shifting identification with each parent, and each parent becomes,
in turn, imbued with qualities projected into him or her by the
child. The drama thus often involves complex reversals, and the
analyst’s role vis-à-vis these different figures must reflect some of
these complexities.
It is only by careful attention to the dynamics of the session, in
particular to the countertransference experience (including the subtle
pressure on the analyst to act in particular ways), that some of these
aspects of the Oedipus situation can be recognized. They are often
derived from a very early period of the patient’s experience and are
not represented in his mind in words, but in feelings or actions or
impulses towards action. Even if they do derive from slightly later
stages of development, they often involve perceptions and interactions
with parental figures that were characterized not by verbalization
but by uneasy collusions or evasions. I hope to show how this gives
rise not simply to problems in understanding the patient, his or her
phantasies, anxieties and conflicts, but to technical difficulties for the
analyst in knowing how to handle the situation and deal with the
pressures that draw him into an enactment of aspects of the Oedipal
situation.
In order to cope with powerful conflicting wishes about family

2
The Oedipus complex

relationships, the child may resort to projective mechanisms designed


to diminish the extent of the conflict, and the accompanying anxiety
and pain. The parent may then experience a disturbing dilemma,
resulting in part from the parent’s own Oedipal conflicts and in part
from the child’s projections. Because of his or her conscious or
unconscious awareness of the intensity of the emotions involved, any
course of action has important implications. To take a simple example:
a father may be made aware of his young daughter’s sense of exclu-
sion and jealousy, and the intense sexual and aggressive impulses
evoked in her by these emotions. His sensitivity to this may arise from
his partial identification with the excluded child, and he may have
some inkling of the nature of the child’s phantasies regarding him and
his relationship with his wife. As a consequence of his conscious or
unconscious awareness, he may feel uneasy about taking his daughter
on his knee, out of a fear that it might further stimulate her belief in
their excited sexual alliance against the mother. If he does not take her
on his knee, however, she may experience this as a rejection, perhaps
as evidence of his unease about the situation, and thus a confirmation,
in a different way, of her Oedipal phantasies.
There is thus no way the father can behave that will not stimulate
the child’s aggressive and/or sexual phantasies. What the child needs
of him is that he have some awareness of these impulses, yet retain a
sure sense of himself as a parental figure (part of which involves
experiencing himself as a member of a mature couple), so that the
child’s impulses and phantasies (and his own) neither have to be
denied nor acted out.
This underlying model is both re-experienced and recreated in
the analytic situation and will determine the nature and quality of the
transference and countertransference. What I want to illustrate in
the clinical material that follows is how the patient’s material and the
dynamics of the transference situation can lead us to understand
the individual’s experience and allow us to construct a view of the
nature of the parental interaction, and the way the patient relates to it.
One important consequence of this view of the Oedipal configur-
ations that exist in the patient’s inner world is that it enables us to
study their influence on his basic mental functions. If the patient
negotiates the Oedipus complex in a relatively healthy way, he has an
internal model of an intercourse that is, on balance, a creative activity.
This seems to be directly connected with the development of the
patient’s capacity to allow thoughts and ideas to interact in a fruitful

3
The Oedipus complex

way. On the other hand, the phantasy that any connection between
himself and another person will create a bizarre or predominantly
destructive couple seems to result in damaged, perverse or severely
inhibited forms of thinking. In my clinical illustrations, I try to exam-
ine the nature of the Oedipal couple existing in the patient’s mind,
partly derived from his perceptions and partly distorted by projection.
This not only influences the patient’s experience of the transference
but also tends to manifest itself by engaging the analyst in a re-
enactment of the Oedipal conflicts. Finally, I hope to indicate some of
the ways in which the patient’s phantasies regarding the nature of
these relationships influence his thinking.

First clinical illustration

My first patient was a young man, Mr J, the youngest of four sons,


whose parents were both involved in the theatre. His mother was
a talented and successful actor. In a session that followed a long
weekend, he at first was silent; he then began to speak in a constric-
ted, self-conscious, quite frustrating way. He made no mention of
the weekend but referred after a while to a dream he had had. In the
dream, he was on a stage, parading himself, dressed in silk under-
clothes similar to the ones he recalled his mother wearing as she
prepared herself for the theatre. There were not many people in the
audience, but he particularly noticed an older man, who looked rather
dishevelled and who seemed to be tantalized and excited by him. The
man was, however, forced to remain on the other side of the foot-
lights, as if separated from him by a pane of glass. The patient said he
thought this man was a ‘pure homosexual’. He had linked the figure
to myself, and this had been a source of pleasure and excitement.
He also seemed to be quite excited while telling me about the dream.
The patient had always felt himself deprived of proper attention
and love. While his parents presented themselves as sympathetic and
caring (and in many ways did their best for him, I think), the patient
never felt properly looked after: he never fully believed in the quality
of their care, or that he could properly hold the attention of either
parent. He tried to overcome this by offering himself to them as
‘special’ – either he was especially ill or unhappy, especially good, or,
sometimes, especially exciting to one or other parent.
With his father in particular, there seems to have been the phantasy

4
The Oedipus complex

of taking the mother’s place, and this was expressed over the weekend
by the dream, in which he made himself exciting by getting into her
clothes. And yet, in a sad and touching way, he conveyed that he never
really believed that any of this would succeed. In his dream the man
was a ‘pure homosexual’, which meant someone who had no interest
in real women, but who found my patient, dressed in women’s under-
clothes, tantalizing and exciting. The dream demonstrated the
absence of any proper contact between my patient (who was identi-
fied with a peculiar, contrived figure) and the man for whom he
was parading himself in this theatrical fashion. On the contrary, it
makes explicit his sense of being cut off from his objects, as if by a
pane of glass.
This corresponded very closely to the patient’s experience in the
past, when he felt doubtful about being able to engage his parents’
attention properly, whatever he did, and his experience in the analysis,
where he often felt he had to produce something that would really
grip my attention. At times he seemed to believe, or at least half-
believe, that he could succeed, but at other times he had to produce
more and more bizarre actions, which might even then not have the
desired effect.
I thought the patient had dealt with the experience of the long
weekend, my absence, and his feelings of loneliness, jealousy and
frustration by projecting, in his phantasy, the feeling of being left out,
excited and tantalized. By reversing the roles, he replaced me and
became a figure who paraded himself in this provocative way. More-
over, this was not simply a phantasy that relieved him during the
weekend, but one that was partly enacted during the session. The
patient’s initial silence, his hesitant and provocative way of speaking,
and the sense of being in possession of exciting and provocative men-
tal underwear – his dreams or sexual phantasies, that I would be
interested in – made this real in the session. He always tried very hard
to judge what would interest me and what would affect me, and
hence make him special for me. He was touchingly preoccupied with
the need to be the patient who I was most interested in or excited by,
or the patient who understood me best, was most sensitive to my state
of health, or my state of mind. At other times, he seemed to want to be
the patient who unsettled me the most, who caused me the most
concern, the one with whom I would remain preoccupied between
sessions.
However, as I have indicated, this often failed in its desired effect,

5
The Oedipus complex

and rather than evoking curiosity, jealousy or excitement, he was


more likely to provoke feelings of sympathy, concern or at times even
despair.
There are various ways of understanding the nature of the counter-
transference experience with this patient. It often seemed that when
he was in possession of intense and disturbing feelings he was not
properly able to employ projective mechanisms to reach his object.
Thus, some of the problems in his early relationship with his parents
might have resulted from his failure to communicate with them prop-
erly by means of projective identification, making it difficult for them
actually to know what was going on in him, as they did not properly
feel the impact of his needs and his anxieties. One could see the pane
of glass in his dream as a concrete representation of this difficulty. In
the sessions, this often made it difficult for me to reconcile what
the patient was saying with what he was communicating about the
nature of his experience.
The other aspect of this concerns the way in which his objects
were perceived and experienced. Bion (1959) described the situa-
tion in which the infant is confronted with a parental figure who
responds dutifully to him without being able to receive or tolerate the
infant’s projections, which then become more and more violent and
disordered, giving rise to a hopeless, vicious circle.
My experience in the transference convinced me that there the
patient had very little conception of a parental object capable of
containing what he might project into it, or of a healthy Oedipal
couple, engaged in a creative intercourse – which implies, of course,
the relation of container and contained. Instead, there was a couple
who went through the motions of being linked, while actually separ-
ated by the footlights or by a pane of glass.
This could be the product of his envious attack on such a couple,
which as a consequence presented itself to his mind as a bizarre,
combined parental object, such as that described by Melanie Klein
(1932). Alternatively, he might have had a perception or an intuitive
sense of the parental couple as being, in fact, damaged – a pathetic,
confused combined figure. Although they presented themselves to
him as healthy and exciting, as if meaning to evoke his envy and
jealousy, they largely failed to do so, and he was actually confronted
with a more disturbing situation. He thus re-created in the analysis
the Oedipal situation in which there was a bizarre figure, composed
of elements of mother and father, which was meant to arouse a great

6
The Oedipus complex

deal of excitement and jealousy, but which had a much more awful
effect in that it evoked pity and a feeling of hopelessness.
For much of the time, the two of us were felt to constitute
such a bizarre, uncreative couple. Sometimes he would perceive me as
posturing as a healthy, vigorous object, one that he knew to be pecu-
liar and damaged and hence indistinguishable from himself. There
were other times, however, when he seemed able to recognize a
difference between us, and this allowed us to do real analytic work
for a time, which was accompanied by a sense of relief and gratitude.
It was striking that at such times his own thinking acquired a different
quality – it was more coherent, and he seemed to have a real sense that
things in his world had meaning. At times like this, there was much
less vagueness, excitement and fragmentation in the way his mind
worked. However, such periods of constructive work were short-lived
and stimulated a desperate, destructive envious attack.
As I have indicated, there seemed to be a relationship between the
quality of the patient’s thinking and the nature of the Oedipal
couple represented in phantasy and reflected in the transference at
any given time. The patient usually found it extremely difficult to
make proper connections in his own mind, to do any thinking for
himself. Instead, his ‘thinking’ often consisted of the agglomeration
of two ideas in a peculiar way, with no meaningful link between
them. As we saw in his dream, he would often present this bizarre
conjunction as if it were desirable, even exciting. Just as he found it
difficult to tolerate any knowledge of the disturbing quality of the
parental relationship (and felt his parents could not tolerate it), so he
found it painful and frightening to face what went on in his own
mind, and he was driven into making these peculiar, desperate com-
binations, which were often accompanied by excitement and always
by a sense of isolation.
Although I thought he was not properly able to use projective
mechanisms to communicate his feelings and anxieties, at times he felt
driven to project these more desperate and disordered functions into
his object. In the countertransference I experienced them in the form
of a pressure to make banal interpretations or to link things in a way
that would ‘do’ but did not feel right, and which I knew to be of no
use. The effect of doing this was to relieve both of us temporarily,
while increasing an underlying feeling of frustration and despair.
When I was able to resist this pressure to enter into the world of the
dream and retain my capacity to think in a different way, even though

7
The Oedipus complex

this was sometimes difficult and painful, it seemed to strengthen the


patient’s contact with reality and with his own internal world.

Second clinical illustration

I would now like to turn to a second case, that of a young woman,


Ms N, in whom the Oedipal couple was represented very differently,
with a different set of phantasies and anxieties structuring the trans-
ference. The patient’s thinking was affected by her need constantly to
provide internal reassurance against her fears of being rejected or
attacked, and there was a corresponding pressure on the analyst to fit
in with this.
The patient’s parents had separated when she was very young, and
her childhood had been dominated by a painful and difficult relation-
ship with her mother, a very disturbed woman. Her mother criticized
and denigrated the absent father, blaming him for everything, always
putting herself completely in the right. My patient was under con-
siderable pressure to accept this version of events, and any attempt to
question the truth of what was presented to her was liable to produce
an angry and violent response. She gradually became aware of the
degree of her mother’s disturbance and the elaborate web of lies and
distortions with which she had grown up, but she was always too
frightened to challenge this.
At the same time she entertained secret phantasies of her father
returning to rescue her. It was important for her to imagine that he
would see that she had done her very best; it was she who had not
only done well at school, but also tidied up the house and cooked the
meals; her mother had been bad, cruel and neglectful. He could hardly
fail to take her side and take her away with him. The alternative
scenario, which she hardly dared contemplate, was that her mother
and father would ‘gang up’ against her, identify her as aggressive, nasty
and dirty and get rid of her.
In the session prior to the one I will describe in detail, the patient
had brought up familiar difficulties in the relationship with her
partner, in which she often felt painfully rejected. She was quite
defensive about her contribution to any of the problems, and it took
some time before she was able to acknowledge her own hostility and
resentment. As the session proceeded, she became less defensive, and a
more complex, real picture of their interaction began to emerge. She

8
The Oedipus complex

seemed to feel that something important had been addressed and to


experience some relief.
She arrived a few minutes late for the next session, and she care-
fully explained how she had been delayed by things that were quite
beyond her control. She then said that something had happened
the previous day that she felt tempted to push away, but then thought
she ought to talk about it, especially as there was nothing else she
could think of to say.
She described how busy she had been with a variety of tasks and
emphasized how well she had coped. She had been able to remain
very patient and calm with all the people she had had to deal with.
Her partner had had a meeting to attend in the evening, and as he was
very short of time, she had prepared a nice snack for him to eat in
her car. She had been very patient and understanding and had raised
no objections to his going out, even though she had seen very little
of him.
From the way she was speaking, I had a fairly good idea that the
story would turn out in a familiar way, with my patient let down, hurt
and disappointed.
When her partner returned from his meeting, he was very tired
and just sat in front of the television. He said he wanted to hear
the news, and she did not mind, although she had heard it herself
an hour before. While sitting there, he dozed off, which I knew often
irritated her.
Then his friend Peter telephoned, and he spoke to Peter for about
half an hour. It was nothing urgent or connected with his work
(which she could have understood) – they were just chatting. She
suddenly felt absolutely furious – he was too tired to bother with her
but had the energy to speak to his friend. It was not that she was
making any great demands on him, or anything like that, she just
wanted a bit of attention.
This all sounded extremely reasonable and compelling. There was a
tone in her voice that pulled me into agreeing completely with her,
being unequivocally ‘on her side’. I was struck by the extent to which
it had been necessary for her to build up a case, as it were, emphasizing
how good and tolerant she had been all evening. She made a point of
acknowledging that she had been able to deal with the difficulties in
this way because of the help she had received in the previous session,
and spelled out that she had accepted the idea that her anger and
resentment might have an effect on her partner, which was one reason

9
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