Schizophr Bull 1980 Benedetti 633 8

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VOL 6, NO.

4, 1980

Individual Psychotherapy
of Schizophrenia

by Gaetano Benedetti

Abstract

A sensitive understanding of a life


history which has led to schizophrenia does not constitute proof that
some biological causes were not also
present. The recent work of Rosenthai et al. (1968) has pointed to the
existence of a hereditary transmission
of the illness,1 which is an important
alternative to the etiologkal theories
of psychological and family influences. An intertwining of psycho1
The importance of the hereditary factor is, of course, controversial. According
to the most recent research of Tienari (in
press), the mental health of the adoptedaway offspring of schizophrenics is largely
dependent upon the mental health of the
adoptive families.

I owe to Manfred Bleuler the concept


that schizophrenia is an illness caused by
the continuous intertwining of psychotraumatic life histories and biological predispositions, and 1 am indebted to him for
his constant encouragement of my work.
Reprint requests should be sent to Professor Benedetti at Kantonsspital Basel,
Universitatskliniken, Psychiatrische
Universitatspoliklinik, Petersgraben 4,
4031 Basel, Switzerland.

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The work of the author and others in


the field of psychotherapy of schizophrenia is said to have demonstrated
that understanding the patient requires a special therapeutic relationship which is different from that in
the psychoanalysis of neurosis
because it implies an intrapsychic
process that can be described as
follows: Parts of the ill personality
are introjected by the psychotherapist
and parts of his personality are
adopted by the patient, as shown by
the fact that the^lreams^and the unconscious fantasies and striving of the
therapist reflect the anxieties of the
patient, and the dreams of the latter
are structured by the inner movements of the former, as if there were
a partially shared identity between
them both. This phenomenon is
called "identification." The
psychotherapy of schizophrenia
reveals realms of existence in which
understanding is not only a function
of personality, but also a transformation of personality by the act of being
near the patient.

logical influences with biological


predispositions has long been
postulated by Manfred Bleuler (1954)
to be at the roots of schizophrenia.2
At the beginning of this century,
Eugen Bleuler (1911) theorized that
many schizophrenic symptoms are
due to the psychological reaction of
the personality to the unknown process of the disease. This was the first
step of psychodynamic thinking in
modem psychiatry. The second step
was taken by Jung (1907), who, at
Burgholzli, continued this line of
thought in his thesis that schizophrenic symptoms ean4>e-Gured-by
psychotherapy. He stressed the psychogenetic point of view. We have
discovered since then that the working through of the psychological "secondary" symptoms can also affect the
very basis of the disease, even its
"primary" symptoms (Benedetti
1975).
The third step was also taken in
Switzerland by Ludwig Binswanger
(1957), who demonstrated that every
psychotic symptom is so connected
with every other as to form a
schizophrenic "world" of its own,
which can be explored only by means
of psychological research. It seems
that splitting and autism, as Manfred
Bleuler (1972) pointed out, lie at the
very core of the whole schizophrenic
psychopathology, and are its fundamental symptoms. As the central

634

something that all psychotherapists of


the schizophrenic ill have experienced
and described, although with different words, as something fundamental. They speak of participation (Sullivan 1962), therapeutic love
(Rosen 1953), relatedness (Arieti
1955), therapeutic symbiosis (Searles
1964), intentionality (Schultz-Hencke
1952), identification (Benedetti 1975a,
1975b, 1978, 1979),etc. I believe that
such a relation is not only symbolic,
as is transference, but also symbolizing, as is reality itself. Only in this
way can the relationship create a dual
world of experience which goes far
beyond what can be clinically
grasped, and which also contributes
to the "individuation" of the
psychotherapist himself. Entrance
into the actual situation and into the
world of the ill is experienced by the
psychotherapist as a gift given to him
by the patient himself and by his own
unconscious, but it can also be
trained and stimulated by our meditation. This situation of entrance, once
it has arisen, reveals itself on different levels, which can all either
coexist simultaneously or appear
singly.

The Psychotherapeutic
Relationship in the Individual
Treatment of Schizophrenia

I shall describe only three of them:


1. Therapeutic dreams arise and
show us our unconscious concern
with the patient, as has recently been
so beautifully illustrated by Isotti
(1978). They lack the classical
dichotomy between latent and
manifest content, postulated by Freud
(1925) for all dreams because they
serve therapeutic communication and
can therefore be used to reinforce it.
The two following examples may
illustrate this:

Individual psychotherapy of the


schizophrenic patient begins with the
"entrance" of the psychotherapist into
the actual situation and into the
world of his partner. "Entrance" is

A patient feared the eyes of his


therapist. He felt that he was being
hypnotized and killed by them. The
following night the therapist dreamed
that he saw the eyes of his patient,

which were staring at him. They were


enormous and terrible, as the
therapist's eyes had been in the patient's experience. The therapist
trembled with anxiety, but could
withstand the look because it seemed
to him, in his dream, to be that of
eternity itself. We see here a reversal
of the death experience of the patient
into a fearful, but grandiose life experience of the therapist.
Another therapist dreamed:
I found myself together with an incurable schizophrenic in a gloomy,
lonely, and cheerless room. Only
few words were spoken. Suddenly
it was as if a curtain lifted; a second level of reality appeared (the
psychotherapeutic transformation
of the phenomenon of a splitting
between a first and a second level
of symbolization). In a vision of
eternity the patient appeared to me
as a hero, as leader of many shining knights charging into infinity.
Astonished, I looked at this picture, and I suddenly knew that
both levels, that of the psychotic
reality and that of the transcendental vision were complementary in
C. G. Jung's sense of the word.
2. Some negative feelings of the
patient, of which he is not aware and
cannot verbalize, are perceived by the
therapist as his own. In this way he
experiences the patient's unconscious
by sensing it within his own being.
For example, it can happen that the
patient can realize his own latent aggressivity only after his therapist,
who has not yet discovered it,
wonders about his own aggressive
mood, which seems to him to be
without any cause. In one supervision
I controlled a problematic countertransference of a therapist, who felt
disgusted by her patient, without,
however, finding any reason for it. I
guessed that such a feeling could be
the manifest sign of her capability to
come in touch with some "disgusting"
parts of the patient's unconscious.

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events of schizophrenia are a multiple


splitting of the ego (Spaltung) and its
autistic retreat from the world,
psychotherapy aims at the creation of
a therapeutic integration of the patient, which does not work on the
social level alone (as does sociotherapy and social rehabilitation) but
goes deep into the unconscious, so
that within the patient an intrapsychic synthesis can be fostered
through the mirror of what happens
in the dual patient-therapist field
(Benedetti 1975).
Such an integration is attempted by
means of the capability of the
therapeutic person to enter into the
world of the schizophrenic, using
shared symbols of the patient, the
therapist's creative fantasies, as well
as ego-nourishing dynamic interpretations, all of which stimulate from
within the psychotic world the
necessary psychosynthetic forces
(Benedetti 1975).
Such psychotherapy is, therefore,
that point of integration where
psychoanalysis merges with
psychosynthesis, and where the
development of the patient and the
self-realization of his therapist are
symmetrical phenomena. Only if the
psychotherapist can himself take a
step toward his own individualization
(individuation, Jung), through the encounter with his patient, is the latter
also able to construct his new sane
world within that of his therapeutic
partner (Benedetti 1975).

SCHIZOPHRENIA BULLETIN

VOL 6, NO. 4, 1980

Without a therapeutic "receiver,"


the patient's sensations are so far

disorganized, fragmented, depersonalized, and derealized that they


can never be transformed into structured ego experiences. They are not
simply repressed as fantasies or affects, as in neurosis, but they
disintegrate into parts of sentences, to
voices, and abstruse meanings in the
psychotic world.
3. The autistic schizophrenic symbols become, in the language of the
therapist, dualized symbols of insight
and communication. They are still
the old ones, but they are filled with
new life, the identity of the therapistpatient. For instance, a patient who
felt influenced by everything says
now, in the psychotherapy, that she
is "thrown around" by the therapist's
wordsthese are now the "influencing machine" (Tausk 1919), which,
however, have a new role, do not
persecute, but protect the patient.
The counteridentification of the
patient with his therapeutic parts by
means of the acceptance of the
therapist's interpretations appears to
be possible only to the same degree
that the therapist, on his part, identifies with the introjected fragmented
experiences of his patient. In the
psychotherapy of schizophrenia, the
patient learns to distinguish between
object and self, to sense his surroundings, and to organize his fragmented
ego functions by means of the
therapist's allowing himself to be used
as symbiotic object. The recovery or
the improvement of the patient does
not occur only on the level of adaption to social norms by overcoming
resistances toward them, but rather
as a change in the therapist himself,
in the adapting of the therapist to the
patient and the potential humanity of
his existence.
The range of psychopathological
facts is narrowed by this discovery,
as many things, which at first seem
to be meaningless in psychosis, ac-

quire significance in that special area


of reality which is formed by the
mutual introjection and projection
processes of the patient and his
therapist, as if there were a third
reality between the healthy one of the
detached observer and the psychotic,
irrational one of the patient.
The concept of what is reality,
psychodynamically seen, in the dual
experience of therapy defies logical
definitions. The point, however, is
that the classical psychopathologic
processes of appersonation and transitivism become, ultimately, the very
forces of separation between the self
and the world, in that they are used
in the therapeutic symbiosis. But we
should not forget that the very
therapeutic "weapon" of the identification grows out of the knowledge
that therapeutic countertransference
can also be very harmful, if it does
not serve the interests of the patient.
It has been shown that in the therapy
of schizophrenia, the unconscious
countertransference of the therapist
can be the unconscious cause of
many behavior patterns of the patient
(Searles 1964). This broadens the concept of schizophrenia as pure transmission or introjection of irrationality. Not only the family (Lidz 1968)
or society (Basaglia 1968) but also
our psychiatric unconscious plays a
role here. Schizophrenia can also be
considered as the intemalization of
the irrationality of all existence.
It is one central paradox of the
psychotherapy of psychosis that it
uses the same autistic symbols which
form the basis of the schizophrenic
psychopathology in order to create a
means of communication with the patient. The paradox is also that we
psychotherapists must give up our
"delusional possession of reality"
(Siirala 1972), our clinical demands
and expectancies, our hierarchical
privileges of normality, our tenden-

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After the therapist could, with the


help of my interpretation, overcome
her anxious countertransference, the
patient (a girl) became conscious of a
sexual problem, which disgusted her
(and no longer the therapist). She
(the patient) then dreamed of a
loathesome man, whose features
became more and more gross and
repulsive, and who urinated into the
glasses of people at the table. At this
point it became possible to work
through the patient's sexual disturbance. But this problem only came to
light through the transient therapeutic
"appersonation" (appersonierung)
which was no rejection of the
patient's sexuality, but the sign that
the therapist's unconscious had
merged with that of the patient, in
order to structure it.
We see also that a psychopathological phenomenon becomes,
in the therapeutic identification with
the patient, a way of "taking over"
his existence. 'Taking over" here
means that the patient's unconscious
is not discovered by the interpretation of verbal signals, as in the
psychoanalyses of neurosis, but it
must be carried mutually by both the
patient and his therapist in order to
become articulated. Whereas, in
classical psychoanalysis, transference
is an alternation of actual reality and
must be shown as such to the patient,
mutual identification is the ground
for a dual reality in psychotic autism.
It sometimes seems that even the
schizophrenic unconscious is disintegrated, as Freud (1925) himself surmised when he spoke of the loss of
intrapsychic images in the psychotic
unconscious. This must therefore not
only become discovered, but first be
born as a structure out of the act of a
primary duality which lies at the very
roots of psychic life.

635

638

relates to his suicidal patient his own


dream, in which the latter throws
himself out of the window; in an attempt to save her, the therapist runs
to the window and can hold her in
the air with his eyes. The patient
said, after hearing this dream, that
she was then no longer able to kill
herself.
I do not deny that even this mutual
dwelling in death can be rejected by
the patient. But in my experience the
patient longs for nothing as much as
he does the object of his resistance,
his therapist. Only then can the death
which has been taken over by the
therapist be overcome by the patient.
The patient asks fearfully whether the
therapist is still alive, whether he eats
and sleeps well, whether he still exists, for if the therapist exists, so,
too, can he.
My point here is that the therapist
does not first try to rationalize the
symptoms of the psychotic patient,
but wants to be together with him
within his symptoms. The first step
of the psychotherapy is this dualized
psychopathology. This was well expressed by a patient who, during her
psychosis, had a terror of the world
as if it were a train bearing down
upon her. During psychotherapy she
developed a "therapeutic hallucination" in which she heard the therapist
tell her to lie between the rails. She
asked, frightened, how she could do
this. The hallucinated therapist
answered that he would lie between
the rails with her.
I call this mutual process "identification" and "counteridentification,"
and I mean that the fragmented patient's ego finds its own identity by
identification with the integrated ego
of the therapist.
At the end of this process, the
psychopathological phenomenon of
"transitivism" is transformed into an
act of psychotherapeutic mutuality.
This is shown by the following dream

of a patient, in which an animal lay


bound in a stall, dying of hunger and
thirst. "What good fortune that you
have come to save me in the last
minute," cried the animal to the patient, as she began to cut its ropes. In
this dream the patient had assumed
the role of the therapist, as it was as
if she herself had cut the ropes to
save herself. This identification was
only possible because the therapist
had often identified with the suffering
of the patient and had thereby experienced himself as the bound
animal.

Interpretation and Resistance


In the Psychotherapy of
Schizophrenia
Another fundamental point concerns
the problem of psychodynamic interpretation. We can reach the core of
the question by asking ourselves,
how we can distinguish between
therapeutic interpretations in
schizophrenia and in neurosis.
1. Interpretations in the
psychotherapy of schizophrenia can
hardly grasp the connections of an individual psychogenesis in such an exhaustive manner that they could
really explain why conflicts must be
carried out by the patient in a
schizophrenic way. Interpretations
are, therefore, "operational" in
nature, in that they do not discover a
specificity of psychodynamics at the
roots of schizophrenia. They give
rather pictures of the dynamic and
existential situations between the patient and his therapist. They can also
be formed by therapeutic fantasies
without, therefore, being untrue,
because they unfold in this way the
therapeutic relationship. Interpretations translate schizophrenic processes
into psychogenetic events in order to
give to the patient the key to the
structuring of his psychotic ex-

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cies to exercise a cognitive power


over the ill, and our needs to adapt
the patients to ourselvesin order to
share with them the great symbols of
the psychosis and the desperate attempts of the ill toward
self-realization.
Therapeutic entrance into the actual situation is in psychosis more important than is the reconstruction of
the past in the psychoanalysis of
neurosis; it is the therapist's message
to the patient. I must discuss now an
objection to such a personal therapeutic approach which has been
raised by many authors. Laing (1959)
for example speaks of the danger of
an "implosion," that is, the dissolving
of the schizophrenic ego when confronted with our emotions. Frieda
Fromm-Reichmann (1950) also tells us
that any offer of love or friendship
to the mentally ill should be avoided.
I agree, of course, with these authors
insofar as they warn against a superficial emotional approach to the patient, which can only be sensed by
him as a demand from us. The matter
is different, however, if "therapeutic
love" means our readiness to be with
the patient in his world of death. Our
messages to the patient convey that
we do not expect anything from him,
that we want only to be with him in
his dreams, fantasies, and terrifying
experiences.
A therapist, for example, listens to
a patient who feels surrounded by
screaming devils; he tells the patient
that he, too, is there; and, by leaping
into the demonic circle, forces the patient to perceive his presence in the
very core of his psychotic world.
Another patient relates a frightening
hallucination in which he is overwhelmed by a flood of water. The
therapist "sees" the deluge, 'la creux
de la vague" (in French also the term
for impending catastrophe), and he
braces himself to withstand this vision. In another case the therapist

SCHIZOPHRENIA BULLETIN

VOL 6, NO. 4, 1980

dissolves him, in order to slip into a


safe protected corner of himself. A
third patient, who cannot develop
any loving connection to the world
and to himself, tries to compensate
this lack with the delusion of love.
It would be naive to assume that it
could be of use to the ill to be confronted with the psychodynamics of
such phenomena as the knowledge of
them would be for him only a tiny
reality that could not fill the terrible
vacuum within himself.
We may, however, reach the patient if we convey to him, through
our interpretations, the feeling that
we accept and understand his resistances as necessary expressions of
himself which permit us to know his
world and so to relate to it. We do
not merely wish to reduce his resistance to psychological mechanisms.
In this connection I remember a patient who idealized me as God
himself. It was of no use to reduce
this delusional transference to the loss
of her beloved mother during
childhood. She maintained that the
origin of her feelings toward me was
the actual dual reality. The patient
was, however, impressed by my interpretation that I felt myself to be
for her the mirror of a radiating
metaphysical sun, which could reach
her through me in order to become,
later, a part of herself. If such interpretations are aimed at putting ourselves into the psychotic world of the
patient, then this psychotic world
must become valuable to us as a
message of a human longing for personal existence.

The Psychotic Relevance of


This Work
The essential significance of this work
does not lie, of course, on a statistical
level. One is faced with the fact that
in individual treatment of psychosis,

from 2 to 8 hours weekly are needed,


so that only a small number of cases
can be benefited. We are then confronted with the dilemma that either,
as in some cases, the clinical results
of the great therapeutic engagement
do not go far beyond what one could
reasonably expect from the normal
course of the sickness, or else the
medical satisfaction for the healing of
chronic patients, who otherwise
seemed incurable, is counteracted by
the objection that our successful cases
belong to a small privileged group of
patients, compared with the majority
of schizophrenics.
Of course, suffering people all
belong to the most discriminated
against human beings. How can one,
however, justify the great efforts of
the individual psychotherapy of the
few when thousands are excluded?
We must realize that the social
benefits of this work do lie on
another level.
1. The psychiatrist with experience
from the individual psychotherapy of
psychosis develops a sensitivity which
also enables him to better master
other psychotherapeutic tasks of his
daily activities, such as short treatments, long-term counseling, group
psychotherapies, single consultations,
etc. It has been my experience that
the knowledge acquired from individual psychotherapy can permeate
many fields of psychiatry, insofar as
they are ready for such influence.
2. A second point lies in the fact
that this work with a few patients
can tell us more, from the dynamic
point of view, about the essence of
schizophrenia than the more descriptive form of observing thousands of
cases in a psychiatric institute.
3. Lastly, I would like to mention
a point which goes beyond specific
psychiatric interest. Individual treatment is a human challenge to us, and
permits a personal view of the suffering individual, which belongs to the

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periences, as they are mirrored back


to him by the therapist.
2. Interpretations.are concerned
not only with drives and instinctual
needs of the patients, as in neurosis,
but also with what I would call
"structural needs" of the schizophrenic ego. I mean by these the
needs of the patients to distinguish
between egoic and alien, to grasp the
frontiers of their own egos, to structure associations in time and space,
to find an intrapsychic coherence,
and so on. To understand such conditions demands a new level of psychodynamics which does not exist in
neurosis, and which must be reached
by the psychotherapist by being with
the patient in the depth of his abnormal psychology.
3. The psychotherapy of psychosis
is different from the psychoanalysis
of neurosis because of the different
emphasis put on the resistances of the
patients.
Freud taught us that we can often
overcome neurotic resistances by
describing them to the patient. This
presupposes a healthy part of the ego
which can work with us and look on
the sick part of itself. Only those few
schizophrenics who are similar to
neurotics are able to do this.
Most schizophrenics are so dependent upon their own autistic, delusional, aggressive, paranoid behavior,
that their clinging to their systems
and symptoms is more than a
resistance; it seems to be an attempt
at survival by means of organizing a
last psychotic identity in the vacuum
of their "nonexistence."
The patient, for instance, who has
become disintegrated by the intrapsychic presence of a "bad object,"
projects this upon his therapist by
feeling persecuted by him. In this
way he tries to get rid of the "bad
object" in order to experience himself
as a unity. A second autistic patient
refuses a surrounding world which

637

638

great experiences of what the human


being is.

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Gaetano Benedetti is Professor of


Psychotherapy and Mental Health at
the University of Basel, Basel,
Switzerland.

The Author

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