Thomas H Ogden Creative Readings Essays On Seminal Analytic Works
Thomas H Ogden Creative Readings Essays On Seminal Analytic Works
Thomas H Ogden Creative Readings Essays On Seminal Analytic Works
• W. R. D. Fairbairn
• Donald Winnicott
• Wilfred Bion
• Hans Loewald
• Harold Searles.
This book is not simply a book of readings, it is a book about reading, about
how to read in a way that readers actively rewrite what they are reading,
and in so doing make the ideas truly their own. The concepts that Ogden
develops in his readings provide a significant step in the reader’s expansion
of his or her understanding of many of the ideas that lie at the cutting edge
of contemporary psychoanalysis. Creative Readings will be of particular
interest to psychoanalysts and psychotherapists who use a psychodynamic
approach, as well as professionals and academics with an interest in contem-
porary psychoanalysis.
Typeset in Bembo
by RefineCatch Limited, Bungay, Suffolk
Paperback cover design by Sandra Heath
To my patients who, each in their
own way, have taught me what is
possible when two people put their
all into talking truthfully to one another
Contents
Acknowledgements xii
6 Reading Bion 97
References 178
Index 186
xi
Acknowledgements
xii
Acknowledgements
xiii
1
Some thoughts on how to read this book
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Creative Readings
2
Some thoughts on how to read this book
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Creative Readings
My reading (and writing) in this way will inevitably lead the reader
to ask where the author’s thinking leaves off and where mine begins.
For example, when I say in Chapter 3 that it is “implicit” in Isaacs’
(1952) “The nature and function of phantasy” that inherent to phan-
tasy is the need to discover, to get to know and understand external
reality, I mean that, for me, the language Isaacs uses strongly suggests
that idea. Did she have that in mind (consciously) when she wrote the
paper? Probably not, but I believe that the language she uses suggests
that her thinking was leading in that direction. I support that idea by
looking at her use of language in the final portion of her paper where
she states that the symbolic function of phantasy “builds a bridge from
the inner world to interest in the outer world and knowledge of phys-
ical objects and events” (Isaacs, 1952, p. 110). She goes on to say that
phantasying promotes “the development of interest in the external
world and the process of learning about it” (p. 110). And a bit later:
“The power to seek out and organize knowledge [of the external
world] is drawn [from phantasy activity]” (p. 110). It is from these
statements and others that I cite in my discussion of her paper that I
make my inferences about the way in which the need to know gives
direction to phantasy activity (which I view as synonymous with
unconscious thinking).
One might ask how you, the reader, are to decide to whom to give
credit or responsibility for the inferences I draw/create. A part of my
response to that question is: Who cares? The important thing is what
one is able to do with the ideas that Isaacs makes explicit in combina-
tion with the ideas that her language suggests. In my reading of Isaacs
I may be able to do more with aspects of the text than Isaacs was able
to because I – as is the case for every contemporary analytic reader –
have available to me perspectives derived from developments in
psychoanalysis and related fields that Isaacs did not. To my ear, her
text echoes work published decades after she wrote her paper, for
example, Chomsky’s (1957, 1968) work on the deep structure of
language, Bion’s (1962a, 1962b) work on a psychoanalytic theory of
thinking, and Winnicott’s (1974) conception of “the fear of break-
down.” In addition, and probably more important, I have a mind of
my own that is different from Isaacs’ mind, and that allows me to see
in her work a good deal that she did not see. The same is true for you,
the reader, in reading Isaacs and in reading what I write.
In the chapters that follow, I, at times, indicate that a particular
idea is my own “extension” of an author’s work, but in truth, I
4
Some thoughts on how to read this book
cannot say exactly where the author’s thinking stops and mine begins.
Ideas do not come with tags naming their owner.1 For example, in
my discussion of Fairbairn’s work (Chapter 4, p. 62), I say
1 Just as ideas come without tags indicating who owns them, it is important that
thinkers not come with tags indicating who owns them (for example, the tags “contem-
porary Kleinian,” “contemporary Freudian,” “self-psychologist,” “relational analyst,”
and so on).
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The irony here is that Borges, in a style of writing and thinking that
is unmistakably original to him, is dismissing the idea that anyone is
justified in claiming that his writing and thinking are strictly his own.
The idea that the author cannot claim originality for his writing is
not original to Borges, but Borges’ way of expressing that idea – and
at the same time refuting it – radically alters it, and makes it original
to him.
Whether or not we believe that anyone has the right to attach his or
her name to an idea or a poem or an essay or a particular form of
“word music” (Borges, quoted by Vargas Llosa, 2008, p. 32), human
6
Some thoughts on how to read this book
7
Creative Readings
8
Some thoughts on how to read this book
Who but Fairbairn could have named and responded to the core
of Isaacs’ thinking in such cogent, diametrically opposing terms as
these:
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lives in his mother’s face or in his own body, provided that from
time to time he comes together and feels something.
(Winnicott, 1945, p. 150)
the patient who cannot dream cannot go to sleep and cannot wake
up. Hence the peculiar condition seen clinically when a psychotic
patient behaves as if he were in precisely this state.
(Bion, 1962a, p. 8)
10
2
Freud’s “Mourning and melancholia” and the
origins of object relations theory
Some writers write what they think; others think what they write.
The latter seem to do their thinking in the very act of writing, as if
thoughts arise from the conjunction of pen and paper, the work
unfolding by surprise as it goes. Freud in many of his most important
books and articles, including “Mourning and melancholia” (1917a),
was a writer of this latter sort. In these writings, Freud made no
attempt to cover his tracks, for example, his false starts, his uncertain-
ties, his reversals of thinking (often done mid-sentence), his shelving
of compelling ideas for the time being because they seemed to him
too speculative or lacking adequate clinical foundation.
The legacy that Freud left was not simply a set of ideas, but, as
important, and inseparable from those ideas, a new way of thinking
about human experience that gave rise to nothing less than a new
form of human subjectivity. Each of his psychoanalytic writings,
from this point of view, is simultaneously an explication of a set of
concepts and a demonstration of a newly created way of thinking
about and experiencing ourselves.
I have chosen to look closely at Freud’s “Mourning and melan-
cholia” for two reasons. First, I consider this paper to be one of
Freud’s most important contributions in that it develops for the first
time, in a systematic way, a line of thought which later would be
termed “object relations theory” (Fairbairn, 1952). I use the term
object relations theory to refer to a group of psychoanalytic theories
holding in common a loosely knit set of metaphors that address the
intrapsychic and interpersonal effects of relationships among uncon-
scious “internal” objects, that is, among unconscious split-off parts of
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12
Freud’s “Mourning and melancholia”
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14
Freud’s “Mourning and melancholia”
Freud points out that the same traits characterize mourning – with
one exception: “the disturbance of self-regard.” Only in retrospect
will the reader realize that the full weight of the thesis that Freud
develops in this paper rests on this simple observation made almost in
passing: “The disturbance of self-regard is absent in mourning; but
otherwise the features are the same” (p. 244). As in every good detec-
tive novel, all clues necessary for solving the crime are laid out in
plain view practically from the outset.
With the background of the discussion of the similarities and
differences – there is only one symptomatic difference – between
mourning and melancholia, the paper seems abruptly to plunge into
the exploration of the unconscious. In melancholia, the patient and the
analyst may not even know what the patient has lost – a remarkable
idea from the point of view of common sense in 1915. Even when the
melancholic is aware that he has suffered the loss of a person, “he
knows whom he has lost but not what he has lost in him” (p. 245).
There is ambiguity in Freud’s language here. Is the melancholic
unaware of the sort of importance the tie to the object held for him:
“what [the melancholic] has lost in [losing] him.” Or is the melancholic
unaware of what he has lost in himself as a consequence of losing the
object? The ambiguity – whether or not Freud intended it – subtly
introduces the important notion of the simultaneity and interdepend-
ence of two unconscious aspects of object loss in melancholia. One
involves the nature of the melancholic’s tie to the object and the other
involves an alteration of the self in response to the loss of the object.
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16
Freud’s “Mourning and melancholia”
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18
Freud’s “Mourning and melancholia”
1 While Freud made use of the idea of “an internal world” in “Mourning and melan-
cholia,” it was Klein (1935, 1940, 1952) who transformed the idea into a systematic
theory of the structure of the unconscious and of the interplay between the internal
object world and the world of external objects. In developing her conception of the
unconscious, Klein richly contributed to a critical alteration of analytic theory. She shifted
the dominant metaphors from those associated with Freud’s topographic and structural
models to a set of spatial metaphors (some stated, some only suggested in “Mourning
and melancholia”). These spatial metaphors depict an unconscious inner world inhabited
by “internal objects” – split-off aspects of the ego – that are bound together in “internal
object relationships” by powerful affective ties. (See Chapters 3 and 4 for discussions of
the concepts of “internal objects” and “internal object relations” as these ideas evolved in
the work of Freud, Klein, Isaacs, and Fairbairn; see also Ogden, 1983.)
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20
Freud’s “Mourning and melancholia”
The patient, Mr. K, began analysis a year after the death of his wife
of 22 years. In a dream that Mr. K reported several years into the
analysis, he was attending a gathering in which a tribute was to be
paid to someone whose identity was unclear to him. Just as the
proceedings were getting under way, a man in the audience rose to
his feet and spoke glowingly of Mr. K’s fine character and impor-
tant accomplishments. When the man finished, the patient stood
and expressed his gratitude for the high praise, but said that the
purpose of the meeting was to pay tribute to the guest of honor, so
the group’s attention should be directed to him. Immediately upon
Mr. K’s sitting down, another person stood and again praised the
patient at great length. Mr. K again stood and after briefly repeating
his statement of gratitude for the adulation, he re-directed the
attention of the gathering to the honored guest. This sequence was
repeated again and again until the patient had the terrifying realiza-
tion (in the dream) that this sequence would go on forever. Mr. K
awoke from the dream with his heart racing in a state of panic.
The patient had told me in the sessions preceding the dream that
he had become increasingly despairing of ever being able to love
another woman and “resume life.” He said he has never ceased
expecting his wife to return home after work each evening at six-
thirty. He added that every family event after her death has been for
him nothing more than another occasion at which his wife is
missing. He apologized for his lugubrious, self-pitying tones.
I told Mr. K that I thought that the dream captured a sense of
the way he feels imprisoned in his inability genuinely to be inter-
ested in, much less honor, new experiences with people. In the
dream, he, in the form of the guests paying endless homage to
him, directed to himself what might have been interest paid to
someone outside of himself, someone outside of his internally
frozen relationship with his wife. I went on to say that it was
striking that the honored guest in the dream was not given a name,
much less an identity and human qualities which might have
stirred curiosity, puzzlement, anger, jealousy, envy, compassion,
love, admiration or any other set of feeling responses to another
person. I added that the horror he felt at the end of the dream
seemed to reflect his awareness that the static state of self-
imprisonment in which he lives is potentially endless. (A good deal
of this interpretation referred back to many discussions Mr. K and
I had had concerning his state of being “stuck” in a world that no
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on the one hand, a strong fixation [an intense, yet static emotional
tie] to the loved object must have been present; on the other hand,
in contradiction to this, the object-cathexis must have had little
power of resistance [i.e. little power to maintain that tie to the
object in the face of actual or feared death of the object or object-
loss as a consequence of disappointment].
(p. 249)
22
Freud’s “Mourning and melancholia”
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i.e. unable to face the reality of the loss of the object, and, over time,
to enter into mature object love with another person. The melan-
cholic does not have the capacity to disengage from the lost object
and instead evades the pain of loss through regression from narcis-
sistic object relatedness to narcissistic identification: “the result of
which is that in spite of the conflict [disappointment leading to
outrage] with the loved person, the love relation need not be given
up” (p. 249). As Freud put it in a summary statement near the end of
the paper, “So by taking flight into the ego [by means of a powerful
narcissistic identification] love escapes extinction” (p. 247).
A misreading of “Mourning and melancholia,” to my mind, has
become entrenched in what is commonly held to be Freud’s view of
melancholia (see, for example, Gay, 1988, pp. 372–373). What I am
referring to is the misconception that melancholia, according to
Freud, involves an identification with the hated aspect of an ambiva-
lently loved object that has been lost. Such a reading, while accurate
so far as it goes, misses the central point of Freud’s thesis. What
differentiates the melancholic from the mourner is the fact that the
melancholic all along has been able to engage only in narcissistic
forms of object relatedness. The narcissistic nature of the melanchol-
ic’s personality renders him incapable of maintaining a firm connec-
tion with the painful reality of the irrevocable loss of the object,
which is necessary for mourning. Melancholia involves ready,
reflexive recourse to regression to narcissistic identification as a way
of not experiencing the hard edge of recognition of one’s inability to
undo the fact of the loss of the object.
Object relations theory, as it is taking shape in the course of Freud’s
writing this paper, now includes an early developmental axis. The
world of unconscious internal object relations is being viewed by
Freud as a defensive regression to very early forms of object related-
ness in response to psychological pain – in the case of the melan-
cholic, the pain is the pain of loss. The individual replaces what might
have become a three-dimensional relatedness to the mortal and at
times disappointing external object with a two-dimensional (shadow-
like) relationship to an internal object that exists in a psychological
domain outside of time (and consequently sheltered from the reality
of death). In so doing, the melancholic evades the pain of loss, and,
by extension, other forms of psychological pain, but does so at an
enormous cost – the loss of a good deal of his own (emotional)
vitality.
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Freud’s “Mourning and melancholia”
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I cannot promise that this attempt [to explain mania] will prove
entirely satisfactory. It hardly carries us much beyond the possi-
bility of taking one’s initial bearings. We have two things to go
upon: the first is a psycho-analytic impression, and the second
what we may perhaps call a matter of general economic experi-
ence. The [psycho-analytic] impression . . . is that . . . both disor-
ders [mania and melancholia] are wrestling with the same,
[unconscious] ‘complex’, but that probably in melancholia the ego
has succumbed to the complex [in the form of a painful feeling of
having been crushed] whereas in mania it has mastered it [the pain
of loss] or pushed it aside.
(p. 253–254)
26
Freud’s “Mourning and melancholia”
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28
Freud’s “Mourning and melancholia”
hate and love contend with each other [in melancholia]; the one
seeks to detach the libido from the object [thus allowing the subject
to live and the object to die], the other to maintain this position of
the libido [which is bonded to the immortal internal version of the
object].
(p. 256)
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Ms. G told me that not long after her husband’s death, she had
spent a weekend alone at a lake where for each of the 15 years prior
to his death, she and her husband had rented a cabin. She told me
that during a trip to the lake soon after his death, she had set out
alone in a motorboat and headed toward a labyrinth of small islands
and tortuous waterways that she and her husband had explored
many times. Ms. G said that the idea had come to her with a sense
of absolute certainty that her husband was in that set of waterways,
and that if she were to have entered that part of the lake, she never
would have come out because she would not have been able to
“tear” herself away from him. She told me that she had had to fight
with all her might not to go to be with her husband.
That decision not to follow her husband into death became an
important symbol in the analysis of the patient’s choosing to live
her life in a world filled with the pain of grief and her living
memories of her husband. As the analysis proceeded, that same
event at the lake came to symbolize something quite different:
the incompleteness of her act of “tearing” herself away from
her husband after his death. It became increasingly clear in the
transference–countertransference that, in an important sense, a
part of herself had gone with her husband into death, that is, an
aspect of herself had been deadened, and that that had been “all
right” with her until that juncture in the analysis.
In the course of the subsequent year of analysis, Ms. G experi-
enced a sense of enormous loss – not only the loss of her husband,
but also the loss of her own life. She confronted for the first time
the pain and sadness of the recognition of the ways she had for
decades unconsciously limited herself with regard to utilizing her
intelligence and artistic talents as well as her capacities to fully be
alive in her everyday experience (including her analysis). (I do not
view Ms. G as having been manic, or even as having relied heavily
30
Freud’s “Mourning and melancholia”
on manic defenses, but I believe that she held in common with the
manic patient a form of ambivalence that involves a tension
between, on the one hand, the wish to live life among the living
– internally and externally – and, on the other hand, the wish
to exist with the dead in a timeless dead and deadening internal
object world.)
2 The reader can hear the voice of Melanie Klein (1935, 1940) in this part of Freud’s
comments on mania. All three elements of Klein’s (1935) well-known clinical triad charac-
terizing mania and the manic defense – control, contempt and triumph – can be found in
nascent form in Freud’s conception of mania. The object never will be lost or missed
because it is, in unconscious fantasy, under one’s omnipotent control, so there is no danger
of losing it; even if the object were lost, it would not matter because the contemptible
object is “valueless” (p. 257), and one is better off without it; moreover, being without the
object is a “triumph” (p. 254), an occasion for “enjoy[ing]” (p. 257) one’s emancipation
from the burdensome albatross that has been hanging from one’s neck.
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But here once again, it will be well to call a halt and to postpone
any further explanation of mania . . . As we already know, the
interdependence of the complicated problems of the mind forces
us to break off every enquiry before it is completed – till the
outcome of some other enquiry can come to its assistance.
(p. 259)
How better to end a paper on the pain of facing reality and the
consequences of attempts to evade it? The solipsistic world of a
psychoanalytic theorist who is not firmly grounded in the reality
of his lived experience with patients is very similar to the self-
imprisoned melancholic who survives in a timeless, deathless (and yet
deadened and deadening) internal object world.
Concluding comments
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Freud’s “Mourning and melancholia”
idea that pathological bonds of love mixed with hate are among the
strongest ties that bind internal objects to one another in a state of
mutual captivity; (4) the notion that the psychopathology of internal
object relations often involves the use of omnipotent thinking to a
degree that cuts off the dialogue between the unconscious internal
object world and the world of actual experience with real external
objects; and (5) the idea that ambivalence in relations between
unconscious internal objects involves not only conflict between feel-
ings of love and hate, but also conflict between wishes to continue to
be alive in one’s object relationships and wishes to be at one with
one’s dead internal objects.
33
3
Reading Susan Isaacs
Toward a radically revised theory of thinking
Susan Isaacs was chosen by Klein to present the opening paper in the
Controversial Discussions held by the British Psychoanalytical Society
between 1941 and 1945. Almost 70 years later, Isaacs’ contribution
holds up not simply as an historical landmark in the development of a
psychoanalytic theory of thinking, but as a critical part of contempo-
rary analytic theory. Isaacs’ paper, “The nature and function of phan-
tasy” (pre-circulated and presented to the British Psychoanalytical
Society on 27 January, 1943) is at the same time a “scientific” psycho-
analytic paper (a paper that presents and develops an original idea that
is accompanied by supporting evidence) and a political position paper
– a paper intended to establish Klein as a disciple of Freud, and not a
“heretic” (Steiner, 1991, p. 248) whose ideas so diverged from Freud’s
that her work no longer deserved to be viewed as psychoanalysis.
The version of Isaacs’ paper that I will be discussing was published
in Developments in Psychoanalysis (1952), a collection of papers written
and edited by Klein and her “inner circle” of Isaacs, Heimann and
Rivière. The original paper (Isaacs, 1943a) – much briefer than the
1952 version and structured quite differently – does, at times, express
ideas more compellingly than the 1952 version. I will cite such
passages in the earlier version of the paper when they elucidate ideas
being developed in the later one.
A good deal of the importance of Isaacs’ (1952) contribution lies
in her groundbreaking conception of the work of phantasy, which
she clearly and systematically presents. And yet I find that much of
what makes Isaacs’ contribution pivotal to the development of
psychoanalytic theory in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries
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Isaacs’ radically revised theory of thinking
Isaacs (1952) indicates at the outset that she “is mostly concerned with
the definition of ‘phantasy’ ” (p. 67), and “is not primarily concerned
to establish any particular content of phantasy” (p. 68); instead, she
will address “the nature and function of phantasy as a whole, and its
place in the mental life” (p. 68). While she intends to demonstrate
that “the activity of phantasy [occurs] from the beginning of life”
(p. 69), she recognizes that this “does not automatically imply
accepting any particular phantasy content at any given age” (p. 69).
Thus, Isaacs refuses to get mired in the controversy concerning what
the infant is thinking or when a particular phantasy first occurs, but
instead focuses on “the activity of phantasy,” an activity that I believe
is more accurately expressed in the form of a verb – phantasying.
The crux of the difficulty involved in proposing a conception
of the unconscious phantasying activity of an infant lies in the fact
that the infant cannot tell us what he is thinking, feeling, or imag-
ining. “Our views about [unconscious] phantasy in these earliest
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years are based almost wholly upon inference, but then this is true at
any age” (p. 69). All that one can know about the unconscious is, by
definition, apprehended exclusively by inference. Consequently, the
intellectual rigor of the methodology used in making such inferences
is of critical importance.
Isaacs’ (1952) inferences are made on the basis of three principles
that she articulates: (1) “the need to attend to the precise details of a
child’s behaviour” (p. 70); (2) “the principle of noting and recording
the context of observed data . . . the whole immediate setting of
the behaviour being studied, in its social and emotional situation”
(p. 71), for example, the external reality with which the infant is
interacting; and (3) the principle of “genetic continuity” (p. 74).
The third of these principles holds a place of special importance in
the construction of Isaacs’ argument. She demonstrates that the
development of a child’s physical capacities and mental functions (for
example, learning to speak and to walk) can be observed to have
their origins in earliest infancy. Speech development begins with the
earliest sounds the infant makes (for instance, when he is hungry or
feeding) and develops by means of a combination of continuous
growth and of “crises” (p. 74), such as the child’s achieving the
capacity to speak its first words.
The principle of genetic continuity is critical to Isaacs’ argument
that the infant begins to generate unconscious phantasies from the
earliest days of life.
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Isaacs’ radically revised theory of thinking
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Isaacs (1952) then turns her attention to her greatly expanded concep-
tion of unconscious phantasy. I speak of Isaacs’s conception of
38
Isaacs’ radically revised theory of thinking
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of thinking and our inability to think, which are reflected, for example,
in dreaming, playing, and imagining, as well as in the psychotic state
of not being able to think). (Clearly, the emphasis of the latter “era”
does not replace that of the earlier one; it supplements it.) This tran-
sitional function of Isaacs’ paper constitutes, for me, the principal
importance of the paper despite the fact that I do not believe that
Isaacs was fully aware (perhaps not at all aware) of this implication of
her work. Isaacs’ (1952) use of language reflects the way in which she
has one foot in each of the two “eras” of psychoanalysis. The fact that
Isaacs uses the noun phantasy far more often than she uses the phrase
phantasy activity (and rarely uses the verb phantasying) reflects her tie to
the earlier era; on the other hand, her repeated use of the term phan-
tasy activity, though a nominative phrase, reflects her expansion of the
term phantasy to include not only mental content, but also uncon-
scious mental action (i.e. thinking).
Having reconceived mental processes and mechanisms as uncon-
scious phantasy activity, Isaacs, in a second major expansion of the
concept of phantasy, focuses on a pivotal aspect of the practice of
child and adult analysis: “the transference situation” (Isaacs, 1952,
p. 78). “[T]he patient’s relation to his analyst is almost entirely one of uncon-
scious phantasy . . . the ‘transference’ has turned out to be the chief
instrument of learning what is going on in the patient’s mind, as well
as of discovering or reconstructing his early history” (p. 79). Here
Isaacs discusses the idea that transference is phantasy, an unconscious
psychic construction based on early experience. I believe that this idea
forms the basis for an even more fundamental development in our
current understanding of transference: if transference is phantasying,
and phantasying is unconscious thinking, then transference holds
significance not simply as a symbolic expression of internal object
relationships originating in infancy and childhood. In addition, trans-
ference, as I understand it, constitutes a way of thinking for the first time
(in relation to the analyst) an emotional situation that occurred in the
past. Transference, from this perspective, is inherently more verb than
noun, that is, it comprises an effort to think disturbing experiences
with the analyst that had previously been unthinkable.
In viewing transference in this way, I am bringing aspects of
Winnicott’s work to bear on my reading of Isaacs. I am drawing on
Winnicott’s (1974) concept of “fear of breakdown” (p. 90) – fear of
psychological collapse that has already occurred much earlier in the
patient’s life (usually in infancy or childhood). When the breakdown
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Isaacs’ radically revised theory of thinking
occurred, the individual was not psychologically able (even with the
help of his parents) to “encompass something” (Winnicott, 1974,
p. 91), to take in what was occurring. The breakdown that has already
occurred persists from that point on as a sense of impending psycho-
logical collapse: “the original experience of primitive agony cannot
get into the past tense unless the ego can first gather it into its own
present time experience” (Winnicott, 1974, p. 91). In the course of
analysis, it may be possible for the patient, for the first time, to expe-
rience (in the context of the safety of the analytic relationship) an
emotional event that had occurred much earlier in his life, but was
too disturbing for him to experience at the time. Transference activity,
from this perspective, is a psychological act not of reliving infantile and child-
hood experience but, rather, the opposite of repetition of early experience – it
is an act of experiencing for the first time (with the analyst and in relation to
the analyst) an emotional event that occurred in infancy or childhood, but was
impossible to experience at the time. Thus, here, and in other parts of this
paper, I find that knowledge of Winnicott’s work enhances my
reading of Isaacs no less than knowledge of Isaacs’ work enriches my
reading of Winnicott.
At this point in Isaacs’ paper, the meaning of the term phantasy has
(largely implicitly) been extended to include both unconscious
psychic content and unconscious thinking. But this is just one aspect
of Isaacs’ expansion of the meaning of the term phantasy. She now
goes on to say that Klein (and Freud) used the word phantasy to refer
to unconscious mental activity (a fact that Strachey underscored by
using the ph spelling of phantasy in the English translation). The
reality of unconscious experience has “its own objectivity as a mental
fact” (Isaacs, 1952, p. 81). In other words, psychic “reality” (the
reality of unconscious phantasy) is no less real than external reality.
Isaacs offers here a brilliantly lucid explanation of the emphasis that
Kleinians place on the reality of unconscious phantasy – it is not
“‘merely’ or ‘only’ imagined, as something unreal, in contrast with
what is actual” (p. 81).
The idea that phantasy is the psychic reality of the unconscious
leads, to my mind, to a new understanding of both phantasy and the
unconscious. Isaacs introduces her view of phantasy and unconscious
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Isaacs, in the 1943 version of her paper, quotes and endorses Rivière’s
(1936) definition of phantasy as “the subjective interpretation of
experience” (Isaacs, 1943a, p. 41). This conception of phantasy holds
profound significance with regard to the way one understands uncon-
scious mental life. If phantasying (unconscious thinking) is the
“subjective interpretation of experience” in both the internal and
external object worlds, phantasying necessarily involves both a
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Isaacs’ radically revised theory of thinking
perceiving aspect of self and an aspect of self that interprets (is capable
of rendering symbolically meaningful) what one is experiencing.
Rendering one’s experience symbolically meaningful is entirely
different from responding (e.g. fearfully or boldly) to an experience.
For example, ethologists have demonstrated that chicks only a few
days old – which have never seen any other species of animal – are
capable of differentiating between the wing patterns of predatory
birds and those of non-predators. On sighting a real or simulated
predatory wing pattern, the chicks scurry for cover (Lorenz, 1937;
Tinbergen, 1957). This constitutes an instinctual recognition of, and
response to, “a sign” in that the wing pattern holds a one-to-one
correspondence to the predatory bird. The response to a sign consti-
tutes an altogether different form of thinking from that involved in
interpreting symbols and attributing personal meanings to them (for
example, attributing personal meaning to the sight of a child waiting
at a street corner). Phantasying, for Isaacs (and for Rivière), is an
interpretive act and as such involves an interpreting subject who
mediates between what one is perceiving (for example, a real child
on a street corner or the image of a child in a dream) and the (uncon-
scious) personal symbolic meanings (i.e. the phantasies) one creates
from one’s perception.
Isaacs is very clear that phantasy and meaning are inseparable.
Phantasy is the process that creates meaning and the form in which
meaning exists in unconscious mental life:
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Isaacs uses the words “mean to him” and “feels as if” six times in the
space of three sentences. Isaacs, a lecturer in logic and child develop-
ment (King, 1991, p. xv), uses the utmost care and thought in her
choice of words. Her use of language, to my mind, reflects an aware-
ness of the fact that in order to generate the qualities of experience
that she is describing, there must be at least the rudiments of the
capacity for operating on the basis of the reality principle. This
impression is borne out a few paragraphs later when Isaacs states,
“The earliest phantasies . . . are bound up with an actual, however
limited and narrow, experience of objective reality” (p. 93). The
capacity to recognize external reality allows the individual to compare
one set of representations of experience with another, that is, to
compare phantasy-generated experience with the perception and
recognition of what one has not created (external reality).
To my ear, the language Isaacs uses also suggests that phantasy
activity constitutes the beginnings of conscious and unconscious
symbolic functioning in which experience is meaningful to an
interpreting/understanding subject (it “mean[s] to him”). The expe-
rience she is describing is not simply that of a psychic presentation (a
“thing in itself” [Barros and Barros, 2009]), but also, to some degree,
an experience of feeling “as if,” that is, an experience in which an
interpreting subject differentiates between one form of reality (the
reality of phantasy) and another (external reality) – this feels like that,
but is not that.
To put this in other words, in order for unconscious phantasy to
hold meaning of the sort that Isaacs is describing, it must mean some-
thing to someone who is an interpreting subject capable of differen-
tiating between symbol and symbolized, between internal and
external reality, between thought and what is being thought about.
It seems to me that phantasy activity, conceived of in this way, is the
mental activity that generates not only psychic content, unconscious
thinking, and unconscious psychic reality, but also generates a state
of consciousness in which that psychic content holds meaning for
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Isaacs’ radically revised theory of thinking
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When the child shows his desire for his mother’s breast, he experi-
ences this desire as a specific phantasy – ‘I want to suck the nipple’.
If desire is very intense (perhaps on account of anxiety), he is likely
to feel: ‘I want to eat her all up.’
(Isaacs, 1952, p. 84)
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Isaacs’ radically revised theory of thinking
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The earliest phantasies, then, spring from bodily impulses and are
interwoven with bodily sensations and affects. They express prima-
rily an internal and subjective reality, yet from the beginning they
are bound up with an actual, however limited and narrow, experi-
ence of objective reality.
(p. 93)
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Isaacs’ radically revised theory of thinking
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Isaacs’ radically revised theory of thinking
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Isaacs’ radically revised theory of thinking
first encounter with the world is his response to the real mother (who
is inevitably both a satisfactory and an unsatisfactory object). The
infant’s experience of emotional deprivation is a real experience, not
a phantasy (for even the best of mothers sometimes misreads her
infant, at other times withdraws emotionally, and at still other times
exhausts her capacity to meet her infant’s needs).
Isaacs’ (1943b) reply to Fairbairn at the Discussion Meetings was
terse and dismissive:
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Concluding comments
54
4
Why read Fairbairn?
I have found that Fairbairn develops a model of the mind that incor-
porates into its very structure a conceptualization of early psychic
development that is not found in the writing of any other major
twentieth-century analytic theorist. Fairbairn replaces Freud’s (1923)
structural model/metaphor of the mind with a model/metaphor in
which the mind is conceived of as an “inner world” (Fairbairn,
1943b, p. 67) in which split-off and repressed parts of the self enter
into stable, yet potentially alterable, object relationships with one
another. The “cast of characters” (that is, sub-organizations of the
personality) constituting Fairbairn’s internal object world is larger
than the triumvirate of Freud’s structural model and provides what I
find to be a richer set of metaphors with which to understand (1)
certain types of human dilemmas, particularly those based on the fear
that one’s love is destructive; and (2) the central role played by feel-
ings of resentment, contempt, disillusionment and addictive “love”
in structuring the unconscious mind.
To my mind, Fairbairn’s theory of internal object relations consti-
tutes one of the most important contributions to the development of
analytic theory in its first century. Yet, judging from the scarcity of
references to his work in the analytic literature, particularly in North
American and Latin American writing, his theoretical ideas (for
example, ideas that he introduced in his 1940, 1941, 1943b and 1944
papers) and his clinical thinking (which he presented in his 1956 and
1958 papers) have attracted far less interest and study than have other
major twentieth-century analytic theorists such as Klein, Winnicott
and Bion. In part this is due to the fact that Fairbairn worked in isola-
tion in Edinburgh. He had little opportunity for personal involve-
ment or intellectual exchange with colleagues at the Institute of
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Why read Fairbairn?
Here it must be pointed out that what presents itself to him [the
infant or child] from a strictly conative standpoint as frustration at
the hands of his mother presents itself to him in a very different
light from a strictly affective standpoint. From the latter stand-
point, what he experiences is a sense of lack of love, and indeed
emotional rejection on his mother’s part.
(Fairbairn, 1944, pp. 112–113)
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At a still deeper level (or at a still earlier stage) the child’s experience
is one of, so to speak, exploding ineffectively and being completely
emptied of libido. It is thus an experience of disintegration and of
imminent psychical death . . . [In being] threatened with loss of his
libido [love] (which for him constitutes his own goodness) . . . [he
is threatened by the loss of what] constitutes himself.
(Fairbairn, 1944, p. 113)
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Why read Fairbairn?
feels that the reason for his mother’s apparent lack of love towards
him is that he has destroyed her affection and made it disappear. At
the same time he feels that the reason for her apparent refusal to
accept his love is that his own love is destructive and bad.
(Fairbairn, 1940, p. 25)
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Fairbairn uses it, is better conveyed by the term self since all the split-
off “parts” of “the ego” are sub-organizations of the self. Fairbairn
(1943b) drops the term id from his lexicon because he views one’s
impulses and passions as integral parts of the ego/self. In discussing
Fairbairn’s ideas, I will use the terms ego and self interchangeably.
Fairbairn (1943b, 1944) reminds the reader again and again that to
conceive of internal object relationships as relationships between a
pair of split-off parts of the ego is to do nothing more than to elabo-
rate on Freud’s (1917a) conception of the creation of the “critical
agency” (p. 248) (later to be called the superego). In “Mourning and
melancholia,” Freud (1917a) describes the process by which two
parts of the ego are split off from the main body of the ego (the “I”)
and enter into an unconscious relationship with one another. In
melancholia, a part of the self (which harbors feelings of impotent
rage toward the abandoning object) enters into a stable internal object
relationship with another split-off part of the ego (which is identified
with the abandoning object). In this way, an actual unconscious
object relationship between different aspects of the self is established
and maintained. The upshot of this splitting of the ego, in Freud’s
view, is an unconscious feeling that one has not lost the object since
the abandoning object has been replaced by a part of oneself. Thus,
Fairbairn’s theory of internal object relationships represents both an
elaboration of Freud’s thinking (see Chapter 2 for a discussion of the
origins of object relations theory in “Mourning and melancholia”)
and a radical departure from it (in his understanding of endopsychic
structure and the nature of internal object relationships).
Having discussed the infant’s replacement of unsatisfactory external
object relationships with internal ones, I will now turn to Fairbairn’s
conception of the internal object world (“the basic endopsychic situ-
ation” [Fairbairn, 1944, p. 106]) that results from internalization of
the unsatisfactory relationship with the mother.
To understand Fairbairn’s conception of the development of the
psyche it is necessary to understand his notion of “endopsychic struc-
ture” (Fairbairn, 1944, p. 120). In brief, an endopsychic structure is a
sub-organization of the self (split off from the main “body” of the
ego/self). For Fairbairn, all unconscious endopsychic structures are
split-off parts of the ego/self; and yet, he misleadingly uses the term
internal objects to refer to these split-off parts of the self, which are more
accurately termed internal subjects. Fairbairn believes that it is erro-
neous to separate “endopsychic structures” (parts of the self capable of
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Why read Fairbairn?
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the alluring and with the rejecting aspects of the mother are also split
off from the central ego. Thus, two repressed internal object relation-
ships (made up of four split-off parts of the central ego) are created: (1)
the relationship of the tantalized self (termed by Fairbairn the libidinal
ego) and the tantalizing self-identified-with-the-object (the exciting
object); and (2) the relationship of the rejected self (the internal sabo-
teur) and the rejecting self-identified-with-the-object (the rejecting
object). These two sets of internal object relationships are angrily
rejected (that is, repressed) by the central ego because the healthy
aspect of the infant’s personality (the central ego) feels intense anger at
the unloving internal object mother.
The exciting object and the rejecting object are no less parts of the
self than are the libidinal ego and the internal saboteur. The exciting
and rejecting internal “objects” have a not-me feel to them because
they are parts of the self that are thoroughly identified with the
unloving mother in her exciting and rejecting qualities (see Ogden,
1983, for a discussion of the concept of internal objects and internal
object relations).
Fairbairn (1944, 1963) believes that the internalization of the unsat-
isfactory object is a defensive measure carried out in an effort to
control the unsatisfactory object. But, to my mind, the illusory control
that the child achieves by means of this internalization only in part
accounts for the immense psychic power of the internal object world
to remain a “closed system of internal reality” (Fairbairn, 1958,
p. 385), that is, to maintain its isolation from the real world. Despite
the fact that split-off and repressed aspects of the ego (the internal
saboteur and libidinal ego) feel intense resentment toward, and feel-
ings of being callously spurned by, the unloving and unaccepting
object, Fairbairn (1944) states that the ties between these split-off parts
of the self and the internalized unloving object are libidinal in nature.
The libidinal nature of these ties suggests that aspects of the indi-
vidual (the internal saboteur and the libidinal ego) have by no means
given up on the potential of the unsatisfactory object to give and
receive love. It seems to me that a libidinal tie to an internal object
toward whom one feels anger, resentment, and the like necessarily
involves an (unconscious) wish/need to use what control one feels
one has to change the unloving and unaccepting (internal) object
into a loving and accepting one.
From this vantage point, I view the libidinal ego and the internal
saboteur as aspects of self that are intent on transforming the exciting
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Why read Fairbairn?
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Addictive love (the bond between the libidinal ego and the
exciting object)
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Why read Fairbairn?
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From the point of view of the rejecting object (the split-off aspect
of the self thoroughly identified with the rejecting mother), the expe-
rience of this form of pathological love involves the conviction that
the internal saboteur is greedy, insatiable, thin-skinned, ungrateful,
unwilling to be reasonable, unable to let go of a grudge, and so on.
But despite the burdensomeness of the ceaseless complaining and self-
righteous outrage of the internal saboteur, the rejecting object is both
unwilling and unable to give up the relationship, that is, to extricate
itself from the mutual pathological dependence. The life, the determi-
nation, the very reason for being of the rejecting object (as a part of
the self) is derived from its tie to the internal saboteur. The rejecting
object is an empty shell, a lost and forgotten part of the past, in the
absence of the obsession on the part of the internal saboteur to wring
love, remorse and magical reparation from it. This internal object
relationship (like the relationship of the libidinal ego and the exciting
object) is a relationship in which the jailer is a prisoner of the jailed,
and the jailed a prisoner of the jailer. Outside of the terms of their
pathological, mutually dependent “love,” neither would hold meaning
for the other or for itself (much less for any other part of the self).
In the absence of one, the other would become a mere remnant
of a once powerful pair of deities that reigned in a religion no longer
practised.
A particular clinical experience of group dynamics comes to mind
in connection with the power of the bond between the internal sabo-
teur and the rejecting object. (While Fairbairn [1944] believed that his
understanding of the psyche “provides a more satisfactory basis than
does any other type of psychology for the explanation of group
phenomena” [p. 128], he did not develop or clinically illustrate this
idea in any of his writings.) I was asked by the chairperson of a social
service agency to serve as a consultant to the psychotherapy division
of the agency. The members of the staff of the psychotherapy division
were in constant conflict with one another and with the rest of the
agency. The director of the psychotherapy division, a psychiatrist in
his early fifties, oversaw a staff of three male psychiatrists and six female
psychologists and social workers, all in their thirties and forties. The
director showed consistent favoritism toward the male psychiatrists,
not only in his praise of their ideas, but also in appointing them to
leadership positions (which paid higher salaries). The women thera-
pists, most of whom had worked in this agency for many years, made
no secret of their discontent with the director.
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Why read Fairbairn?
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For me, one of Fairbairn’s most original and most significant contri-
butions to psychoanalysis is the understanding of human nature that
emerges from his conception of the relationship between the internal
saboteur and the libidinal ego, and between the internal saboteur and
the exciting object. The internal saboteur, filled with self-hatred for
its own “dependence dictated by . . . [infantile] need” (Fairbairn,
1944, p. 115), turns on the libidinal ego, and in so doing, turns on
itself at one remove (since every internal object – every endopsychic
structure – is a subdivision of a subject who is one person). The
internal saboteur disdainfully, contemptuously attacks the libidinal
ego as a pathetic wretch, a sap, a sucker for the way it continually
humiliates itself in begging for the love of the exciting object: You
[the libidinal ego] never learn your lesson. You get kicked in the face
[by the exciting object] and drag yourself to your feet as if nothing
has happened only to get kicked and knocked down again. How can
you be so stupid as to not see what is plain as day? She [the exciting
object] toys with you, leads you on, and then dumps you every time.
And yet you keep going back for more. You disgust me.
It seems to me that from this perspective – the perspective of the
internal saboteur – we are better able to understand the sense in which
Fairbairn uses the term libidinal ego to name the aspect of self that is
tied by bonds of addictive love to the exciting object. Libido, in this
context, and in the internal object world in general, is synonymous
with narcissistic libido (narcissistic love). All internal objects (more
accurately, internal subjects) are split-off parts of the central ego/self,
and therefore the relationships among them are relationships that are
exclusively relationships with oneself. Thus, the libidinal ego is
“loving,” but only loving of itself (in the form of the exciting object).
Closely tied to the attack of the internal saboteur on the libidinal
ego is the attack of the internal saboteur on the object of that narcis-
sistic love, the exciting object. The internal saboteur views the
exciting object as a malicious tease, a seductress, a bundle of empty
promises: You [the exciting object] don’t fool me. You may be able
to make a fool of him [the libidinal ego], but I know your type, I’ve
heard your lies, I’ve seen your depraved imitations of love. You’re a
parasite; you take, but you don’t know what it means to give. You
prey on the gullible, on children.
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Why read Fairbairn?
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bad” [p. 93]. To feel unconditionally bad is to feel that one’s love is
bad.) I eventually said to Ms. T, “For a long time, you have been
telling me that I simply cannot understand you and that virtually
everything I say confirms that. I don’t think you’ve been any harsher
with me than you are with yourself. In fact, I think that your attacks
on yourself are far more violent than your attacks on me. I think that
you feel not only that everything you do is wrong, you firmly believe
that your very existence is wrong and that the only thing you can do
to remedy that situation is to become another person. Of course, if
you were to succeed in doing so, you would be dead: worse than
that, you would never have existed.”
Ms. T responded immediately by saying that I was being very
wordy. As she said this, I felt deflated and realized that despite years
of experience with this patient, I had actually expected that this time
she would at least consider what I had said. I told this to the patient
and after a few moments of silence, she said, “Please don’t give up on
me.” In Fairbairn’s terms, the patient, at least for this moment, had
softened her intrapsychic attack on herself (the attack of the internal
saboteur on the libidinal ego for its way of loving). She allowed
herself not only to accept her dependence on me, but also to ask
something of me (as a separate person) that she knew she could not
provide for herself.
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Why read Fairbairn?
Psychological growth
In the final section of this paper, I will discuss some of the ways in
which a person may be helped to grow psychologically. Fairbairn
regards as “relatively immutable” (1944, p. 129) the “basic endopsy-
chic situation,” i.e. the constellations of split-off and repressed aspects
of the central ego. For Fairbairn, the psychological changes that can
be achieved through psychoanalysis primarily involve diminutions of
the intensity of the feelings of resentment, addictive love, contempt,
primitive dependence, disillusionment, and so on that bind the split-
off, repressed sub-organizations of the self to one another. Specifically,
healthy psychological change can be achieved by reducing to a
minimum:
(a) the attachment of the subsidiary egos [the internal saboteur and
the libidinal ego] to their respective associated objects [the rejecting
object and the exciting object], (b) the aggression of the central
ego towards the subsidiary egos and their objects [which takes the
form of repression of the two pairs of split-off parts of the self], and
(c) the aggression of the internal saboteur towards the libidinal ego
and its object [the exciting object].
(Fairbairn, 1944, p. 130)
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Why read Fairbairn?
at the sides of his mouth and mucus dripped from his nose while tears
ran down his cheeks. Being with Mr. C at these times was heart-
breaking. I have only rarely felt in such an immediate, physical way
that I was the mother of a baby in distress. Mr. C seemed to want me
to help him present himself to Ms. Z in a way that would not frighten
her and would help her understand how much he loved her and how
much she loved him (if she would only admit it to herself). It was
impossible not to hear in the patient’s “plan” a wish that I transform
Ms. Z (and, unconsciously, his mother and the aspect of me that only
“tolerated” him) into people who were genuinely able to love him,
accept him and value his love.
In retrospect, I believe that it was very important to the analytic
experience that Mr. C experience for himself over a period of years
the reality that I was not repulsed by him even when he bellowed in
pain and could not control the release of tears, nasal mucus and saliva.
It must have been apparent to Mr. C, though I never put it into
words, that I loved him as I would one day love my own children in
their infancy. For years, the patient had been too ashamed to tell me
about some of the ways his mother had humiliated him as a child, for
example, by repeatedly calling him “a repulsive, slobbering monster.”
He only gradually entrusted me with these deeply shamed aspects of
himself.
I viewed Mr. C’s accounts of his humiliating mother as a descrip-
tion not only of his external object mother, but, as importantly, a
description of an aspect of himself that viewed himself as an object of
contempt and which enlisted others (most prominently Ms. Z) to
humiliate him. A humiliating connection with Ms. Z was uncon-
sciously felt to be far better than no connection at all.
Several years into the work, Mr. C told me a dream: “Not much
happened in the dream. I was myself with my cerebral palsy, washing
my car and enjoying listening to music on the car radio that I had
turned up loud.” The dream was striking in a number of ways. It was
the first time, in telling me a dream, that Mr. C specifically mentioned
his cerebral palsy. Moreover, the way that he put it – “I was myself
with my cerebral palsy” – conveyed a depth of recognition and an
acceptance of himself that I had never before heard from him. How
better could he have expressed a particular type of change in his rela-
tionship to himself – a psychological change that involved a loving
self-recognition that contributed to freeing him from the need to
perpetually attempt to wring love and acceptance from those internal
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and external objects who were least inclined to, or incapable of,
loving him? In the dream, he was able to be a mother who took
pleasure in bathing her baby (his car) while listening to and enjoying
the music that was coming from inside the baby. This was not a
dream of triumph; it was an ordinary dream of ordinary love:
“nothing much happened.”
I was deeply moved by the patient’s telling me his dream. I said to
him, “What a wonderful dream that was.”
Some years later, Mr. C moved to another part of the country to
take a high-level job in his field. He wrote to me periodically. In the
last letter I received from him (about five years after we stopped
working together), he told me that he had married a woman he
loved, a woman who had cerebral palsy. They had recently had a
healthy baby girl.
Mr. C, in the context of the developing relationship with me, was
able to extricate himself from his addictive love of Ms. Z (a bond
between the libidinal ego and the exciting object) while at the same
time diminishing his compulsive engagement in forms of relatedness
based on the bond between the debasing and the debased aspects of
himself (the bond between the internal saboteur and the libidinal
ego).
It seems to me that a key element of the therapeutic action of the
work that Mr. C and I did together was the real (as opposed to the
transferential) relationship between the two of us (for example, in
my genuinely not feeling repulsed by the mucus, tears and saliva
flowing from his nose, eyes and mouth as he bellowed in pain, and
by my experiencing love for him of a sort that, later in my life, I
would feel for my infant sons). Fairbairn, I think, would agree with
this understanding and go a step further: “the really decisive [thera-
peutic] factor is the relationship of the patient to the analyst”
(Fairbairn, 1958, p. 379). He elaborated on this idea a bit later in the
same paper:
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Concluding comments
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5
Winnicott’s “Primitive emotional
development”
Psychoanalysis in its first century has had several great thinkers, but,
to my mind, only one great English-speaking writer: Donald
Winnicott. Because style and content are so interdependent in his
writing, his papers are not well served by a thematic reading aimed
exclusively at gleaning what the paper is “about.” Such efforts often
result in trivial aphorisms. Winnicott, for the most part, does not use
language to arrive at conclusions; rather, he uses language to create
experiences in reading which are inseparable from the ideas he is
presenting – or, more accurately, the ideas he is playing with.
I offer here a reading of Winnicott’s (1945) “Primitive emotional
development,” a paper that contains the seeds of virtually all the
major contributions to psychoanalysis that Winnicott would make
over the course of the succeeding 26 years of his life. I hope to
demonstrate the interdependence of the life of the ideas being devel-
oped and the life of the writing in this seminal contribution to the
analytic literature. What Winnicott’s paper has to offer to an analytic
reader could not be said in any other way (which is to say that the
writing is extraordinarily resistant to paraphrase). It has been my
experience that an awareness of the way the language is working
significantly enhances what can be learned from reading Winnicott.
In recent years, I have found that the only way I can do justice to
studying and teaching Winnicott is to read his papers aloud, line by
line, as I would a poem, exploring what the language is doing in
addition to what it is saying. It is not an overstatement to say that a
great many passages from Winnicott’s papers well deserve to be called
prose poems. These passages meet Tom Stoppard’s (1999) definition
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I shall not first give an historical survey and show the development
of my ideas from the theories of others, because my mind does not
work that way. What happens is that I gather this and that, here
and there, settle down to clinical experience, form my own theo-
ries and then, last of all, interest myself in looking to see where I
stole what. Perhaps this is as good a method as any.
(p. 145)
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1 The term “depression,” as it is used in this sentence, seems to refer to a wide spectrum of
psychological states ranging from clinical depression to the universal depression associated
with the achievement of the depressive position (Klein, 1952). The latter is a normative
stage of development and “mode of generating experience” (Ogden, 1989, p. 9) involving
whole object relatedness, ambivalence and a deep sense of loss in recognizing one’s sepa-
rateness from one’s mother.
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of what he will provide the patient (by maintaining the other aspects
of the analytic frame). Implicit here is the notion that the analyst’s
fear of the destructiveness of his hatred of the patient may lead to
treatment-destructive breaches of the analytic frame: for example,
extending the session for more than a few minutes in order “not to cut
the patient off,” or setting the fee at a level below what the patient is
able to afford “because the patient has been consistently exploited by
his parents in childhood,” or reflexively telephoning the patient when
the patient has missed a session “to be sure he is all right,” and so on.
Only by looking closely at these sentences can one discern and
appreciate what is going on in the very living relationship between
the writing and the reader that constitutes so much of the life of the
ideas being developed. As we have seen, the writing demands that
the reader become an active partner in the creation of meaning. The
writing (like the communications of an analysand) suggests, and only
suggests, possibilities of meaning. The reader/analyst must be willing
and able not to know in order to make room in himself for a number
of possible meanings to be experienced/created, and to allow one
meaning or another or several meanings concurrently to achieve
ascendance (for a time).
Moreover, it is important to note that the writing “works” (to
borrow a word from Winnicott’s statement of his “method”) in large
measure by means of its power to understand (to correctly interpret
the unconscious of) the reader. Perhaps all good writing (whether it
be in poems, plays, novels or essays) to a significant degree “works”
in this way.
Winnicott’s writing in the paper under discussion (and in almost
all of the papers included in his three major volumes of collected
papers [1958, 1965, 1971d]) is surprisingly short on clinical material.
This, I believe, is a consequence of the fact that the “clinical experi-
ence” is to such a large degree located in the reader’s experience of
“being read” (that is, of being interpreted, understood) by the writing.
When Winnicott does offer clinical material, he often refers not to a
specific intervention with a particular patient, but to a “very common
experience” (1945, p. 150) in analysis. In this way, he implicitly asks
the reader to draw on his own lived experience with patients: not for
the purpose of “taking in” Winnicott’s ideas, but to invite from the
reader an “original response” (Frost, 1942a, p. 307).
Still other forms of generative interplay of style and content, of
writing and reader, take on central importance in a passage a bit later
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2 It seems to me that Winnicott is referring here to silent interpretations that the analyst
formulates in words for himself in the moment and may at a later time present to the
patient.
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as the patient’s need to be known in all his bits and pieces by one
person, the analyst.” The phrase “Sometimes we must” addresses the
reader as a colleague who is familiar with the clinical situation being
described, and who very likely has felt it necessary to intervene in the
way Winnicott is describing. Perhaps the reader/analyst has not fully
named for himself what he has been experiencing and doing with his
patient. The language does not debunk the angry resistance interpreta-
tion that the reader/analyst has either made or has been inclined to
make in response to his feelings of frustration and failure. Winnicott,
by means of the language he uses to address the reader, provides an
experience in reading that helps the reader undefensively to gather
together his own unarticulated experiences from his own analysis and
from his analytic work with his patients.
Moreover, the simple phrase “very common experience” conveys
an important theoretical concept (again without calling attention to
itself): primitive states of unintegration are not restricted to the anal-
ysis of severely disturbed patients; such states regularly occur in the
analysis of all of our patients, including the healthiest ones. This
writing “technique” does not have the feel of a manipulation of the
reader; rather, it feels like a good interpretation – a statement that
puts into words what the reader/analyst has known from his experi-
ence all along, but has not known that he has known it, and has not
known it in the verbally symbolized, integrated way that he is
currently coming to know it.
The second paragraph of the passage being discussed is remarkable:
This sentence is distinctive, not only for the originality of the ideas it
develops, but also for the way in which its syntax participates in a
sensory way in the creation of those ideas. The sentence is constructed
of many (I count ten) groups of words that are read with a very brief
pause between them (for instance, a pause after the words “time,”
“life,” “mind,” and so on). The sentence not only states, but brings
to life in its own audible structure, the experience of living in bits
(“for a long time”) in a meandering sort of way before coming
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together (for a moment) in its final two bits: “he comes together”
and “feels something.” The voice, syntax, rhythm, and carefully
chosen words and expressions which constitute this sentence –
working together as they do with the ideas being developed – create
an experience in reading that is as distinctively Winnicott as the
opening paragraph of the The Sound and the Fury is distinctively
Faulkner, or as the opening sentence of The Portrait of a Lady is
uniquely Henry James.
The reader of the sentence being discussed is not moved to ques-
tion how Winnicott can possibly know what an infant feels or to
point out that regressions in the analyses of children and adults
(whether psychotic, depressed or quite healthy) bear a very uncertain
correlation with infantile experience. Rather, the reader is inclined
to suspend disbelief for a time and to enter into the experience of
reading (with Winnicott) and to allow himself to be carried by the
music of the language and ideas. The reader lives an experience (in
the act of reading) that is something like that of the imagined infant
who does not mind whether he is in many bits (experiencing a
floating feeling that accompanies non-linear thinking) or one whole
being (experiencing a “momentary stay against confusion” [Frost,
1939, p. 777]). Winnicott’s writing, like a guide “who only has at
heart your getting lost” (Frost, 1947, p. 341), ensures that we will
never get it right in any final way, and we do not mind.
Subliminally, the pun on “mind” allows the clause “a baby does
not mind whether he is many bits or one whole being” to concen-
trate into itself different overlapping meanings. The baby “does not
mind” because the mother is there “minding” him (taking care of
him). And he “does not mind” in that he feels no pressure to be
“minded,” that is, to create premature, defensive mindedness which
is disconnected from bodily experience. The writing itself, in
punning, deftly and unselfconsciously creates just such an experience
of the pleasure of not minding, of not having to know, of not having
to pin down meaning, instead, simply enjoying the liveliness of a fine
experience in the medium of language and ideas.
The language that Winnicott uses in describing the infant’s coming
together in one place is surprising in that the “place” where coming
together occurs is not a place at all, but an action (the act of feeling
something). Moreover, the infant, in “coming together,” does not
simply feel, he “feels something” (p. 150). The word “something”
has a delightful ambiguity to it: “something” is a concrete thing, the
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object that is felt; and, at the same time, “something” is the most
indefinite of words suggesting only that some feeling is experienced.
This delicate ambiguity creates in the experience of reading the flick-
ering of the feeling-world of the infant, a world loosely bound to
objects, loosely localized, experienced now in the body as objectless
sensation, now in the more defined and localized sensation of feeling
an object, now in the mother’s face.3
The unexpected turns, the quiet revolutions occurring in this early
Winnicott paper are too numerous to address. I cannot resist,
however, taking a moment simply to marvel at the way in which
Winnicott, the pediatrician, the child-analyst, nonchalantly jettisons
the accrued technical language of 50 years of psychoanalytic writing
in favor of language that is alive with the experiences he is describing:
there are the quiet and the excited states. I think an infant cannot
be said to be aware at the start that while feeling this and that in his
cot or enjoying the skin stimulations of bathing, he is the same as
himself screaming for immediate satisfaction, possessed by an urge
to get at and destroy something unless satisfied by milk. This means
that he does not know at first that the mother he is building up
through his quiet experiences is the same as the power behind the
breasts that he has in his mind to destroy.
(p. 151)
The infant has his quiet and his excited states – everyone who has
spent time with a baby knows this, but why had no one thought to
put it this way? The baby feels “this and that” (there is ease in the
language as there is ease in the baby’s state of mind-body) and enjoys
the “skin stimulations of bathing” and “cannot be said to be aware
[in the quiet states] . . . that . . . he is the same as himself screaming
for immediate satisfaction.” (And how better to capture at the same
time the underlying continuity of identity across discontinuous
feeling/meaning states than with unobtrusive alliteration of “s”
3 The role played by the word “something” in this sentence is reminiscent of Frost’s use of
nouns to simultaneously invoke the mysterious and the utterly concrete and mundane,
for example, in lines such as “Something there is that doesn’t love a wall” (1914, p. 39)
or “One had to be versed in country things/Not to believe the phoebes wept” (1923a, p.
223) or “What was that whiteness?/ Truth? A pebble of quartz? For once, then, some-
thing” (1923b, p. 208).
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4 Of course, I am not suggesting that Winnicott planned, or even was aware of, the way he
was using alliteration, syntax, rhythm, punning and so on to create specific effects in his
use of language any more than a talented poet plans ahead of time which metaphors,
images, rhymes, rhythms, meters, syntactical structures, diction, allusions, line lengths and
so on that he will use. The act of writing seems to have a life of its own. It is one of the
“rights and privileges,” as well as one of the pleasures, of critical reading to attempt to
discern what is going on in a piece of writing – regardless of whether the writer intended
it or was even cognizant of it.
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from this perspective, the dreaming child, the waking child and the
adult. This interpretation is suggested by the language, but the reader,
once again, must do the work of imaginatively entering into the
experience of reading. The language quietly creates (as opposed to
discusses) the confusion that the reader/child experiences about how
many people are present in the act of conveying a dream to an adult.
The reader experiences what it feels like for a child to be two people
and not to notice that experience until an adult gives him help in
“getting to know [what are becoming his] dreams” (p. 151). “Getting
to know” his dreams – the expression is uniquely Winnicott; no one
else could have written these words. The phrase is implicitly a meta-
phor in which an adult “makes the introductions” in the first meeting
of a waking child and his dreams. In this imaginary social event, not
only is the child learning that he has a dream-life, his unconscious is
learning that “it” (which in health is forever in the process of
becoming “I”) has a “waking-life.”
The metaphorical language of this passage is carrying a heavy
theoretical load without the slightest evidence of strain. First of all,
there is the matter that, as Freud put it, the unconscious “is alive”
(1915c, p. 190), and consequently “getting to know” one’s dreams is
no less than the beginnings of healthy communication at the “fron-
tier” (Freud, 1915c, p. 193) of the unconscious and preconscious
mind. As the waking child and the dreaming child become acquainted
with one another (i.e. as the child comes to experience himself as the
same person who has both a waking-life and a dream-life), the expe-
rience of dreaming feels less strange (other to oneself) and hence less
frightening.5
It might be said that when a dream is both dreamed and remem-
bered, the conversation between the conscious-preconscious and the
unconscious aspects of mind “across the repression barrier” is
enhanced. But once it is put in these terms, the reasons for enjoying
Winnicott’s writing become all the more apparent. In contrast to the
noun-laden language of preconscious, conscious, unconscious, repression
and so on, Winnicott’s language seems to be all verb: “feeling some-
thing,” “getting to know their dreams,” “screaming,” “possessed.”
5 Even as adults, we never completely experience dream-life and waking-life as two different
forms of the experience of ourselves as one person. This is reflected in the language we use
in talking about dreams. For example, we say “I had a dream last night” [it happened to
me] and not “I made a dream last night.”
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that it is his own anger and predatory urges that have killed the
mother. The mother who had earlier wished to be attacked by a
hungry baby is gone and in her place is a lifeless mother passively
allowing herself to be attacked by the hungry baby as carrion is avail-
able for consumption by vultures.
“Coincidence” leads the infant defensively to bring a degree of
order and control to his experience by drawing what was becoming
the external world back into his internal world by means of omnipo-
tent fantasy: “I killed her.” In contrast, when a mother and child are
able to “live an experience together,” the vitality of the child’s
internal world is recognized and met by the external world (the
mother’s act of living the experience together with him). Winnicott
does not state these ideas as such, but they are there to be found/
created by the reader.
A note of caution is needed here with regard to the license a
reader may take in creating a text and that caveat is provided by
Winnicott. It is implicit in all of Winnicott’s writing that creativity
must not be valorized above all else. Creativity is not only worthless,
it is lethal (literally so in the case of an infant) when disconnected
from objectivity – that is, from “acceptance of external reality”
(p. 53). An infant forever hallucinating what he needs will starve to
death; a reader who loses touch with the writing will not be able to
learn from it.
Winnicott’s conception of the infant’s earliest experience of
accepting external reality is as beautifully rendered as it is subtle in
content:
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Winnicott’s “Primitive emotional development”
illusion for the baby. These efforts of the mother constitute the
intense backstage labor necessary if the infant is to enjoy his orchestra
seat in the performance of illusion. The performance reveals not a
hint of the dirty grunt work that creates and safeguards the life of the
illusion.
The humor of the contrast between illusion as seen from backstage
and from an orchestra seat is I think not at all lost upon Winnicott.
The juxtaposition of the passage just quoted (something of a job
description for the mother of a baby) and the paragraph that follows
(which captures all of the sense of wonder and amazement a child
feels on seeing a magic show) can hardly be a coincidence: “The
subject of illusion . . . will be found to provide the clue to a child’s
interest in bubbles and clouds and rainbows and all mysterious
phenomena, and also to his interest in fluff . . . Somewhere here, too,
is the interest in breath, which never decides whether it comes
primarily from within or without” (p. 154). I am not aware of a
comparable expression in all of the analytic literature of the almost
translucent, mystifying quality of imaginative experience which
becomes possible when the full blast to fantasy is made safe by a
child’s sturdy grasp on external reality.
Concluding comments
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other, neither holding dominion over the other. To be alive (in more
than an operational sense) is to be forever in the process of making
things of one’s own, whether they be thoughts, feelings, bodily
movements, perceptions, conversations, poems or analytic papers.
No psychoanalyst’s writing bears witness better than Winnicott’s
to the mutually dependent, mutually enlivening relationship of life
and art.
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Reading Bion
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and “clarify” (each also used twice) pile up in these five sentences.
What it is to learn from experience (or the inability to do so) will be
something for the reader to experience first-hand in the act of reading
this book – an experience in reading that does not simply “progress”
from obscurity to clarification, but resides in a continuous process of
clarification negating obscurity and obscurity negating clarification.
Bion, not without an edge of irony and wit, suggests that the reader
“may find [it] . . . rewarding” to attempt to “clarify [obscurities]” for
himself “not simply because I have not done it myself.” In other
words, if the reader is to engage in something more than “merely
reading” (1962a, p. ii) this book, he must become the author of his
own book (his own set of thoughts) more or less based on Bion’s.
Only then will the reader have generated the possibility of learning
from his experience of reading.
Bion (1992), in a note to himself, a “cogitation” which in all prob-
ability was written during the period in which he was writing Learning
from Experience, elaborates on the idea that the act of reading is an
experience in its own right to be lived and learned from: “A book
would have failed for the reader if it does not become an object of
study, and the reading of it an emotional experience in itself” (1992,
p. 261). In another “cogitation,” Bion presents his “early” concep-
tion of how analytic writing works, and by implication, how he
would like to be read. (The passage I will cite immediately follows a
brief page-and-a-half account of an analytic session that includes
detailed observations of both Bion’s emotional experience and that
of his psychotic patient.)
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Reading Bion
A mixing of tongues
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Reading Bion
In approaching Bion’s late work I will again make use of some of his
comments on how he would like his work to be read as a port of
entry into his thinking – this time, focusing on Attention and
Interpretation (1970). A problem posed by Bion’s later work is imme-
diately apparent in the “advice” that he offers the reader early in that
book. Just as the experience of reading served as a medium in which
learning from experience was brought to life in Bion’s early work, so
too, in Attention and Interpretation, the living experience in reading1 is
used to convey what cannot be said in words and sentences:
the reader must disregard what I say until the O of the experience
of reading has evolved to a point where the actual events of reading
issue in his [the reader’s] interpretation of the experiences. Too
great a regard for what I have written obstructs the process I repre-
sent by the terms ‘he becomes the O that is common to himself
and myself’.
(1970, p. 28)
1 The difference between thinking about an experience and being in an experience is a recur-
rent theme in Attention and Interpretation, particularly as it relates to the impossibility of
becoming an analyst by learning about analysis; one must be in psychoanalysis – one’s
own and the analyses one conducts – to be genuinely in the process of becoming a
psychoanalyst.
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The reader is thrown directly into the fire of not knowing and is
advised not to evade this state by holding “too great a regard for what
I have written.” And at the same time, the question is inescapable:
What does Bion mean by “the O” of an experience? He uses such
terms as “the thing in itself,” “the Truth,” “Reality,” and “the expe-
rience” to convey a sense of what he has in mind by O. But since
Bion also insists that O is unknowable, unnamable, beyond human
apprehension, these nouns are misleading and contrary to the nature
of O. In introducing O to the analytic lexicon, Bion is not proposing
another reality “behind” the apprehensible one; he is referring to the
reality of what is, a reality that we do not create, a reality that precedes
and follows us, and is independent of any human act of knowing,
perceiving or apprehending.
The language Bion uses in offering thoughts about reading his late
work suggests that the reader is best armed with capacities for the
negative. What cannot be known can be addressed only in terms of
what it is not: “The reader must disregard what I say” and not hold
“too great a regard for what I have written.” The “instructions” to
the reader in Learning from Experience were founded in part on the
notion that the reader must let go of what he thought he knew in
order to enter a progressive cycle of knowing and not knowing. In
contrast, Bion’s instructions in Attention and Interpretation focus on
“disregard[ing]” what Bion is saying altogether, for such adherence to
statements about experience obstructs the reader’s access to the actual
events [the O of the experience] of reading.
The reader is told that if he is able to remain in the experience of
reading, his state of mind will “issue in his [the reader’s] interpreta-
tion of the experiences” (p. 28). The word “experiences” is ambig-
uous in a critically important way: the word refers both to the analytic
experiences he (Bion) has had with his patients, who are now the
subject of his text, and to “the experiences” the reader is having in
reading the text. Bion’s experiences in analysis are conveyed not by
writing about those experiences, but by using language in such a way
that his experiences in analysis become the reader’s experiences in
reading. To the extent that the writing works, the irreducible, unver-
balizable essence, the O, of each of the two experiences – Bion’s
experiences in reading his patients and the reader’s experience in
reading Bion – becomes at one with (“common to”) the another.
The reader “becomes the O that is common to himself [his experi-
ences in reading] and myself [Bion’s experiences in the analyses that
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2 K is a sign used by Bion (1962a) – as I interpret him – to refer not to the noun knowledge
(a static body of ideas), but to knowing (or getting to know), i.e. the effort to be
receptive to and give apprehensible form (however inadequate) to what is true to an
experience (O).
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3 For both Bion and Borges the future is already alive in the present as “the as-yet unknown”
(Bion, 1970, p. 11); the future casts its shadow backwards on the present (Bion, 1976;
Ogden, 2003b).
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Reading Bion
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Reading Bion
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Mr. B, during a phone call in which we set up our first meeting, told
me that he did not want analysis. In the initial session, he repeated his
wish not to be in analysis and added that he had seen “the school
shrink” while in college for a few sessions for insomnia, but could
not remember the man’s name. I chose not to ask for clarification of
what Mr. B meant by “analysis” and why he was so set against it. My
decision to desist from intervening in this way was based on a sense
that to have done so would have been to ignore what this patient was
trying very hard to tell me: he did not want me to be “an analyst”
without a name, an analyst who conducted himself in a manner that
represented the outcome of his experience with other patients. In my
work with him, I was not to be who I thought I was or who I previ-
ously had been to any other person or to myself.
At the end of the first session, I suggested possible times to meet
again later in the week. Mr. B opened his appointment book and told
me which of the times would be best for him. I continued this method
of arranging one future meeting at a time over the next several months;
it seemed to suit Mr. B in that period of our work. In the course of
the first several months, a schedule of daily meetings became estab-
lished. In the second or third session, I told Mr. B that I thought I
would be able to work best with him if he used the couch; we began
working in that manner in the subsequent session. Mr. B told me that
using the couch was a little strange, but it suited him too.
The patient at first said almost nothing about the present circum-
stances of his life, including how old he was. He mentioned his wife,
but it was not clear how long they had been married, what sort of
marriage it was or whether they had any children. I did not feel any
inclination to inquire; his way of being with me, and my way of
being with him, at that juncture seemed to be a more important form
of communication than could be achieved through my making
inquiries. When, on occasion, I did ask a question, the patient
responded politely and earnestly, but the questions and responses
seemed only to distract Mr. B and me from the task of introducing
ourselves to one another at an unconscious level.
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home. It seemed that the important thing about this childhood expe-
rience was the sense of security that Mr. B derived from knowing
these things were alive (alive with meaning) just as he was alive in his
own being at school. The carefully placed objects had an existence
that went on in his absence: the stone and the leaf and the bottle cap
went on being what they were. As Mr. B was telling me the story, the
sound and cadences of his words reminded me of lines from a Borges
(1957) prose poem: “All things long to persist in their being; the stone
eternally wants to be a stone and the tiger a tiger” (p. 246).
In listening to Mr. B’s story about the stones and leaves and bottle
caps remaining themselves while he was at school (in conjunction
with my reverie regarding G and his mother), it occurred to me that
Mr. B had been frightened as a child – and now with me – that his
connection with his mother (and me) felt thin, not based on truths
that remain true, truths that can be taken utterly for granted, love
that remains love, a mother who persists in her being as a mother all
the time. I said to Mr. B, “It seems to me that you felt – although
I don’t know if you would put it this way – that L’s mother was not
being motherly either to L or to you in lying to you. There is some-
thing about being a mother that doesn’t go together with lying. It’s
not a matter of ethics or sentimentality; it’s a feeling that a mother,
when she’s being a mother, is telling the truth, she is the truth.”
Mr. B and I were silent for a few minutes until the end of the session.
Some months later, as Mr. B was beginning to be able to speak
more directly about feelings, he told me that as a child, there were
long stretches of time during which he felt frightened that he would
come home and find that his mother had been taken over by aliens
– she would no longer be his mother even though she looked exactly
like his mother. He would try to devise questions, the answers to
which only his real mother would know. He said, “I remember
vividly that fear that I felt as a kid and only now recognize the lone-
liness that went with it. But at this moment, all I feel is cold – not
distant or remote, but physically cold, as if the temperature in the
room has suddenly dropped by 25 degrees.”
Discussion
The work with Mr. B began with an unconscious request that I not
be a generic analyst, and instead be a person capable of not knowing
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Reading Bion
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7
Elements of analytic style
Bion’s clinical seminars
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Analytic style in Bion’s clinical seminars
Bion inquires, “Why should this patient think that the analyst
would do anything?” This question to the presenter is, for me, quite
startling and more than a bit odd. Of the innumerable aspects of
the clinical material presented, why is Bion asking about why the
patient would think that the analyst would take action? Only after
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Analytic style in Bion’s clinical seminars
make me into you by putting your ideas into my head and in that
way controlling my actions (making me stand still). If that happens, I
won’t be able to move my own mind and body at all.” In asking why
the patient would think that the analyst would do anything, Bion is,
I believe, trying to help the presenter to understand this aspect of the
patient’s psychotic thinking.
The presenter responds at a superficial level to Bion’s question –
“Why should the patient think that the analyst would do anything?”
– by saying,
I was interested to know why she had said “Don’t try to keep me
still”. She said she didn’t know the answer to the question, so I
suggested that she was preoccupied by my being quiet, still. She
said that she did not regard me as being still, but as dominating my
movements, my mind controlling my body.
(p. 4)
This, at first, seems like a very strange thing to say. But I view it as a
reflection of Bion’s analytic style. Only Bion could have said this. If
someone else were to say this, he would be imitating Bion. So what
is Bion doing here, or, to put it in different terms, how is Bion being
Bion-the-analyst here? He is treating the encounter as if it were the
first encounter between him and the patient. He recognizes that the
patient is predominantly psychotic and speaks to her from that
vantage point (thereby recognizing who she is at that moment). For
Bion (1957), the psychotic aspect of the personality is a part of the
self that is unable to think, to learn from experience or do psycho-
logical work.
Speaking to “the non-psychotic part of the patient’s personality”
(Bion, 1957), the part capable of thinking and doing psychological
work, Bion begins by naming in the simplest, most literal terms the
objects that are in the consulting room (which are swirling with
uncontrolled meaning for the patient because she is frightened and
unable to think): “We have here these chairs, this couch, because
you might want to use any of them.” Bion, in this way, not only tells
the patient what the objects are – as external objects – he also tells her
implicitly that they are there for her to use as analytic objects, objects
that may be used in dreaming up an analysis, if she wishes to try to
do so (with his help). He continues: “you might want to sit in that
chair, or you might want to lie on that couch in case you feel that
you couldn’t bear sitting there – as you say today.” Here, Bion tells
the patient that he thinks that she may be frightened of using the
chair today. I believe that Bion is implicitly speculating imaginatively
that the chair, for the patient, is a psychological place that once held
magical power to protect her against what she fears would happen if
she “really” were in analysis. The chair, for some reason, has lost its
power today. She might want to use the couch (i.e. she may want to
try to become the analytic patient who she had hoped to become
when she first came to see the analyst). Bion is not trying to do
something to her or to get her to do something, for example, to use
the chair or the couch; he is attempting to help her to “dream herself
into existence” (Ogden, 2004a) as an analysand and dream him up as
an analyst who may be able to help her to think: “That is why the
couch was here when you first came.”
Bion, in a way that is characteristic of him in the “Clinical semi-
nars,” frames his inquiry in the form of the question, “I wonder what
has made you discover this today?” i.e. how have you discovered that
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this is the emotional problem that is most important for you to solve
in today’s session? He is implicitly adding that he does not have a
solution to the problem, but that she may, and that he may be able to
help her to understand something of the problem that is disturbing
her, but which she, as yet, is unable to think/dream. Further, what
Bion is implicitly saying might be phrased as follows: “In your saying,
‘Today I won’t be able to stay sitting here,’ you are telling me that
you are afraid that you can no longer get help here – you fear that
you have become so mad (‘dizzy’) that you have lost hope of being
able to become a patient who may be able to make use of me as your
analyst.”
Bion continues to wonder aloud: “[So] why is it that only today
you have found that you may not be able to sit in that chair; that you
may have to lie down or go away?” Bion’s interpretation (ostensibly
to the patient) is perhaps more an interpretation to the presenter: the
presenter had not recognized or spoken to the patient about her fear
of not being able to be a patient in analysis, a fear she expressed both
in her stated inability to use either the chair or the couch and in her
statement that the analyst seems to the patient to be able to perceive
only what “looks as if . . . [it] were true.” It now seems clearer to me
why I find the patient’s smile so chilling: it bespeaks the enormity of
the emotional disconnection that the patient was experiencing
between the degree of her emotional distress and her very limited
ability to think/dream it, and between herself and the analyst.
Not long after making this interpretation to the patient (and also
to the presenter), Bion says, “As the analyst, one hopes to go on
improving – as well as the patient . . . If I knew all the answers I
would have nothing to learn, no chance of learning anything . . .
What one wants is to have room to live as a human being who makes
mistakes” (p. 6). This, too, is a fundamental element of Bion’s style
in the “Clinical seminars.” Though time and again, Bion surprises
the presenter and the reader with his uncanny way of sensing the
importance of, and making analytic use of, seemingly insignificant
elements of what is happening in a session, he no less frequently
states, without contrived humility, that an analyst must “have room
to live as a human being who makes mistakes.” Only in this state of
mind is one able to learn from experience: “If you had been prac-
tising analysis as long as I have, you wouldn’t bother about an inad-
equate interpretation – I have never given any other kind. That is
real life – not psycho-analytic fiction” (p. 49).
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126
Analytic style in Bion’s clinical seminars
The reader can almost feel Bion’s blood coming to a boil – not in
response to the presenter’s anxiety, but in response to the arrogance
of an analyst who believes that he knows how to do psychoanalysis,
and believes that if his supervisees see things as he does, they, too,
will know how to do psychoanalysis. Nevertheless, Bion’s response
is a measured one, but not completely bleached of his feeling that a
supervisory style of the sort described is destructive to the supervi-
see’s efforts to become an analyst. At the same time, Bion is fully
aware that he is not hearing the ideas of the training analyst (about
whom Bion knows nothing), but the ideas and feelings of the
presenter who, like his own patient, has momentarily retreated from
being a thinking doctor (an analyst) into a passive patient who cannot
think for himself. Bion says:
In a sense these theories, such as the one you mention, have a use
for the particular person who mentions them. [Bion does not
identify that person as the training analyst because he is not
addressing that person. He is addressing a split in the presenter’s
personality in which one aspect of himself – who uses analytic
theory as a way of not thinking – belittles another aspect of himself
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Analytic style in Bion’s clinical seminars
this time that style is the opposite of fashion; it is also the opposite of
narcissism. Giving oneself over to fashion arises from the wish to be
like others (in the absence of a sense of who one is); narcissism
involves a wish to be admired by others (in an effort to combat one’s
sense of worthlessness).
Following this “digression” in which Bion discusses the difficulties
inherent in becoming an analyst, he asks the presenter to tell him
more about the session:
Presenter: The patient had the impression that if he remained on
duty [as a doctor at the hospital the previous night] he
was going to feel ill. He was not feeling ill – he had the
impression that this was going to happen.
Bion: In other words, he wasn’t going to get cured – he would
get these illnesses. It sounds possible that he has never
really considered that he has to be very tough indeed to be
a doctor at all. In this profession you are always dealing with
people at their worst; they are frightened; they are anxious.
It is no good taking up that occupation if he is going to
end up by being anxious, depressed and frightened too.
(pp. 16–17)
Bion is making an indirect interpretation to the non-psychotic
aspect of the presenter’s personality. Here again, the interpretation has
a surprisingly pragmatic feel to it: the patient has chosen a career for
which he is not emotionally equipped – he seems not to be able to
face other people’s fears without becoming frightened and depressed
himself. But, of course, there is more to the interpretation than that.
Bion is focusing on a striking contradiction that seems to provide a
sense of the nature of the emotional problem for which the patient is
seeking help in this session. Why is the patient presenting the analyst
with a contradiction in this particular way, at this moment? Perhaps
the patient did not simply make a poor career choice. Is there some-
thing about himself (an aspect of himself that is a genuine doctor)
from whom the patient feels disconnected? Bion is noticing a commu-
nication that is so obvious that it is as invisible as Poe’s purloined
letter. Perhaps it is this paradox – that the obvious is invisible – that
makes Bion’s comments sound odd and concrete. Here, as was the
case earlier in the seminar, Bion’s observation concerning something
that feels “off” to him contains an “imaginative conjecture” (p. 191)
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regarding the emotional problem that the patient (with the analyst’s
help) is attempting to “solve” (p. 125), i.e. to think in this session.
The question is not simply, “What is leading the patient to feel anxious
and fearful?” A more specific problem (or facet of the dynamic tension
driving the patient’s symptomatology) is alive in the current session.
Bion, in his comments that address the patient’s choice of profession,
seems to be trying out the idea that the patient may feel that he is not
himself. He chose to try to become a doctor, and yet he feels more
drawn to being a passive patient – a person who knows nothing,
and wishes to know nothing, about the illness from which he is
suffering.
Bion’s speculation might be thought of as an interpretation spoken
to the non-psychotic aspect of his “imaginary” patient, an aspect of
personality that is both unconscious and capable of thinking.
The presenter seems to have been able to make use of this inter-
pretation:
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a doctor” (p. 17). The patient, with the analyst’s help, is finding that
he is able to become a doctor, i.e. a person who is able to think and
to use that capacity to “dream himself into existence” as a doctor and
as an analytic patient. Similarly, with the help of Bion’s interpreta-
tions, the presenter is able to dream himself into existence as a doctor,
i.e. as an analyst. He is becoming able to be curious about the patient,
a person “at his worst” (a person who is anxious and in dire need
of help).
To return to Bion’s response to the patient’s unexpectedly
becoming a genuine doctor, Bion observes,
Using this [event in which the patient became a doctor] not only
for this incident but for many others, you can begin to feel that the
patient may after all be a doctor or a potential analyst if, when it
comes to a crisis, the doctor emerges. But why in a crisis? If it is
really true that he may after all be a doctor, not just by title but the
thing itself, why hasn’t he discovered that until now? . . . Of
course, we believe as analysts – rightly or wrongly – that analysis is
helpful. But this belief is liable to hide from us the extraordinary
nature, the mystery of psychoanalysis. Such a lot of analysts seem
to be bored with their subject; they have lost the capacity for
wonder.
(p. 17)
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magician whom will turn the patient into the person who he wishes
to be), Bion asks himself (and often asks the “dreamt-up” patient)
what the patient thinks analysts do. Perhaps second only in frequency
to Bion’s question, “Why has the patient come for analysis?” is his
question, “What does the patient think analysis is?” And he often
comments in response to the patient’s idea, “That is a very strange
conception of analysis.” Helping the patient and giving the patient
the “correct” (p. 162) analysis (a genuine analytic experience) are, for
Bion, one and the same thing.
The second important element of Bion’s analytic style that is alive
in this passage is his feeling that his awareness of how little he knows
is not a source of frustration or disappointment; it is a source of awe
and wonderment in the face of the complexity, the beauty, and the
horror that constitute human nature and human efforts to cope with
and learn from disturbing experience. (See Gabbard, 2007, for a
discussion of the role of analytic orthodoxy and the use of analytic
dogma to evade facing the full complexity and “chaos of the human
condition” [p. 35] and of the analytic enterprise.)
In response to the questions and associations that were elicited in
Bion by the patient’s having begun to develop his capacity for
thinking, the presenter continues:
The reader can hear in this comment a shift in the balance of power
between the patient as an assailant of his own capacity for thinking,
and the patient as a thinking doctor. The doctor is now able to face
the fact that he is ill while remaining alive to his feelings; he is able
to make use of his awareness of his emotions to give direction to his
thinking; and he is able to use his thinking to become “an analyst”
who actively takes responsibility for his role in his own analysis.
Bion recognizes that the satisfaction to be taken by the patient in
this achievement is balanced by feelings of sadness that are equally
intense: “One of the peculiarities of progress is that it always makes
you feel depressed or regretful that you didn’t discover it sooner”
(p. 17). This interpretation is meant not only for the imaginary
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patient being dreamt up in the seminar, but also for the presenter
who, I think, Bion feels is regretful that it has taken him so long to
become an analyst for his patient. (Perhaps the presenter recognized
in the course of the seminar that he had relied for a long time on the
thinking of others – the “training analyst” in himself – who had been
afraid to respond freshly, without preconception, to what he was
perceiving and feeling in the analytic sessions. In other words, to this
point he had been unable to invent/rediscover psychoanalysis with
this patient.
Still another element of Bion’s analytic style can be felt in this
portion of the seminar. As we have seen, Bion is continually aware
of the way in which each patient in each analytic hour unconsciously
feels that his life is at stake (and, it seems to me, that Bion believes,
in an important sense, that the patient is correct in believing so).
After all, to the extent that a patient cannot think, he cannot be
alive to his experience. But Bion, here, takes a more radical position
than he took earlier regarding the analyst’s use of himself in his effort
to help the patient. What he adds is critical to who Bion is as an
analyst:
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This is something that one cannot be taught to do; one must be born
with a capacity to do it, and a wish to do it.
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implicitly stating his belief that such recognition of the truth of what
is occurring influences the balance of power between the psychotic
and the non-psychotic aspects of the personality.
Bion, shortly after, elaborates on this idea:
Concluding comments
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qualities of Bion’s analytic style that are brought to life in the “Clinical
seminars,” I do not view his style as a model to emulate. Rather, as
Bion states in the seminars, “The way I do psychoanalysis is of no
importance to anybody excepting myself, but it may give you some
idea of how you do analysis, and that is important” (p. 224).
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8
Reading Loewald
Oedipus reconceived
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Reading Loewald: Oedipus reconceived
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desire, and wishes to take her mother’s place with her father. She,
too, experiences guilt in response to her incestuous and murderous
wishes in the complete Oedipus complex (Freud, 1921, 1925).
The child guiltily fears punishment for his or her murderous and
incestuous wishes in the form of castration at the hands of the father.
Whether or not actual castration threats are made, the threat of
castration is present in the mind of the child as a “primal phantasy”
(Freud, 1916–17, p. 370), a universal unconscious fantasy that is part
of the make-up of the human psyche.
“Analytic observation[s] . . . justify the statement that the destruc-
tion of the Oedipus complex is brought about by the threat of castra-
tion” (Freud, 1924, p. 177). That is, the child, for fear of punishment
in the form of castration, relinquishes his or her sexual and aggressive
strivings in relation to the oedipal parents and replaces those “object
cathexes . . . [with] identifications” (ibid., p. 176) with parental
authority, prohibitions and ideals, which form the core of a new
psychic structure, the superego.
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Reading Loewald: Oedipus reconceived
1 Breuer’s words echo those written by Plato two-and-a-half millennia earlier: “Now I am
well aware that none of these ideas can have come from me – I know my own ignorance.
The only other possibility, I think, is that I was filled, like an empty jar, by the words of
other people streaming in through my ears, though I’m so stupid that I’ve even forgotten
where and from whom I heard them” (Phaedrus, 1997, p. 514). Loewald, trained in
philosophy, no doubt was familiar with this dialogue.
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The paper seems to begin again in its second paragraph with a defini-
tion of the Oedipus complex as the “psychic representation of a
central, instinctually motivated, triangular conflictual constellation of
child–parent relations” (p. 384). (With its several beginnings and
several endings, the paper itself embodies the multiplicity of births
and deaths that mark the endless cycle of generations.) Loewald then
draws our attention to the way in which Freud (1923, 1925), in
speaking of the fate of the Oedipus complex, uses forceful language,
referring to its “destruction” (Freud, 1924, p. 177) and its “demoli-
tion” (Freud, 1925, p. 257). Moreover, Freud (1924) insists, “If the
ego has . . . not achieved much more than a repression of the complex,
the latter persists in an unconscious state . . . and will later manifest its
pathogenic effect” (p. 177). This idea provides Loewald the key to his
understanding of the fate of the Oedipus complex.
The reader’s head begins to swim at this point as a consequence
of the convergence of two interrelated enigmatic ideas: (1) the notion
that the Oedipus complex is “demolished” (how are we to under-
stand the idea that some of the most important human experiences
are, in health, destroyed?); and (2) the idea that the demolition of the
Oedipus complex is “more than a repression” (whatever that means).
The reader, here and throughout the paper, must do a good deal of
thinking for himself in making something of his own with the ideas
that Loewald is presenting. This, after all, is the task of each new
generation vis-à-vis the creations of its ancestors.
In an effort to find his bearings in this portion of the paper, the
reader must grapple with several questions. To begin with, the reader
must determine the meaning of the term repression as it is being used
here. Freud uses the term to refer to two overlapping but distinct
ideas in the course of his writing. At times, he uses the term to refer
to psychological operations that serve to establish “the unconscious
as a domain separate from the rest of the psyche” (Laplanche and
Pontalis, 1967, p. 390), a sine qua non of psychological health. At
other times – including, I believe, the instance under discussion – the
term is used to refer to a pathogenic expulsion from consciousness of
disturbing thoughts and feelings. Not only is the repressed segregated
from the main body of conscious thought, but repressed thoughts
and feelings are, for the most part, cut off from conscious and uncon-
scious psychological work.
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Reading Loewald: Oedipus reconceived
2 Loewald uses the word sacred as a secular term to refer to that which is solemnly, respect-
fully set apart, as poetry, for Plato and Borges, is set apart from other forms of human
expressiveness – poetry is “something winged, light and sacred” (Plato, cited in Borges,
1984, p. 32).
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Loewald again and again in his paper makes use of etymology – the
ancestry of words, the history of the way succeeding generations
both draw upon and alter the meanings of words.
Parricide involves a revolt against parental authority and parental
claims to authorship of the child. That revolt involves not a ceremo-
nious passing of the baton from one generation to the next, but a
murder in which a sacred bond is severed. The child’s breaking of the
sacred bond to the parents does not represent a fearful response to
the threat of bodily mutilation (castration), but a passionate assertion of
the “active urge for emancipation” (p. 389) from the parents. Loewald’s
phrase urge for emancipation connects the word urge (which has a strong
tie to the bodily instinctual drives) with the word emancipation, thus
generating the idea of an innate drive for individuation. In the language
itself, instinct theory is being broadened by Loewald to include drives
beyond the sexual and aggressive urges (see Chodorow, 2003; Kaywin,
1993; and Mitchell, 1998, for discussions of the relationship between
instinct theory and object relations theory in Loewald’s work).
In the oedipal battle, “opponents are required” (p. 389). A relative
absence of genuine parental authority leaves the child with little to
appropriate. Moreover, when the parents’ authority has not been
established, the child’s fantasies lack “brakes” (Winnicott, 1945,
p. 153) – that is, the secure knowledge that his fantasies will not be
allowed to be played out in reality. When parental authority does not
provide the “brakes” for fantasy, the fantasied murder of those one
loves and depends upon is too frightening to endure. Under such
pathological circumstances, the child, in an effort to defend himself
against the danger of the actual murder of the parents, represses
(buries alive) his murderous impulses and enforces that repression by
adopting a harshly punitive stance toward these feelings. In health,
paradoxically, the felt presence of parental authority makes it possible
for the child to safely murder his parents psychically (a fantasy that
need not be repressed). Oedipal parricide does not require repression
because it is ultimately a loving act, a “passionate appropriation of
what is experienced as loveable and admirable in parents” (p. 396). In
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Reading Loewald: Oedipus reconceived
Several years into his analysis, Mr. N told me the following dream:
“I was checking in at the front desk of a hotel late at night. The
man behind the desk told me that all the rooms were booked. I
said that I had heard that hotels keep a few rooms open in case
someone shows up in the middle of the night. I thought, but did
not say to him, that those rooms are meant for important people.
I knew that I was not an important person. At the other end of
the long desk, an older woman who was checking in said in a
commanding voice, ‘He’s with me – he’ll share my room.’ I didn’t
want to share a room with her. The thought was repellent. I felt as
if I couldn’t get a breath of air and tried to find a way out of the
hotel, but I couldn’t find an exit.”
Mr. N said that he felt extremely embarrassed by the dream and
had considered not mentioning it to me. He told me that even
though we had often talked about his feeling that his parents had
had no psychological room in themselves for him as a child, he
was horrified in the dream by the woman (who seemed like his
mother) offering to have him share her room, and, by implication,
her bed, with him.
I said to Mr. N that the embarrassment he felt in response to the
dream may stem not only from his feeling horrified by the idea of
sleeping with his mother, but also from seeing himself as a peren-
nial child who lacks the authority to claim a place of his own
among adults – a boy who will never become a man.
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A medical student near the end of his analysis with me began affec-
tionately to refer to me as “a geezer” after it had become apparent
that I knew very little of the developments in psychopharmacology
that had occurred in the previous 25 years. I was reminded of my
own first analysis, which had begun while I was a medical student.
My analyst occasionally referred to himself as an “old buck” in
response to my competitiveness with him regarding what I was
learning about current developments in psychoanalysis. I remem-
bered having been surprised by his seemingly calm acceptance of
his place in the “over-the-hill” generation of analysts and of my
place in the new (and, I believed, far more dynamic) generation.
While with my medical student analysand, my memory of my
analyst’s referring to himself as an old buck struck me as both
comic and disturbing – disturbing in that at the time he said it, he
was younger than I was at that juncture in the analysis of my
patient. I recognized how his acceptance of his place in the succes-
sion of generations was currently of great value to me in my efforts
not only to accept, but also, in a certain way, to embrace my place
as “a geezer” in the analysis of my medical student.
3 The Oedipus complex is, in a sense, a process by which the child, in killing his parents
(with their cooperation), creates his own ancestors (see Borges, 1962).
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Reading Loewald: Oedipus reconceived
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Thus, parricide, from the point of view of both parents and children,
is a necessary path to the child’s growing up, his coming to life as an
adult who has attained authority in his own right. Oedipal parricide
conceived of in this way underlies, for both Freud and Loewald, the
organization of “the superego [which is] the culmination of indi-
vidual psychic structure formation” (Loewald, 1979, p. 404). The
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150
Reading Loewald: Oedipus reconceived
only an atonement for parricide and the restitution of the parents, but
also a “metamorphosis insofar as in this restitution oedipal object
relations are transmuted into internal, intrapsychic structural rela-
tions” (p. 389). I find the metaphor of metamorphosis to be critical
to Loewald’s conception of what it means to say that the parents are
internalized in a “transmuted” form. (Loewald, in this paper, uses the
word metamorphosis only in the sentence being cited and may not
have been aware of the full implications of his use of this metaphor.)
In complete metamorphosis, for example, in the life cycle of the
butterfly, inside the cocoon, the tissues of the caterpillar (the larva)
break down. A few clusters of cells from the breakdown of the larval
tissues constitute the beginning of a new cellular organization from
which adult structures are generated (e.g. wings, eyes, tongue,
antennae and body segments).
There is continuity (the DNA of the caterpillar and that of the
butterfly are identical) and discontinuity (there is a vast difference
between the morphology and physiology of the external and internal
structures of the caterpillar and that of the butterfly). So, too, superego
formation (the internalization of oedipal object relations) involves a
simultaneity of continuity and radical transformation. The parents (as
experienced by the child) are not internalized, any more than a cater-
pillar sprouts wings. The child’s “internalization” of oedipal object
relationships involves a profound transformation of his experience
of his parents (analogous to the breakdown of the bodily structure
of the caterpillar) before they are restituted in the form of the
organization of the child’s more mature psychic structure (superego
formation).4
In other words, the child’s “internalized” oedipal object relationships
(constituting the superego) have their origins in the “DNA” of the
parents – that is, the unconscious psychological make-up of the parents
(which in turn “documents” their own oedipal object relationships
4 A passage from Karp and Berrill’s (1981) classic, Development, underscores the aptness of
the metaphor of metamorphosis: “The completion of the cocoon signals the beginning of
a new and even more remarkable sequence of events. On the third day after a cocoon is
finished, a great wave of death and destruction sweeps over the internal organs of the
caterpillar. The specialized larval tissues break down, but meanwhile, certain more or less
discrete clusters of cells, tucked away here and there in the body, begin to grow rapidly,
nourishing themselves on the breakdown products of the dead and dying larval tissues.
These are the imaginal discs . . . Their spurt of growth now shapes the organism according
to a new plan. New organs arise from the discs” (p. 692).
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with their parents). At the same time, despite this powerful transgen-
erational continuity of oedipal experience, if the child (with the parents’
help) is able to kill his oedipal parents, he creates a psychological clear-
ance in which to enter into libidinal relationships with “novel” (p. 390)
(non-incestuous) objects. These novel relationships have a life of their
own outside of the terms of the child’s libidinal and aggressive relation-
ships with his oedipal parents. In this way, genuinely novel (non-
incestuous) relationships with one’s parents and others become possible.
(The novel object relationships are colored, but not dominated, by
transferences to the oedipal parents.)
In a single summary sentence, which could have been written by
no one other than Loewald, the elements of the transformations
involved in superego formation (the establishment of an autono-
mous, responsible self) are brought together: “The self, in its
autonomy, is an atonement structure, a structure of reconciliation,
and as such a supreme achievement” (p. 394).
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Reading Loewald: Oedipus reconceived
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154
Reading Loewald: Oedipus reconceived
rewarding richness of life” (p. 400). The reader may wonder why
Loewald does not say so from the beginning instead of invoking the
clearly untenable idea that experience can be destroyed. I believe that
Loewald begins with more absolute and dramatic language because
there is a truth to it that he does not want the reader to lose sight of:
to the degree that one succeeds in murdering one’s parents psychi-
cally and atones for that parricide in a way that contributes to the
formation of an autonomous self, one is released from the emotional
confines of the Oedipus complex. The Oedipus complex is destroyed
to the extent that oedipal relationships with one’s parents no longer
constitute the conscious and unconscious emotional world within
which the individual lives as a perennial, dependent child.
The paper closes as it began, with a comment addressing writing
itself as opposed to the subject matter that has been taken up:
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her own. The child atones for imagined (and real) parricide by means
of a metamorphic internalization of the oedipal parents which results
in an alteration of the self (the formation of a new psychic agency, the
superego). “Responsibility to oneself . . . is the essence of superego as
internal agency” (Loewald, 1979, p. 392). Thus, the child repays the
parents in the most meaningful terms possible – that is, by establishing
a sense of self that is responsible to oneself and for oneself, a self that
may be capable of becoming a person who is, in ways, more than the
people who the parents were capable of being and becoming.
The incestuous component of the Oedipus complex contributes
to the maturation of the self by serving as an ambiguous, transitional
form of object relatedness that holds in tension with one another
differentiated and undifferentiated dimensions of mature object ties.
The Oedipus complex is brought to an end not by a fear-driven
response to the threat of castration, but by the child’s need to atone
for parricide and to restore to the parents their (now transformed)
authority as parents.
I do not view Loewald’s version of the Oedipus complex as an
updated version of Freud’s. Rather, to my mind, the two renderings
of the Oedipus complex constitute different perspectives from which
to view the same phenomena. Both perspectives are indispensable
to a contemporary psychoanalytic understanding of the Oedipus
complex.
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Harold Searles’ “Oedipal love
in the countertransference” and
“Unconscious identification”
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158
Searles on oedipal love and Ucs identification
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surely will be strange not to be waking up, for the first time in
sixteen years, for the two-o’clock feeding!”
(p. 290)
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Searles on oedipal love and Ucs identification
towards the patient, and, on the other hand, the depth of matura-
tion which the patient achieves in the analysis.
(p. 291)
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162
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while we were sitting in silence and a radio not far away was
playing a tenderly romantic song, when I realized that this man
was dearer to me than anyone else in the world, including my
wife. Within a few months I succeeded in finding ‘reality’ reasons
why I would not be able to continue indefinitely with his therapy,
and he moved to a distant part of the country.
(p. 294)
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164
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analyst, cannot be lived out with the current object of one’s love: “I
was filled with a poignant realization of how utterly and tragically
unrealizable were the desires of this man who had been hospitalized
continually, now, for fourteen years” (p. 296). In this second example
of oedipal love for a man, Searles is saddened, not frightened, by his
love for the patient. By this point in the paper, it comes as a surprise
to me, but not as a shock, that Searles took for a ride in his car a
patient for whom he was experiencing feelings of love and fantasies
of being married. In reading this passage, I feel “amazed” (p. 295), to
use Searles’ word, not shocked or horrified, by Searles’ capacity to
invent psychoanalysis anew for this patient (see Ogden, 2004a,
2005c). Not only has Searles grown emotionally in the course of the
work that he has presented to this point, but perhaps I, too, as reader,
have matured in the course of the experience of reading his work.
For me, the paper builds toward a moment near its end when
Searles speaks of his own experience as a parent and as a husband. I
will quote this passage in its entirety because no paraphrase, no set of
excerpts can convey the effect created by the force of Searles’ care-
fully chosen words:
165
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166
Searles on oedipal love and Ucs identification
Even this statement of the parents’ oedipal love for the child is a pale
rendering of what, in Searles’ hands, is a vibrant, living thing which
constitutes a good deal of the richness of human life, both for chil-
dren and for parents. But this is not the heart of the difference
between Searles’ and Freud’s conceptions of the Oedipus complex.
For Freud (1910, 1921, 1923, 1924, 1925), the story of the healthy
Oedipus complex is that of the child’s triangulated sexual desire and
romantic love for one parent, and his jealousy, intense rivalry and
murderous wishes for the other parent; the child’s fearful and guilty
renunciation (in the face of castration threats) of his sexual and
romantic desires toward his parents; and the internalization of the
threatening, punitive oedipal parents in the process of superego
formation.
By contrast, Searles’ version of the Oedipus complex is the story
of the child’s experience of reciprocated romantic and sexual love of
the parent (a wish “to marry” and make a family and home with that
parent). There is rivalry with, and jealousy of, the other parent, but
it is a far quieter affair than that involved in Freud’s conception of the
child’s murderous wishes for his parents. Searles’ version of the
oedipal experience does not end with the child feeling defeated by
castration threats and being left with an abiding sense of guilt and the
need to renounce and ashamedly hide sexual and romantic wishes for
the parent.
Instead, for Searles, the healthy Oedipus complex is the story of
love and loss, of reciprocated romantic parent–child love that is safe-
guarded by the parents’ firm but compassionate recognition of their
roles both as parents and as a couple. That recognition on the part of
the parents helps the child (and the parents themselves) to accept the
fact that this intense parent–child love relationship must be given up:
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These feelings [of love for the patient] come to him [the analyst]
like all feelings, without tags showing whence they have come,
and only if he is relatively open and accepting of their emergence
into his awareness does he have a chance to set about finding out
. . . their significance in his work with the patient.
(pp. 300–301)
The notion that feelings come to the analyst “without tags” is pivotal
to Searles’ conception of oedipal love in the countertransference
168
Searles on oedipal love and Ucs identification
Unconscious identification
169
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170
Searles on oedipal love and Ucs identification
171
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172
Searles on oedipal love and Ucs identification
For many years I have enjoyed washing dishes, and not rarely have
had the feeling that this is the one thing in my life that I feel entirely
comfortably capable of doing. I have always assumed that, in my
washing of dishes, I was identifying with my mother, who routinely
did them in my early childhood. But in recent years . . . it has
occurred to me that I have been identifying with my mother not
only in the form but also in my spirit of washing the dishes. I had
not previously allowed myself to consider the possibility that she,
too, may have felt so chronically overwhelmed, so chronically out
beyond her depth in life, that this activity, this washing of dishes,
was the one part of her life with which she felt fully equipped to
cope comfortably.
(p. 224)
This paragraph could have been written by no one other than Searles
– in part because it involves such exquisite mastery of the art of
looking deeply into seemingly ordinary conscious experience. Searles
knows in a way that few analysts have known that there is only one
consciousness and that the unconscious aspect of consciousness is in
the conscious aspect, not under it or behind it. Paradoxically, Searles
knows this in practice and makes use of it in virtually every clinical
illustration he presents, but he has not, as far as I am aware, ever
discussed this conception of consciousness in his writing. Moreover,
in the opening sentence of the paper cited earlier, Searles explicitly
contradicts this understanding of the relationship of conscious and
unconscious experience when he says that unconscious identifica-
tions lie “behind and beneath” conscious identifications. I believe,
however, that this conception of the relationship between conscious
and unconscious experience (and the accompanying sea plant
metaphor) are not in keeping with the understanding of the relation-
ship between conscious and unconscious experience that Searles so
powerfully illustrates in this paper. I believe that it would more accu-
rately reflect what Searles demonstrates in his clinical work to say that
conscious and unconscious experience are qualities of a unitary
173
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174
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which I suggest that the reader requires familiarity with the work of
both authors in order to fully appreciate either one.
The container–contained
175
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Searing honesty (with himself and with the patient) permeates Searles’
accounts of his clinical work. Examples previously discussed in this
paper that come immediately to mind include Searles’ acknowl-
edging to himself (despite internal and external pressures to do other-
wise) his intense wishes to marry his patients when in the thick
of oedipal transference–countertransference experiences; Searles’
alarming awareness that he felt a depth of tenderness toward a male
schizophrenic patient that was greater than the love he felt for his
wife; and his recognition of his feelings of bitterness about the fact
that he was not the patient in the analysis that he was conducting
and, consequently, did not have the right to tell the patient at length
what he was feeling. While Searles clearly believes that straightfor-
wardly facing the truth of what is occurring in the analytic relation-
ship is an indispensable element in analytic work, it took Bion to
formulate this clinical awareness at a higher level of abstraction,
namely, that the most fundamental principle of human motivation is
the need to know the truth about one’s lived emotional experience.
“[T]he welfare of the patient demands a constant supply of truth as
inevitably as his physical survival demands food” (Bion, 1992, p. 99).
Searles is without peer in demonstrating what that need for truth
looks like and feels like in the transference–countertransference and
how it shapes the analytic experience; Bion put the idea into words,
located it in relation to analytic theory as a whole, and created an
understanding of the human condition that placed the need for truth
at its core.
176
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177
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Index
158; analyst’s task 131; analytic style, 177; waking-life 135, 136; writing
of 118–137; Attention and of 101
interpretation 97, 98, 103–9, 118; Borges, J.L. 6, 78, 106, 107, 113,
becoming an analyst 128–9; 143n, 146
beta-elements 101, 102, 107; Bornstein, M. 50
binocular vision 58; Brasilia Seminar, Boyer, B. 147
No. 1 118–24, Brasilia Seminar, No. 3 Brasilia Seminar, No. 1 118–24
124–134; Brasilia Seminar, No. 8 135; Brasilia Seminar, No. 3 124–34
“Clinical Seminars” 117–37; Brasilia Seminar, No. 8 135
cogitation 99; container-contained breakdown, fear of: Winnicott 4, 40–1
158, 175–6; dreaming 10, 28, 40, 46, Breuer, J. and Freud, S.: originality 5–6;
50, 102–3, 107, 109, 122, 134, 135; Studies in Hysteria 6, 140–1
dreams 50–1; 109, 134; “early” 97, British Psychoanalytic Society:
102–3, 107–8, 177; Elements of Controversial Discussions 34
Psycho-Analysis 97; emergence
105–6; emotional problem 124, Cambray, J. 106
129–31, 134; epistemophilic castration 140, 144, 156, 167
impulse 50; function 101, 102; central ego 52, 56, 61–2, 63, 68, 70–1
“imaginative conjecture” 129; Chestnut Lodge 161
interplay of paranoid-schizoid and child analysis 46
depressive positions 45; child’s behavior: context of 37; details
interpretation 103, 105, 106, 107, of 36
115–16, 120, 121, 123, 125–32, 133; Chodorow, N. 144
Klein 50; knowing (K) 105–6; Chomsky, N.: deep structure of
language, use of 100, 101, 104; “late” language 4, 49
97, 103, 104, 107–8; Learning from “Clinical Seminars” 117–37
experience 97–102, 104; “learning cogitation 99
from experience” 29, 99, 101, 103, “coincidences” 92–3, 94–5
108, 121, 123; memory 109–10; “O” consciousness: continuity with
103–8, 109, 115, 116; non-psychotic unconsciousness 177; differentiation
parts of personality 45, 122, 125, from unconsciousness 102, 134;
129, 130, 134, 135–6; obscurities Fairbairn’s view of 63; make use of
98–9, 100, 101, 102, 107; phantasy 176; only one 173–4, 177; phantasy
50; projective identification 38, 177; as generating a state of 44;
and psychoanalytic theory 4, 35, 101, unconscious aspect of 173–4; 176–7;
102, 103, 158, 174, 176, 177; as unforeseeable emergence 105–6
psychosis 28; psychotic part of contact barrier 134
personality 45, 122, 134, 135–6; container-contained 158, 175–6; like
reading 1, 3, 97–116; reverie 103, Searles’ “turning experience inside
108, 177; São Paulo Seminar, No. 1 out” 175–6
134–6; Searles 158, 174–7; sleeping contempt: bonds of 68–70, 75;
and dreaming 10; supervisor, style as diminution of 71; and feeling
125–7; as theorist 55, 117; “a slighted 61; of internal saboteur
theory of functions” 101, 102; 68–9; and mania 31; object of 73;
theory of thinking 4, 35; thinking role of in the unconscious 55;
of 97; truth 50, 51, 104, 106–7, substitutes for love 28
108, 135, 136, 158, 176; vertices 108, control, contempt, and triumph 31
187
Index
Controversial Discussions 34, 53 sexual 139; of speech 36; Spitz 37;
corrective emotional experience 162 unintegration and integration in 83
countertransference: acting out 103; Development 151n
fantasy 159, 161, 164; love 158–69; Developments in Psychoanalysis 34
role of 79 disappointment 18, 22, 23, 24, 25,
creativity 93 28, 132
critical agency 17, 19, 20, 25, 60 disillusionment 55, 71, 75
disintegration 58–9
deadness: and aliveness 31–2, 33, 87 dissociation 87, 89
death instinct 61 dreaming: alpha function, form of 46,
defense mechanisms 39 102; an analysis 122; the analytic
delusional belief 120 session 109; Bion, 10, 28, 40, 46, 50,
dependence, primitive 71 102–3, 107, 109, 122, 134, 135;
depression: analyst’s 79–81; clinical 80; capacity for 103; conversation
and depressive position 80; dynamic between unconscious and
structure of 79–80; unconscious preconscious 14, 29; dissociation of
fantasy of 79; following 89; into existence 122, 130; Freud
interpretations 107; Freud’s theory 14; generating difference between
of 79; intergenerational origins, conscious and unconscious 102; and
79–80; Klein’s theory of 79; and hallucination 134; a life 164; as
melancholia 14; mother’s 79–80, 174; meaning-generating 103; and
patient’s 79–81; Winnicott’s theory mourning 28; and “O” 107;
of 79–81 reflecting ways of thinking 39–40,
depressive position: achievement of 46; and reverie 115; as symbolizing
80n; conception of 102; interplay 28, 103; as unconscious thinking 46,
with paranoid schizoid position 45; 50; and waking 134
stage of development 80n dream-life 88, 136
desire: in countertransference 159, 162; dreams: Bion 50–1; 109, 134; and
erotic 162; of exciting object 64; children 87–8; that float into the
father as object of 139–40; mind 109; Freud 13, 14; in Freud–
incestuous 152, 153; for mother’s Klein era 39; Grotstein 45; and
breast 46; oedipal 165, 167–8; of hallucinations 134, 136; and oedipal
patient 165; as phantasy 46; as love 164; and phantasy 42; and
“psychic dynamism” 61; sexual 14, reflective self 115; symbolic content
139, 152, 167; unconscious 52; of unconscious thoughts 39; and
unrealizability of 168 thinking 50–1; Winnicott 87; word
despair: and triumph 28 “dreams” 13
development: of capacity for thinking dream-work: Sandler 45
48; continuity versus discontinuity of drives 144
36–7; infantile 37; “of interest in the dynamic structure: of depression 80; as
external world” 4, 50; Isaacs 37; most theoretical term 56
mature aspects of 161; narcissistic 23; dynamic unconscious 169
normative stage of 80; pre-oedipal
154; primitive emotional 76–96; of ego: central 52, 56, 61–2, 63, 68, 70–1;
psyche-soma 90; psychic 45–8, 55, critical activity of 19, 20; ego-loss 17,
58, 60; as a psychoanalyst 3; 19; and internal object relationship
psychological 37, 38, 46, 51, 90, 139; 59; “flight into” 24; Freud
188
Index
reconceiving of 17; as “I” 60, 61; and internal object 32, 59, 60; relatedness
id 53, 60; identification of 19, 20; to 23, 28; Winnicott 3; world 3, 19,
identified-with-the-object 20, 25, 52, 89
62; and inner reality 51; external reality: acceptance of 93;
identification of 19; in Klein’s capacity to recognize 44; and central
metaphor of unconscious 19n; ego 70–1; disconnecting from 20;
libidinal 5, 25, 56, 61, 62–70, 74; evasion of 28; Fairbairn 58, 60; Freud
libidinal cathexis of 23; and libido 49; and hallucination 91; and infant
19, 23, 31; -loss 17, 19; and 36, 37, 47, 89, 92; and internal reality
melancholia 15–16, 17, 19, 20, 26; 44–5, 47, 168; Klein 58; knowledge
and mourning 7–8, 29–30; and of 49; modulating effects of 94; and
Oedipus complex 142, 149; as omnipotent thinking 48; and
phantasying 52, 53; and primary phantasy 4, 42, 44, 47–50; primacy
narcissism 23; as psychic structure 17; of 58; and psychic reality 41–2;
regressed aspects of 62; relationship recognizing 44; “taking flight” from
between aspects of 59, 60; and 28; Winnicott 89
repression 142; as self 52, 53, 60, 61; external world: infant and 93; interest
and shadow of the object 19, 20; in 4, 50; and internal object world
split-off parts of 17, 19, 20, 25, 28, 19, 71; Klein 19n; knowledge of 49,
32, 52, 53, 60; splitting of 60; and 50; lived emotional experience in
superego 19, 52, 53, 60, 140, 148, 46; and phantasy 4, 47–8, 50
149–51, 156, 167, 168; structure 61;
as a suborganization 52, 55, 60, 71; as Fairbairn, W.R.D.: addictive love 55, 64,
a term 59; unconscious part of 25–6 71, 74, 75; aggression 63, 71; “the
ego-identified-with-the-object 20, 25 basic endopsychic situation” 60, 71;
ego-libido 23 central ego 52, 56, 61–2, 63, 68,
ego structure 61 70–1; contempt 68–70, 75; ego and
Elements of Psycho-Analysis 97 id 53, 60; ego and self 60, 61; ego,
emancipation: genuine 10; and manic split off parts of 52, 60; emotional
defense 31; urge for 144–56 life of internal objects 63–4;
emergence 105–6 endopsychic structure 9, 51, 53, 56,
Emerson, E. 1 60–1, 68, 70–1; “Endopsychic
emotional problem 50–1, 120, 123, structure considered in terms of
124, 129–31, 134 object-relationships” 53, 56; exciting
endopsychic structure 9, 51, 53, 56, object 5, 25, 56, 60–70, 71, 74;
60–1, 68, 70–1 external object world 52; external
“Endopsychic structure considered in reality 58, 60; Freud 61; Greenberg
terms of object-relationships” 53, 56 and Mitchell 56; Grotstein 56;
epistemophilic instinct 50, 51 Guntrip 56; internal object 5, 19, 51,
exciting object 5, 25, 56, 60–70, 71, 74 59, 60, 63–4; internal object relations
external object: as abandoned object 19, 52, 55, 59, 60, 64, 69; internal
20; use as analytic object 122; Bion object world 5, 19, 52, 55, 59, 60–4,
122; cut off from world of 28–9, 33; 69; internal saboteur 5, 56, 62–3,
disappointing 24; and infant 89, 91; 65–71, 74; Isaacs 9, 51–4; Kernberg
and mania 28–9; and melancholia 20, 56; Klein 51, 53, 55, 56, 58, 61;
28; mother 59; and narcissistic Kohut 56; language, use of 56, 57,
identification 23; replaced by 72; libidinal ego 5, 25, 56, 61, 62–70,
189
Index
74; libido 58, 59, 63, 71; love/hate Freud–Klein era: dreams in 39; Isaacs
bond 25; model of the mind 55; 40; of psychoanalysis 39; transition
Modell 56; mother 56–9, 61–2, from 54
65–6, 69, 70, 75; no object Freud, S.: ambivalence 29, 31; Bion 28;
relationship at all 26; object relating Breuer 6, 141; castration 140; critical
and object–seeking 90; object agency 17, 19, 20, 25, 60; death
relations theory 11, 51, 58, 60, 64; instinct 61; desire 90; dreaming, role
Oedipus complex 138; phantasy 51, of 14; dreams 13, 14; disturbance of
52, 58; place in psychoanalysis 56; self-regard 13, 14–15, 16, 19; ego 17,
psychic development 55, 57; 24; ego and id 53; ego and
psychoanalytic theory 55, 56–62; melancholia 15, 16, 17, 19, 60;
psychological growth 71–3, 75; Fairbairn 19n, 55, 61, 102; Ferenczi
reading 1, 55–75; rejecting object 5, 12; “Instincts and their vicissitudes”
56, 61, 62–3, 65–6, 67, 69, 71; 12; The Interpretation of Dreams 12,
resentment 65, 75; Rinsley 56; 14, 166–7; Isaacs 19n, 42, 49, 50, 53;
satisfactory objects and unsatisfactory Klein 19n, 34, 41, 53, 61, 79; -Klein
objects 5, 59, 62; Scharff and Scharff era 39, 54; language, use of 7, 13, 14,
56; schizoid psychopathology 57; 15, 19, 20, 26–7, 28; Loewald 138,
“Schizoid factors in the personality” 139, 142, 143, 149, 154, 155–6;
56; Second Discussion Meeting 51, mania 31–3, 32n; melancholia 7, 8,
53; Sutherland 56; Symington 56; 14–18, 22–9; “A metapsychological
terminology of 56; thinking of 5, 56, supplement to the theory of dreams”
63; view of unconscious 55, 63; 12; mania 26–8, 31, 32; model of the
Winnicott 9; writing of 5, 56 mind 16, 19, 32; mourning 7, 8,
fantasy: countertransference 159, 161, 14–17, 29; “Mourning and
164; of depressed patient 81; of melancholia” 7, 8, 11–33, 52, 60;
depression 79; lacking “brakes” 93–4, “On narcissism: An Introduction”
144; of oedipal child 159; 22–3; narcissism 22–5; object
omnipotent 93–5; of manic relations theory 11, 13, 17, 19n, 24,
defense 31; and reality 161; 28, 29, 31, 32; Oedipus complex
representations of object relations 138–40, 142, 143, 148, 154, 155,
154; universal unconscious 140; 166–7; phantasy 41, 50; primal
see also phantasy phantasy 49, 140; psychoanalytic
father: authority of 153; castration by theory 12–13, 17, 22, 25; reading 1,
140; erotic attachment to 139–40; 3; repression 142; “Repression” 12;
identification with 139; in Oedipal Searles 166–7; sexual desire 14;
complex 139, 146; as punitive rival sexual instinct 61, 139; Standard
139; symbolic presence of 87; wish Edition of the Complete Psychological
to kill 139 Works of Sigmund Freud 13; structural
Faulkner, W. 85 model 18, 19n, 35, 53, 55, 102, 149;
fear of breakdown 4, 40–1 Studies in Hysteria 6; superego 19, 52,
Ferenczi, S. 12 53, 60, 148, 167; theory of
Fervor to Buenos Aires 6 depression 11–33, 79; topographical
Ficciones 78 model 19n, 102, 158, 177; “The
Freud, A.: defense mechanisms 39; unconscious” 12; view of the
Institute of Psychoanalysis in unconscious 41–2, 88; voice, of 13,
London 56 18, 32; Winnicott 79; writing and
190
Index
thinking of 8, 9, 11, 12, 15, 17, 19, id: and ego 53, 60
26, 27, 32, 60 identification: of ego 19; with
Frost, R. 78, 85, 86n, 107 abandoning object 20, 22; conscious
frustration 57, 84, 93, 132 173–4; with father 139; with loved
function: alpha 46, 102, 107, 158; Bion and loving objects 71; narcissistic
101, 102; ego 52; meaning- 23–5; with object 19, 20; with
generating 103; mental 36, 46; of oedipal parents 149; primary 153–4;
phantasy 4, 35, 50, 52, 54 and superego formation 149;
unconscious 169–73
Gabbard, G. 132, 161 illusion: melancholia 8; Winnicott 91,
Gay, P. 12, 24 92, 94, 95
generations: creations of previous 138, incest: atonement 152; destroys
142; difference between 147, 153; demarcation between generations
face-off between 145; succeeding 153; superego 152–3
138, 141, 144, 145, 146, 147, 148; incestuous object 138–9; 152–5, 156
task of new 138 incorporation: and superego formation
“genetic continuity” 36 149
Green, A: aliveness and deadness 31; infantile development 37
internal object world 31 infant, mind of: Bion 38; Isaacs 38;
Greenberg, J. & Mitchell, S.A. 56 Rosenfeld 38; Winnicott 38
grief 28, 31, 81 infant observation 46
Grotstein, J.: dreamer who dreams the influence: and originality 140–1; of
dream 45; Fairbairn 56; talking to parents via parricide 150
patient’s unconscious 125; instinct theory: and object relations
unconscious psychological work 45 theory 144
group dynamics 66 instinct: aggressive 139; aim of 49;
growth, psychological 65, 72, 71, 75, bodily 14, 144; death 61; -driven
108, 125, 175 phantasying 52; ego 61;
guilt 69, 79, 81, 139–40, 152, 167, 175 epistemophilic 50–1; mental
Guntrip, H. 56 expression of 45; mental
representation 52; Oedipus complex,
hallucination: and dreams 136; and motivated by 142; sexual 61, 139;
external reality 91; of infant 91, theory 144
93, 94 “Instincts and their vicissitudes” 12
Hamlet 107 Institute of Psychoanalysis in London
hate: and ambivalence 24, 29; analyst’s 55–6
81–2; and love 25, 26, 29, 33, 64, 79, integration 82–3; 87
93–4; and melancholia 25, 29; internal object: bad 25; bonds of love
and pathological love 65; and hate 33; central ego, relationship
and primitive love 2; reader’s to 70–1; dead 33; emotional life of
81–2 63–4; endopsychic existence of 9, 51;
Heaney, S. 78 as evading object loss 20; and
Heimann, P.: Developments in external world 19, 71; Fairbairn 5, 9,
Psychoanalysis 34; Institute of 19, 51, 52, 53, 59, 60, 63–4; Freud
Psychoanalysis in London 56 17, 20, 24, 60; hated and hating 25;
human symbology 14 identity of 9, 51; and internal subject
hysteria 140–1 60; Isaacs 19n, 35, 52, 53; Klein 19n,
191
Index
51, 53, 158; libidinal tie to 5, 62; and introjection: and superego
mania 28–9; of mother’s depression formation 149
80; mother 61, 62, 80; Ogden 19, 62; Isaacs, S.: Bion 35, 38, 45, 46, 50; child’s
organized structure of 9, 51; behavior, details of 36, 38; context
phantasy and 9, 19n, 35, 47, 51–3; of observed data 36, 38; continuity
replacing external object 59, 60; vs. discontinuity in development
split-off parts of central ego 52, 68; 36–7; Developments in Psychoanalysis
as subdivision of a subject 68; 34; ego and id 53; epistemophilic
superego as 52, 53; Winnicott 3; impulse 50; external reality 44;
world 3, 5, 19n, 28–9, 31, 52, 53, 55, Fairbairn 9, 51–4; Fairbairn, letter
59, 60–4, 68, 69, 158 from 51; Freud, A. 39; Freud 19n, 42,
internal object relations: central ego 71; 49, 50, 53; in Freud–Klein era 39–40,
enlivening or deadening 31–2; 54; “genetic continuity” 36;
Fairbairn 19, 52, 55, 59, 60–2, 64, 69; Grotstein 45; “I-ness” and otherness
fantasized 32, 35; Freud 17, 20, 24–5, in phantasy 47; instinct 46, 49, 52;
32, 35, 60; between internal saboteur internal objects and internal object
and rejecting object 65–7; and relations 19n, 35, 52, 53; interpretive
incestuous fantasies 153; Isaacs 19n, act, phantasying as 43, 45; Klein 34,
35, 52, 53; Klein 19n, 53; 39, 50, 53–4; language, use of 4, 40,
melancholia 24–5; Ogden 19n, 62; 44; and meaning 42–8, 54; mental
pathological 25; satisfactory and life, phantasies giving 45–6; mental
unsatisfactory 75; split-off part of operations, phantasy as 39;
ego, formed by 20, 59–60; methodology 37–8; “The nature and
transference 40; unconscious function of phantasy” 4, 34;
organized around 32; unloving “particular sorts of phantasy” 39;
mother as 59, 61–2, 69 phantasy 4, 9, 34–54; phantasying
internalization: of object 20, 59, 153; of 34–54; psychic reality 41–2, 44;
oedipal object relations 149, 150, psychoanalytic theory 34, 35, 39, 51,
151, 153–4, 167–8 54; reading 1, 3; Rivière 39, 42;
internal reality: as closed system 62; and Rosenfeld 38; Second Discussion
external reality 44–5, 47, 168; and Meeting 51, 53; Segal, 45; self–object
phantasy in 47–8 differentiation, phantasying in 46, 47;
internal saboteur 5, 56, 62–3, 65–71, 74 theory of thinking 34 –54; “the
internal subject 60, 68 transference situation” 40, 54;
The Interpretation of Dreams 12, 14, unconscious thinking, phantasy as 4,
166–7 38–42, 45, 46, 48, 50–1, 52, 54;
interpretation: toward analyst’s and Winnicott 9, 39–40; in Winnicott–
patient’s experience 114; Bion 103, Bion era 39–40, 54
105, 106, 107, 115–16, 120, 121, 123,
125–32, 133; as conversation 128; James, H. 85
good 84; inadequacy of 115–16, 123;
resistance 83, 84; silent 83; toward Karp, G. and Berrill, M. 37, 151n
supervisee 125, 129, 133; Kaywin, R. 144
unobtrusive 120; where comes Kernberg, O. 56
from 127 King, P. 44
interpretive act: phantasying as 43–5 Klein, M.: Bion 50; control, contempt,
interpretive subject 43, 44 and triumph 31n; depression, theory
192
Index
of 79; depressive position 45, 80n, parents 149; incest 152–3; incestuous
102; Developments in Psychoanalysis object 138–9, 152–3; incestuous
34; epistemophilic instinct 50; object relationship 152–5; influence
external reality 58; Fairbairn 51, 53, and originality 140–1, 154; instinct
55, 56, 58, 61; Freud 34, 41, 53, 61, theory 144; language of 148, 155;
79; Freud–Klein era 39, 54; as heretic metamorphic internalization of
34; Institute of Psychoanalysis in oedipal parents 148–52, 153–4;
London 56; internal objects 19n, 51, “more than a repression” 143;
53, 158; internal object relations 19n, non-incestuous objects 152; Oedipus
53; Isaacs 34, 39, 50, 51, 53–4; loving, complex 138–56; parental authority
hating, and making reparations 90; 143–7, 149; parricide 143–8,
mania 31n; manic defense 31n; 149–51, 153, 156; reading 1, 3, 10;
object relations theory 19n, 51, 58; 138–56; restitution 150, 151, 166;
Oedipus complex 138; paranoid- “something rich and strange” 154;
schizoid position 45, 102; phantasy, superego 148–9, 150–1, 152, 156;
conception of 39, 41, 50, 51, 58; thinking, way of 138, 155;
projective identification 39; and transitional incestuous object
psychoanalytic theory 19n; reading relationship 152–5; transmutation of
2; spatial metaphors of unconscious oedipal parents 150–1; “the troubling
19n, 158; split off aspects of ego 19n; but rewarding richness of life”
symbol formation 50; structure of 154–5; “The waning of the Oedipus
unconscious 19n; teaching 2; as complex” 138–56; writing of
theorist 39, 55; unconscious, 138, 155
conception of 19n; voice of 31 Lorenz, K. 43
knowing (K) 105–6 love: accepting of 56, 57, 59, 62, 64, 70;
knowledge 49, 50 addictive 55, 64–5, 68, 71, 74, 75;
Kohut, H. 56; Oedipus complex 138 adult 166; and ambivalence 29;
analyst’s 79, 81, 161, 162; as bad 70;
Lacan, J.: Oedipus complex 138 of bad objects 59; bonds of 26, 33,
language: deep structure of 4, 49, 50 68, 75; capacity to 14, 57, 58; and
Laplanche, J. and Pontalis, J.– B. 142 contempt 28; countertransference
“learning from experience” 29, 99, 101, 157–69; as destructive 55, 81;
103, 108, 121, 123 developmental need to 162;
Learning from experience 97–102, 104 displacement of 23; erotic 25; failure
libidinal ego 5, 25, 56, 61, 62–70, 74 to 57; falling in 148, 153, 159, 161;
libido: and ego 19, 23, 31; in Fairbairn’s and hate 25–6, 29, 33, 64, 79, 93–4;
internal object world 63; fixation of imitations of 68; lack of 57, 59; loss
in melancholia 7, 8. 18, 31; in hate of 58, 167; and melancholia 29; of or
and love 29; hemorrhaging of 59; by mother 56–9, 65, 70, 89;
loss of 58, 59; and mania 23; and narcissistic 68, 79; nascent 59;
narcissistic love 68; object– 23 non-countertransference 160; object
Loewald, H.: atonement 149, 150–1, 3, 8, 17–18, 20, 22, 23, 24, 25, 59, 81,
152, 153, 155, 156; emancipation, 165; oedipal 157 –69; pathological
urge for 10, 144, 147, 153, 155; 65–6; pre-oedipal 139; primitive 2–3;
enlivening “fire” of unconscious 29; pursuit of 69; rejecting of 56, 70;
Freud 138, 139, 142, 143, 149, 154, romantic 162, 163, 165, 167, 168;
155–6; identification with oedipal sexual 167, 168; substitutes for 28;
193
Index
and superego 150; ties of 25; toxic mind, model of the: Freud 16, 19, 32;
effects of 59; transference- Fairbairn 55; as inner world 55;
countertransference 161, 163; structural 149
unaccepting of 58; unable to 58; Mitchell, S.A. 56, 144
the verb 3 model of the mind: Freud 16, 19, 32;
Fairbairn 55; as inner world 55;
mania: and grief 31; and ambivalence structural 149
31; and disappointment 28; Modell, A. 56
economics of 27; and external mother: acceptance of 56–9, 72, 75;
objects 28–9; Freud’s explanation of analyst-as-transference 80; breast of
31–3, 32n; and internal objects 28–9; 46, 89; and child 89–95; claim to the
Klein 31n; and loss 26; and 153; -as-context 38; deficits in love
melancholia 26–7; and object of 56–8; depression of 79–80, 174;
relations theory 28; psychotic “doing this and that to” 47; external
edge of 26–9; triumph in object 59; face of 10, 83, 84, 86;
26, 28 feeling hated by 163; healthy 78;
manic defense: fantasy of 31n -infant dual unity 152; -infant
McLaughlin, B.P. 106 relationship 38; instinctual urges of
melancholia: abandoned object 20, 22; 90; internal object 61, 62, 80; lifeless
abandoning object 60; ambivalence 93; lived experience with the 52, 89,
7, 8, 18, 25, 29; defining features of 90, 91, 93; love of 56–9, 65; love by
25; disturbance of self-regard 13–17, 56–9; 70; love of 58; to “marry”
19; ego 15–16, 17, 19, 20, 26; and one’s 159; as object of sexual desire
external object 20, 28; and hate 25, 139; oedipal fantasies of 159;
29; “the key to the clinical picture psychological life of 38; the real 53;
of ” 22; libido 7, 8, 18, 19, 23, 29, 31; rejecting 57, 61–2, 65–6, 69, 70; of
living and dead 29; loss 7; love and Searles 174; separateness from 38,
hate 29; and mania 26–7; mental 80n, 91; tantalizing 61–2; toxic effect
activities of 7; and mourning 7, on 63; traumatizing experience with
11–33; “Mourning and melancholia” 70; unloving 57–9, 61–2, 64, 70, 75;
7, 11–33; and narcissism 22–5; object unsatisfactory relationship with
loss 15, 17, 19–20, 22; 23–4; object 57, 60
relations theory of 22, 29; outrage mourning: absence of disturbance of
18, 20, 24, 25; psychoanalytic self-regard 15; capacity for 29;
theory of 22; psychotic edge continuing to be emotionally alive 8;
of 26, 28; rage 8, 28, 60; revolt 18; death of the object 7, 29–30; and
and sadism 25; tie to object 15, dreaming 28; and ego 7–8; 29–30;
22, 25; unconscious internal work incapacity for 23–4; irrevocable loss
of 16 7, 15, 24; and melancholia 7, 8,
memory 102, 105, 109–10, 112 11–33; mental activities of 7;
mental mechanisms 39, 40 “Mourning and melancholia” 7,
mental operations 39, 101 11–33, 52; normal effect of 13, 14;
mental processes 40, 43 symbolizing pain 28; unconscious
metamorphosis 149, 151 work of 8, 12, 32
“A metapsychological supplement to “Mourning and melancholia” 7; 11–33,
the theory of dreams” 12 52; misreading of 24; time of
Milner, M. 56 writing 12
194
Index
“On narcissism: An introduction” 22 51–3, 55, 59–60, 62–6, 68, 70–2, 75,
narcissism: analytic style opposite of 80, 153, 158; internalized 20, 59,
129; Freud 22–4; concept of 22; 153; killing of 8, 31; Klein 19n, 31n;
disease of 23; and identification libido 23; loosely bound to 86; loss
23–5; and melancholia 22–5; and 15, 17, 19–20, 23–4, 79; lost 20, 22,
object love 23; and object tie 22–4; 24, 28, 31, 31n, 79; love 3, 8, 17–18,
opposite of analytic style 129; 20, 22, 23, 24, 25, 59, 81, 165; loved
primary 22–3; theory of 22; 8, 17, 18, 22, 79, 81; loving 5, 63; and
regressing to 22 mourning 7–8; narcissistic tie to 23,
narcissistic mental disorders 13 24, 71; non-incestuous 152; oedipal
“The nature and function of phantasy”: 153; otherness of 23; outrage at 25;
about definition of phantasy 35; and parental 147; physical 4; pre-
external reality 4; about depressive relationship to 79;
“phantasying” 35; scientific and primitive love 2–3; psychically
political paper 34 present 8; rejecting 5, 56, 62–3, 65–6,
Non-psychotic part of personality 45, 67, 69, 71; relatedness 24, 37, 47, 139,
122, 125, 129, 130, 134, 135–6 143, 153, 156, 161; -relating 90;
satisfactory 5, 63; -seeking 90; self–
“O”: being and becoming 106; 46, 47, 70; self-identified-with-the-
“common to himself ” 103, 104; 62; 46; separate 20, 72, 153; of sexual
without defining, use 105; evolutions desire 139; shadow of 19, 20;
of 105–6; of experience of reading subject- 16, 47; tie to 8, 15, 18, 22,
103, 104; and “K” 105–6; meanings 23, 24, 25, 71, 156; transitional 161;
of 105; present moment 107, 109; undifferentiated 138–9, 153, 154,
reality of what is 104; truth of what 156; unloving and unaccepting 5, 62;
is 106; unknowable 104; and verb unsatisfactory 5, 53, 62, 63, 71;
“to be” 106; of the unconscious 109, whole 80n, 153; word object 3
115, 116 object-loss 15, 17, 19–20, 22, 23–5, 79
object: abandoned of 19, 20, 22; object-love 3, 8, 17–18, 20, 22, 23, 24,
abandoning 60; absent 8; 25, 59, 81, 165
ambivalently loved 24; analytic 106, object relations theory: and concept of
122; bad 25, 59; captive 20; -cathexis ambivalence 29; definition of 11;
18, 22, 23, 140, 153; -choice 18, 22; Fairbairn 11, 51, 55–75; Freud
contemptible 31n; dead 7, 8, 31, 33; 11–33; 60; includes developmental
death of 22, 29–30; denigrating 31; axis 24; and instinct theory 144;
differentiated 47, 138–9; 153, 154, Isaacs 34–54; Klein 19n, 51, 58; in
156; disappointment by 25; ego- Loewald’s work 144; in “Mourning
identified-with-the- 20, 25, 62; and melancholia” 11–33; origins of
emotional life of 63–4; exciting 5, 11–33; as a revised model of the
25, 56, 61–4, 65–9, 71, 74; external 3, mind 32; the term 11, 51
9, 19n, 20, 23, 24, 26, 28–9, 32–3, 42, obscurities 98–9, 100, 101, 102, 107
47, 59, 60, 70–1, 73–4, 89, 91–2, 122, oedipal child: emotional state 159;
153; fixation to 7, 8, 22, 31; forsaken fantasy life of 159; need for unity
19, 20; give up 7, 30; identification 153; parent’s love for 161; and
with 19, 20; incestuous 138–9; parricide 153
152–5; internal 3, 5, 9, 11, 13, 17, 19, oedipal love: child’s 167; in the
19n, 20, 24–6, 28–9, 31–3, 35, 40, 47, countertransference 157–77;
195
Index
emotional state of 159; healthy 161; 154; reconceived 147–8;
parents’ 167; of patient and analyst re-conceptualized 138, 158; phallic
161–2; pre- 139; reciprocated 168; phase 139; renunciation of 167–8;
Searles’ own experience of 160 resolution of 150, 161; Searles 158,
“Oedipal love in the 166–8; “something rich and strange”
countertransference” 157–77 154; successfully analyzing 161; and
oedipal parents: “DNA” of 151; death superego 140, 148–50, 151, 153, 156,
of 145; desire of 138–140; 168; as tension between influence
identification with 149; libidinal and and originality 140–1; transformed
aggressive relationships with 152; 154; undifferentiated object relations
love of 167; metamorphic 154; universality of meaning of
internalization of 148–51, 156, 167; 50; unresolved 143; waning of
murder of 138–45, 147, 148, 152; 138–56, 168
sexual strivings toward 140; Oedipus myth 92, 139, 146–7
threatening and punitive 167; Ogden, T. 19n, 29, 32, 39, 50, 52, 62,
transferences to 152; transmutation 78, 80n, 102, 106, 115, 117, 118, 122,
of 150 139, 141, 154, 165, 175, 177
oedipal relations: atonement of 149–51, omnipotence 23, 28, 33
152; emotional world of 155; omnipotent phantasy 47, 48, 93–5
incestuous 153; internalized 149; omnipotent thinking 28, 33, 47, 48
restitution of 149 “On Narcissism: An Introduction”
Oedipus complex: and autonomy 152; 22–3
and atonement 156; castration, as originality: Breuer and Freud 140–1;
part of 140, 144, 156, 167; creating Loewald 138–56, 154; Plato 141;
ancestors 146n; definition of, versus influence 140–1
Loewald’s 142; demolished 142–3,
154–5; destruction of 140, 142, paranoid-schizoid position 45, 102
154–5; and ego 142, 149; parental authority 143, 144–5, 146,
emancipation, urge for 144–56; 147, 149
emotional confines of 154; Fairbairn parricide: atonement for 149–51, 152,
138; father in 139, 146; Freud 138, 155, 156; and autonomy 153, 155;
139–40, 142, 143, 148, 155–6, 166–7; fantasies of 14, 145; inability to
and “greater limiting reality” 168; commit 145; Loewald’s definition of
healthy 167; “heir” to 153, 168; 143–5; a loving murder 143–7;
incestuous component of 152, 156; necessary path 148–50; of oedipal
incestuous fantasies of 139, parents 144, 148, 152; revolt 144;
140; incestuous object relationship securing influence of parents 150;
153; internalization of oedipal object superego as documenting 149–50
relations 149, 150, 151, 153–4; Klein personality: of analyst 117, 128; of
138; Kohut 138; Lacan 138; Loewald infant 61–2; melancholic 24;
138–56; more than a repression non-psychotic parts of 45, 122, 125,
142–3; oedipal love 158–65; 129, 130, 135–6; neurotic core of
metamorphosis 151; murder of 154; and Oedipus complex 154;
parents 138–45, 147, 148, 149–50, organization 26, 80; psychotic core
152, 155, 167; negative 139; neurotic of 154; psychotic part of 45, 122,
core of 154; non–incestuous objects 134, 135–6; split off parts of 11–12;
152; positive 139; psychotic core of suborganizations of 52, 55, 60, 71;
196
Index
thinking aspect of 125, 130; 43–5; omnipotent 47, 48; role of 39;
uniqueness of 128 omnipotent 47; and phantasy 35, 39,
Phaedrus 141 40; product of internal objects 52;
phallic phase 139 promotes interest in external world
phantasy: activity of 35, 40; alpha 4, 50; reality principle 47–8; self–
function 46; Bion 46, 50; “builds a object differentiation 46, 47;
bridge from the inner world . . . to self-object undifferentiation 47;
the outer world” 4, 50; content 35; solving emotional problems 50–1;
definition of 35; epistemophilic “the subjective interpretation of
instinct 50, 51; external reality 4, 42, experience” 42–3, 47; transference
44, 47–50; Fairbairn 9, 51–2, 58; 40, 54; truth 51; unconscious
Freud 41; function of 4, 35, 50, 52, thinking 4, 35, 38–42, 44, 45, 46, 48,
54; instinct 45–6, 49–50, 52; internal 50–1, 52, 54; the verb 35, 40; see also
objects 9, 19n, 35, 47, 51–3; Isaacs phantasy
34–54; Klein 39, 41, 50, 51, 58; and Plato 141n, 143n
knowledge of reality 48–50; and The Portrait of a Lady 85
meaning 42–8, 54; and mental life 9, preconscious: conversation with
35, 45–6; mental mechanism 39; and unconscious 29, 88; and dreaming
the need to know 50–1; objective 14, 88; experience of hate 81; in
reality and 48; object relating Fairbairn’s internal object world 63;
mediated by 47; omnipotent pre-oedipal love 139
thinking 47, 48; “particular sorts primal phantasy 140
of . . .” 39; “phantasy thinking” 47; primary identification 153–4
primal 49, 140; psychic content 41, primary narcissism 22–3
44, 54; psychical reality 9, 51; psychic primitive emotional development:
development 45–8; “reality thinking” creating a way of being alive 78;
47; Rivière 39, 42–4; in self–object Winnicott 2, 76–96
differentiation 46, 47; “the subjective “Primitive emotional development” 2,
interpretation of experience” 42–3, 76 – 96
45, 47; subjective reality in 48; projective identification: Bion 38, 177;
symbolic function of 4, 44; symbolic Klein 39; mother-infant relationship
meaning 42–5; the term 41; as 38; Rosenfeld 38; Searles 177
transference 40, 54; transforming psyche-soma 90
sensory/bodily experience 46, 48; psychic development: and phantasy 45,
truth 50, 51, 54; “within the infant” 47; Fairbairn 55, 57
37–8; work of 34; unconscious psychic dynamism 61
psychic reality 9, 41–2, 44; psychical reality: conscious, in
unconscious self-reflection 42–5; tension with unconscious 42;
unconscious thinking 4, 35, 38–42, dream-like memory of 109; and
44, 45, 46, 48, 50–1, 52, 54; see also external reality 41–2, 44; and
phantasying phantasy 9, 51
phantasying: alpha function 46; psychic structures: relationships among
development of thinking 48; ego the 63
function 52, 53; epistemophilic psychoanalytic theory: see analytic
instinct 50–1; id function 53; theory
interplay of internal world and psychosis: evasion as hallmark of 28;
external reality 47–8; interpretive act fear of recognizing 121; of mania
197
Index
and melancholia 28; denial of 136; revolt 18
psychotic core: of personality 154 Rinsley, D.B. 56
psychotic field 100 Rivière, J.: conception of phantasy 39,
psychotic part of personality 45, 122, 43–4; definition of phantasy 42;
134, 135–6 Developments in Psychoanalysis 34;
Isaacs 39, 42
reading: act of 1, 85, 99, 100; being read Rosenfeld, H.: development of
by 2, 82; Bion 97–116; book about psychological life 38; Institute of
1; capacity for 49; creatively 1, 10; Psychoanalysis in London 56;
critical 87n; early Bion 98–100, 102, mother-infant relationship 38;
107, 108; experience in 1, 76, 84, 86, projective identification 38
88, 103, 104, 108, 143, 169;
experience of 1, 2, 3, 85, 88, 101, sadism 25
103, 104, 141, 163–4; Fairbairn Sandler, J.: dream-work 45;
55–75; Freud 7, 13, 24, 32; as understanding-work 45
interpreting 3; intransitive 2; Isaacs 4, São Paulo Seminar, No. 1 134–6
34–54; late Bion 103–8; learning Scharff, J.S. and Scharff, D.E. 56
from experience 99, 101; living “Schizoid factors in the personality” 56
experience in 103; Loewald 138–56; schizoid pathology 57
“Mourning and melancholia” 7, Scott, W.C.M. 46
24, 32; O of 103, 104; “Oedipal love Second Discussion Meeting 51, 53
in the countertransference” 157–77; Searles, H. Bion 158, 174–7; Chestnut
“Primitive emotional development”: Lodge 161; clinical theory 161, 164,
76–96; the reader 2; Searles 157–77; 174; conscious experience 169, 176;
style of 155; “transitive” 2; consciousness and the unconscious
“Unconscious identification” 173–4, 176–7; container-contained
157–77; “The waning of the 175–6; context transformed into
Oedipus complex” 138–56; content 158, 171, 172, 174, 175;
Winnicott 41, 76–96; versus countertransference love 158–68;
writing 1 dynamic unconscious 169; Freud
reality principle 44, 70 166–7; “greater limiting reality” 168;
regression: in analysis 85; defensive 24, language, use of 167; mother of 174;
25; to narcissistic identification 24; non-countertransference love 160;
from narcissistic object relatedness 24 oedipal love 158–68; “Oedipal love
rejecting object 5, 56, 61, 62–3, 65–6, in the countertransference” 157–68,
67, 69, 71 169; Oedipus complex 158, 161,
reparations 90 166–8; reading 1, 157–77; 164, 165,
repression: barrier 88; and ego 142; 167, 169, 176; schizophrenic
meaning of 142; “more than a . . .” patients 161, 162, 163, 164, 176,
142–3; of murderous impulses 144; 177; thinking, way of 157, 158,
and Oedipal parricide 144; of 167, 170. 173; transference–
Oedipus complex 142–3; of split-off countertransference 160, 161, 163,
parts of the self 71 169, 175–6; “turning experience
“Repression” 12 inside out” 158, 171–3, 175–6;
restitution 150–1, 152 unconscious communications 157;
reverie 103, 108, 112, 113, 114, unconscious experience 169, 176;
115, 177 “Unconscious identification” 157,
198
Index
158, 169–74; “waking up” to oneself thing-in-itself 44, 104
164; working, way of 157, 158, 167, thinking: as action 120; alpha function
170; writing, way of 10, 157, 159, 46, 102; analytic 19, 32, 35, 56, 90,
161, 163, 164, 165, 173 101, 130, 138, 166; breakdown of
Segal, H.: Institute of Psychoanalysis in 115; capacity for 47, 48, 51, 70, 103,
London 56; symbol formation 122, 125, 130, 132, 175; clinical 55,
proper 45; symbolic equation 45 169; development of 48; and
self: -acceptance 72–5; early experience dreaming 39–40, 46; endopsychic
of 78; interpreting aspect of 43; loss structure, as 70; incapacity for 121,
of 58; -object differentiation 46, 47, 133; as interpreting symbols 43; new
70; perceiving aspect of 43; form of 12; non-magical 47;
-reflection 42, 45; –regard 13, 14–15, omnipotent 28, 33, 47, 48;
16, 19; sense of 78–9 originality of 7; phantasy as 42, 47,
sensory/bodily experience: and 50, 51; psychotic 121; reality 47; a
language 49; and phantasy 46, 48, 49; space for 92; theory of 4, 35, 34–54;
sexual desire: mother as object of 139; transference as 40, 54; unconscious 4,
object-related 152; present from 35, 38–42, 44, 45, 46, 48, 50–1, 52,
birth 14; triangulated 167 54; and thoughts 35, 54; in
sexual instinct 61, 139 Winnicott–Bion era 39–40; and
Sophocles 92 writing 9, 11, 27; yet to be
The Sound and the Fury 85 thought 32
Spitz, R.: infantile development 37 thoughts: arise from writing 11;
“squiggle games” 77 common property 6, 140;
Standard Edition of the Complete experience transformed into 120;
Psychological Works of Sigmund meaning of 54; repressed 142;
Freud 13 thinking one’s own 128, 175;
Steiner, J. 34 thinking, overwhelmed by 175;
Stoppard, T. 76–7 unconscious 39, 171; unthinkable
Strachey, J. 12, 13, 41 120, 175; verbally symbolized 120,
structural model 19, 35, 53, 102; 172; versus thinking 35, 54
replaced by Fairbairn 55; residue in Tinbergen, N. 43
Loewald 149 topographical model 102, 158, 177
Studies in Hysteria 6, 140–1 Tower, L.E. 158–9
sub-organizations of the personality 52, transference: agency of 74; as a clinical
55, 60, 71 theory 158; experiencing for first
superego: atonement 149–50, 152, time 41; more verb than noun 40; as
153; critical agency 60; documents phantasy 40, 54; as phantasying 40,
parricide 149; identification 140, 54; situation 40; way of thinking for
149; internal agency 156; the first time an emotional event
internalization 149, 151, 156, 167, 40, 41
168; internal object 52; introjection transference-countertransference:
149; metamorphosis 149; resolution aliveness and deadness of 32; and
of Oedipus Complex 150, 153; conscious and unconscious
split–off part of ego 19, 53, 60 emotional shifts in 175; impasses 26;
Sutherland, J.D. 56 love in 160, 161, 163–4, 168; oedipal
symbolic equation 45 176; oedipal love in 160–1, 168; role
Symington, N. 56 of 79; between reality and fantasy
199
Index
161; Searles on 157–77; truth, need sub-organizations of the self 53;
for in 176; understanding and thinking 4, 35, 38–42, 44, 45, 46, 48,
interpreting 157; Winnicott on 79 50–1, 52, 54; thoughts 39;
transitional incestuous object topographical model of 177
relationship 152–55, 156 “Unconscious identification” 157, 158,
transitional phenomena 91, 161 169–74
trauma theory 58 unintegration 9–10, 82–3, 84, 89
traumatic experience 56–7, 58
“the transference situation” 40 Vargos Llosa, M. 6
transmutation: atonement in 150; of
oedipal parents 150 waking: and dreaming 134
Tresan, D. 106 waking-life: child’s introduction to 88;
Trilling, L. 107 adult’s experience of 88n; dream and
triumph: and control and contempt 31; 135–6
dream of 74; Klein 31n; mania 26, “The waning of the Oedipus complex”
28; versus despair 28 138–56
truth: evading the 135; human need for Winnicott–Bion era: dreams in 39;
50, 158, 176; of one’s experience 50, Isaacs 40; of psychoanalysis 39;
54; and phantasying 50, 51; -seeking transition to 54; ways of thinking
51; “the” 104; of what is 106–7, 136 39–40
Winnicott, D.W.: aliveness and
“The unconscious” 12 deadness 31; analytic frame 81–2;
unconscious: communications 157; and analytic relationship 79; analytic
consciousness 173–4, 176–7; technique 83–4; analytic theory 31,
differentiation from conscious 102, 45, 55, 77, 79, 89–90; being alive 90;
134, 177; differentiation from “bits and pieces” 83–5, 89; “brakes”
preconscious 14, 29; dynamic 169; on fantasies, putting 48, 144;
endopsychic structures 60; fantasy “complications” 92; “coincidences”
79, 140, 159; incestuous wishes 14; 92–3, 94–5; creation versus discovery
internal object relations 13, 17, 19, 91; creativity 93; depression, theory
24, 25, 31, 60, 69; internal object of 79–81; dreams of children 87–8;
world 5, 28–9, 33, 71; Fairbairn’s external reality 93–4; Fairbairn 9, 56;
view of 55, 63; Freud’s view of 18, fantasy 93–4; “the fear of
41–2, 88, 177; identification 22, 80, breakdown” 4, 40–1; hallucination
157, 158, 169–74; Klein’s structure 89, 91, 93, 94; hate 81–2; illusion 91,
of 19n; mental activity 41; mental 92, 94–5; integration and
content 42; mental life 43, 45, 54; unintegration 9–10, 82–3, 84, 85, 89;
the O of the 115; object-loss 15; internal object world 31;
phantasy 35–54, 58; and interpretation 83–4; Isaacs 4, 9,
preconscious 88; psychic content 41, 38–41; language, use of 76, 79, 81,
54; psychic reality 8, 41–2, 44; 84–9, 87n, 90–2, 94; life and art 96;
psychological work 45, 120, 157, “live an experience together” 89–90,
175; repressed 14; self–reflection 42, 93; maternal provision 92;
45; split-off part of ego 17, 19, 25; “methodology” 78; mother 38, 78,
split-off parts of the personality 85, 89–95; mother-infant as single
11–12; symbolic functioning unit 38, 89–95; playfulness of 77–8,
44; structural model of 19; 82; primary maternal preoccupation
200
Index
153; “Primitive emotional transference-countertransference 79;
development” 2, 76–96; primitive transitional phenomena 91, 161;
love 3; psychological life, voice of 77–8; “Winnicott–Bion” era
development of 38, 90; reading 1, 2, 39–40, 54; word object 3; writing of
3, 41, 76–96; “squiggle games” 77; 2, 3, 9, 76–7, 79, 81–2, 84–9, 87n,
thinking of 9; transference 40; 90–2, 95–6
201