Title: Attachment and objectrelations theory.
1Attachment and object-relations theory.
- The importance of early childhood studies
Winnicott, Bowlby, Daniel Stern and
intersubjectivity
2- Psychodynamic Theory and Practice
- Course COP020M01OA
- Postgraduate Diploma in the Practice of
Counselling Psychology/MSc - School of Psychology and Therapeutic Studies,
Whitelands College
3Development of the British Object-Relations School
- 1950s great flowering of object relations as a
distinctive position within psychoanalysis - Segal, Rosenfeld and Bion laid foundations of
present Kleinian practice - Michael Balint worked from the concept of the
basic fault ( in the sense of a geological
fault)- the fit between the developing child and
the kind of care she receives
4Effective psychotherapy according to Holmes 2001
(see more later)
- Containment
- Insight
- New experience
- See if you can trace these three elements through
the work of the great attachment and self
theorists
5Attachment
- Concerned with the inter rather than the intra
6Influences on Attachment Theory
- Reaction to the ferment of object-relations
theory - A profound response to the direct observation of
infants and the growing child. See Susan Isaacs,
the play movement in education and reactions to
Truby King type methods of child-rearing
7Basic Concepts of attachment Theory
- Infant is a social being from the beginning
- Born with a propensity to socialisation.
Programmed to engage with primary caregiver - Proximity seeking behaviour (attachment) a
universal biological need and persists throughout
life - Early bonding crucial to later social
relationships - If need not met in infancy irreversible damage to
adults capacity to form affectionate bonds? (See
Storr Solitude)
8Winnicott (1896-1971)
- Belief that life is worth living in spite of the
fact that life is difficult - Emphasis on the observation of infants
- Foundation of Freud and Klein It is not
possible to be original except on the basis of
tradition
9Winnicotts Basic Assumption1
- 1. Self central to his theory but not easy to
define - central self from the beginning later to become
core of the self - The central self is defined in terms of the
growth that is already taking place in order for
a personal identity to be realised (in Davis and
Wallbridge 198142)
10Basic Assumption 1 continued
- Growth as moving and motivating force from the
beginning - A capacity to become what one is
- Central self, like the id is source of energy but
not given the same primacy as the id drives - More interested in Freuds ego psychology than
Freuds id psychology - Enriched by Kleins ideas about fantasy
11Basic assumption 2
- The fact of dependence
- No such thing as a baby- always will be a baby
and someone - Absolute dependence gives way to relative
dependence, and eventually to a state he calls
towards independence - Independence is never absolute
12A brilliant article by Winnicott
- Hate in the Counter-transference (1947) Based
on a Paper read to the British Psych-Analytic
Society on 5 February. Int. J. of Psycho-Anal.,
Vol. XXX, 1949 - Rescues W from those who would turn him into a
sentimentalist - Have a look its very reassuring!
13Bowlby (1907-1990) and the self
- Attachment intrinsic to human nature
- Adults seek out their secure base
- Thought what are the ways in which you establish
a secure base when you face a new situation?
14Bowlbys phases of attachment
- 1. Pre-attachment (birth-6 weeks) Tracking with
eyes - 2 Attachment-n-the making phase (6 weeks- 6-8
weeks) more marked orientation towards mother - 3 Clearcut attachment (6-8 months- 18-14 months)
Show separation anxiety, pursue proximity.
Concurrent with Piagets object permanancy
15Bowlby 4. reciprocal relationship
- Rapid development of language and mental
representation - Separation anxiety declines during the 3rd year
- Emphasises a positive, enduring, affectional tie
to the caregiver
16Daniel Stern
- Inferential leaps from the study of developmental
psychology to what it might be like subjectively
for the infant - Attempt at empathetic understanding where there
is no language - Of use to counselling psychologist because shows
a way of developing empathy with Simon or
Georgie, or Karen
17A Theory of Self that feels
- Cf. attempts to say objective things about a
category e.g. a pathology, or kind of presenting
problem
18Domains of self-experience emerge at a
particular time but active throughout life
- Domain One The emergent self sense of
organisation in the process of formation (within
first two months) - Properties of people and things
- Categorical affects angry, happy, sad
- Vitality affects dynamic, kinetic terms e.g.
surging, fading, explosive, crescendo
19Domain Two The core self (2-6 months)
- Development of a sense of agency as baby realises
he /she is an active agent in events - Sense that he/she has separate physical being
from mother - Sense that has states of being that belong to
him/her alone - Experience of self-with-another (dominated by eye
to eye, face to face interactions
20Domain Three The subjective self (about nine
months)
- Baby senses that has interior subjective life of
own - Sharing of subjective experience e.g. wanting to
share delight with a given object, even though
without language - Baby becomes a reader of the human heart and mind
- Sharing or non-sharing of mental states has a
profound effect on development
21Domain Four the verbal self (18 months)
- Leap into the world of words
- Play out events , past, present and future on the
stage of the mind - Dark side Language may split thought away from
emotion - Some things cant be caught with words
- Schism is confusing simple wholeness of life is
broken
22The search for a secure baseJeremy Holmes (2001)
Hove Brunner-Routledge
- Advances the idea of attachment as a therapy in
its own right - Consequently there is a distinct role for the
therapist analogous to parent figure - Integrates attachment and psychoanalytic theory
23Attachment in practice
- Atonements
- Emotional Proximity
- Forming and Maintaining the therapeutic alliance
- Challenge
- Balance ( between self and the world)
- Therapist freedom of movement
- Negative capability ( tolerance for uncertainty
and doubt) - The Thinking mind
24From Holmes Preface p xii
- Attachment theory puts the search for security
above all other psychological motivators, and
posits the attachment bond as the starting point
for survival, a precondition for all meaningful
interactions - (cf. psychoanalysis which starts from desire)
- Fairbairn (1952) Sex is a signpost to the object
25Kohut and Self Psychology (Associated with
North American School of Psychology)
- Places self at the centre of personality
- Personality develops along two narcissistic or
self-expressive lines called grandiosity and
idealisation - Single cohesive psychological structure called
the self replaces Freuds id, ego and super ego
as macrostructures of the mind
26Kohut and Freud
- Collateral rather than contradictory to Freud
- Consistent with a general theory of
psychoanalysis - Both make the mental act the fundamental
construct of theory - Similar clinical behaviour e.g. confrontation of
resistances and working through of the
transference
27BUT
- Kohuts explanation of events in the analysis of
disorders of the self varies,however, in that the
patient develops a narcissistic or self-object
transference, rather than a classic neurotic
transference (Patton and Meara 199248)
28 In 1971 Kohut argued
- Self, the content of the ego is organising centre
of the ego subject to the demands of narcissistic
libido ( a variation of ego psychology/object
relations) an effort to keep his theory
consistent with classical psychoanalysis - Not logically possible to have self as organiser
when at the same time it is an aspect of the ego
29Sohe learned from this inconsistencyand in 1977
- Abandoned classical formulations of drives and
macrostructures - Theory not now reducible to those of ego
psychology/object relations - Psycho-analytic self-psychology stand on its own
but still collateral to the classicists
30But Kohut not a humanistic version of
psychoanalysis
- Rogers doesnt subscribe to psychoanalytic
methodological principles e.g. avoids determinism - By contrast Kohut assumes antecedents of
behaviour are formative forms of adaptation
reside in early childhood, interacting with
parental figures
31Kohut uses empathy in two additional ways that
Rogers does not
- Incorpotaes the concept at a level of theory, by
making it an attribute of normal parenting - Elevates empathy as a methodological principle
vicarious introspection - Parents use empathy to understand the needs that
the childs expressive displays communicate
through his or her exhibitionistic and idealistic
actions
32The development of the self
- Born with native talents and skills, and with
self-expressive narcissistic trends that occur in
grandiosity and idealisation - Personality development is a matter of genesis
and maturation of the bi-polar self - Constituent elements of self objects are
grandiosity and idealisation
33Attempts to regain original bliss
- Child represents its experience to itself by
constructing loose, fragmented mental images - As psychological structures these images are
frail or dis-cohesive, transitory and unreliable
34The cohesive infantile self and its self-objects
(18 months)
- Self now serves as an organising centre for the
infants personality - Self is subject to break up and re-fragmentation
- No distinction between self and others- like a
part object in Freudian terms
35The mirroring self-object
- Child constructs this of the caregiver as
faithful mirror of the childs greatness - Childs self-esteem as a faithful mirror of the
childs greatness - Childs self esteem maintained in the grandiose
sector - Child only aware of the mirroring function when
the caregiver is absent
36The idealised self-object
- Child constructs an idealised self-object.
Consists of the powerful, omnipotent parent in
relation to the idealising child - Child gains from this when she feels she is in
want. I am great. You are great but then I am
part of you - Kohut maintains we need self subject/object
relations throughout our lives
37The break up of the infantile self
- Grandiose and idealising sectors of the self
normally develop into reality-based formations
which provide cohesion (transmuting
internalisation) - Infantile self-objects rearranged into different
psychological structures which are then
internalised as part of the self - Contingent on the withdrawal of the approving
parent
38The development of the self and the grandiose
sector
- Carrier of the persons ambition/initiative
- Expressed in childhood as exhibitionism
39Development of the self and the idealised sector
- Kohut 1987 normal development involves merger
with omnipotent figure, later de-idealisation.
Incorporation of the idealised self-object into
the self as an emerging pattern of goal setting
ideals - The tension gradient represents the two poles
of the self. Action-promoting tendency that
arises from an individuals ambitions and ideals
40Disturbances of the self
- Chronic or traumatic frustration of the childs
need for the mirroring self-object and/or wish
for merger with the idealised self-object - Results in defensive/ compensatory manoeuvres to
avoid painful sense of fragmentation - The earlier the defect in the self, the more
severe the adult disturbance
41Narcissism according to Kohut
- Defect in either the grandiose or the idealising
sector of the self - The defect in either sector is unusually severe
- Compensatory manoeuvres increase the healthier
parts of the self and ignore the defective parts
42Treatment of narcissism
- Persons self-esteem is extremely vulnerable
- Vulnerable client will either try to use the
counsellor as mirroring or idealising self-object
in order to resume the process of development
43Implications of intersubjectivity for counsellors
- Client/Counsellor at the intersection of two
subjectives - Problem if there is a failure to build shared
meanings - Attunement/empathy
- Implications for the use of Gestalt, body therapy
etc - Would cognitive therapies miss the point?
44More implications..
- Understanding of shared affectivity. Confirming
the feeling or idea as a shared experience - Therapist with psychotic client (mind
wanders) - Client Please dont go away
- Therapist sorry
45So what about archaeology
- Stern et al may suggest searching for the domain
that needs strengthening rather than returning to
the sensitive period as in classical Freudian
work.
46Adult attachment
- See Feeney and Noller (1996)
- About the quality of intimate adult relationships
- Quality of these relationships often a
determinant of subjective well-being - Uses Bartholomew and Horrowitz (1991) Attachment
styles amongst young adults, Journal of
Personality Social Psychology (61) p226
47Attachment styles in adulthood
- Secure
- Dismissing - (prefers not to be dependent or to
have others dependant on them) Denial of
attachment - Preoccupied - wants close intimacy but find
others reluctant to give such intimacy - Fearful Find it hard to trust
48The components of romantic love ( just in case
you didnt know)