Psychodynamic Family Therapy Flashcards

Review psychodynamic and contextual family therapy approaches. (22 cards)

1
Q

Transference

(Psychoanalytic)

A

Refers to when a client projects onto the therapist attributes that stem from unresolved issues with primary caregivers; therapists use the immediacy of these interactions to promote client insight.

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2
Q

Countertransference

(Psychoanalytic)

A

Refers to when therapists project back onto clients, losing their therapeutic neutrality and having strong emotional reactions to the client.

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3
Q

Interlocking Pathologies

A

In psychodynamic family therapy, this term refers to how the pathologies of individuals typically are complementary to pathologies of other members of the family.

For example, a highly person may seek out a people-pleasing partner.

An individual’s pathology reflects those family distortions and dynamics that are mutually reinforcing.

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4
Q

Attachment

(Psychoanalytic)

A

The basic human need for relationship and emotional safety. These patterns are shaped by early experiences with primary attachment objects or caretakers.

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5
Q

Self-Object Relations Patterns

(Psychoanalytic)

A

Patterns based on early experiences with primary attachment objects, particularly mothers. As a result of these experiences, external objects are experienced as ideal, rejecting, or exciting.

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6
Q

Parental Introjects

(Psychoanalytic)

A

The internalized negative aspects of parents. People internalize these attributes and unconsciously strive to make all future intimate relationships conform to them, such as when they hear a parent’s critical comments in the neutral comments of a partner.

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7
Q

Transference Between Family Members

(Psychoanalytic)

A

Involves one person projecting onto other members introjects and repressed material.

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8
Q

Defense Mechanisms

(Psychoanalytic)

A

Automatic responses to perceived psychological threats and are often activated on an unconscious level. When used periodically, defense mechanisms can be adaptive ways of coping with stress; when used regularly, they become quite problematic.

Examples include projection, splitting, repression, etc.

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9
Q

Splitting

(Psychoanalytic)

A

The more intense the anxiety resulting from frustration related to the primary caregiver, the greater the person’s need to split these objects, separating good from bad parts by repressing the rejecting and/or exciting objects, thus leaving less of the ego, or conscious self, to relate freely.

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10
Q

Projection

(Psychoanalytic)

A

Refers to falsely attributing one’s own unacceptable feelings, impulses, or wishes onto another, typically without being aware of what one is doing. Example: seeing others as greedy but not recognizing this characteristic in oneself.

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11
Q

Projective Identification

A

A psychoanalytic term in which clients defend against anxiety by projecting certain split-off or unwanted parts of themselves onto the other person, who is then manipulated (usually unconsciously) to act according to these projections.

Example: viewing a sibling as spoiled and then treating them with disdain and frustration, which in turn elicits dependent or entitled behavior from the sibling — thereby confirming the projection.

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12
Q

Repression

A

Describes the unconscious process that occurs when the superego seeks to repress the id’s innate impulses and drives. Repression is the cause of a wide range of neurotic symptoms, such as obsessions, compulsions, hallucinations, psychosomatic complaints, anxiety, and depression. Because it happens outside of awareness, repression is considered more pathological than suppression.

(Psychoanalytic)

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13
Q

Suppression

(Psychoanalytic)

A

The intentional conscious avoidance of difficult inner thoughts, feelings, and desires. When thoughtfully chosen, this defense can be very useful when facing difficult emotions over extended periods of time, such as grief, complicated loss, and so on.

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14
Q

Displacement

(Psychoanalytic)

A

Refers to unconsciously redirecting intense emotion from a threatening object to a less-threatening object. Occurs commonly in families, such as when a parent is angry with a boss or situation at work and then redirects this anger onto a partner or children.

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15
Q

Holding Environment

(Psychoanalytic)

A

A nurturing relationship between the therapist and client. Two aspects of holding in family therapy: contextual holding and centered holding.

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16
Q

Contextual Holding

A

This is about the frameboundaries and structure–that the therapist creates for the therapeutic process, including scheduling, clear therapeutic boundaries, ground rules for communication, therapeutic neutrality, etc.

17
Q

Centered Holding

A

This is the emotional and psychological presence the therapist brings moment-to-moment in session, including the ability to tolerate difficult emotions in the room, manage conflict calmly, tolerating projections without reacting, etc.

18
Q

Interpretation

A

Psychoanalytic family therapists encourage insights into interpersonal dynamics by offering interpretations to the client, such as by analyzing self-object relations.

19
Q

Working Through

(Psychoanalytic Family Therapy)

A

The process of translating insight into new action in family and other relationships. Changing one’s behavior on the basis of new insight.

20
Q

Detriangulation

(Psychoanalytic)

A

Psychoanalytic therapists identify situations in which the parents have triangulated a symptomatic child into the relationship to deflect attention away from their couple distress. Once the child’s role is made clear, the therapist dismisses the symptomatic child from therapy and proceeds to work with the couple to address the issues that created the need for the child’s symptoms.

21
Q

Eliciting

(Psychoanalytic/ Contextual therapy)

A

Uses clients’ spontaneous motives to move the family in a direction that is mutually beneficial and dialogical. The therapist facilitates this process by integrating the facts of the situation, each person’s individual psychology, and interactive transitions to help the family rework the balances of entitlement and indebtedness, helping each member to reinterpret past interactions and identify new ways to move forward.

22
Q

Family-of-Origin Therapy

(Psychoanalytic Family Therapy)

A

Three-stage model created by Framo (1992) for working with couples that involved couples therapy, couples group therapy, and family-of-origin therapy. Therapists begin working with the couple alone to increase insight into their personal and relational dynamics. Next, the couple join a couples group, where they receive feedback from other couples and also view their dynamics.

Finally, each individual member of the couple is invited to have a four-hour-long session with his or her family of origin without the other partner present. These extended family-of-origin sessions are used to clarify and work through past and present issues, thereby freeing individuals to respond to their partners and children without the “ghosts” of these past attachments.