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Attachment and Trauma in Object Relations Family & Couple Therapy Family Therapy Institute of Firenze April, 2005 David E. Scharff, M. D. Jill Savege Scharff, M. D. International Psychotherapy Institute
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Affect Development and Therapy (Schore) Early right brain development Entrainment Importance of affect match and mis- match in family & couple relationship
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Attachment Theory (Bowlby, Ainsworth) Types: Secure Insecure - Resistant Insecure - Ambivalent Disorganized/Disoriented (Traumatic)
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Attachment Theory (Bowlby, Ainsworth) Adult attachment (Main) Attachment in couples Matching different attachment styles Separations and reunions Therapist and separation
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Fonagy, Jurist, Gergely & Target 2003 Transformation of Attachment Theory to Theory of Growth of Mind –Mentalizing –Reflective Function –Interpersonal Interpretive Mechanisms –Regulation of Affect –Development of the Self
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Evolutionary Function of Attachment Bowlby: Survival in the wild Fonagy et al: Building a mind that knows itself and others
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Social Origin of Affect Regulation From Co-Regulation to Self-Regulation Developmental Schema of Affect Regulation –Co-Regulation: Marking, contingency, coupling Marking as contingent and the same 0-3 months –Shift in infant’s preference at 3 months: Now wants Non-Contingent “Nearly the same, but clearly not the same” response from mother –Mother down regulates negative affect
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1 st & 2 nd Order Affects Tompkins, Ekman Universal Primary Emotions: Happiness, sadness, anger, fear, disgust, surprise –Recognizable from facial expressions, vocal signs Secondary Affects –More complex, subtle –Shame, Pleasure, Envy, etc.
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Genetics vs. Social Environment Previous Studies: Most variance due to genetic endowment Fonagy’s argument: Studies have use wrong environment. –The right environment is the early mental interaction that grows a mind to filter and give meaning to experience –Risk or protection for expression of genes –Example: Suomi’s ADD monkeys
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Reflective Function in Childhood A control system Psychic Equivalence Pretend Mode Playfulness and Alternate Views to Child’s Own Mind Trauma constricts playfulness and increases prevalence of psychic equivalence
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Playing with Pretend Mode Sensitization Building Representations State Regulation Communication Mentalizing –Cognitive advances at Oedipal phase
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Agency of the Self Physical – Somatization of Affect Social Teleological – about 1 year Intentional – 18-24 months Represenational/Autobiographical – 3-4 years
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Playing with Reality Marking and Affect Mirroring Marking of Non-Consequentiality Decoupling from Reality Empathy and Pretend Play Importance of “False Belief” Pretend Mode in Psychotherapy
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Reading one’s own and another’s mind
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Complex Attachments in Couples (Fisher & Crandell 2001) Secure & Secure Secure & Insecure: Preoccupied Man & Secure Woman Preoccupied Woman & Secure Man Dismissive & Dismissive Preoccupied & Preoccupied Good Relationship At Risk Low Risk At Risk
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Two-dimensional, four-category model of adult attachment (Bartholomew, Henderson & Dutton, 2001)
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The dynamics of the secure attachment system (Bartholomew, Henderson & Dutton, 2001)
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Attachment & Psychoanalytic Therapy Verbal Exchange is also Exchange of Affect Marking “Not for real” in pretend mode Attunement...
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Attachment & Psychoanalytic Therapy (continued) Emotional regulation Sensitive pointing to internal states Establishment of 2 nd order representations Adaptation & transformation of affect through externalization
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Attachment & Couple Therapy Reading of one’s own and partner’s mind Regulation of affective states Transforming 1 st Order into 2 nd Order Affects Changing the dynamics of mirroring: –From escalations of augmenting the “same” into down-regulation of “nearly the same, but clearly not the same.”...
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Attachment & Couple Therapy (continued) Moving through Holding to Containment Using playfulness to move from psychic equivalence to pretend mode Increase Non-Consequentiality, De-Coupling Move from expressions in the body to increase couple’s reflective function...
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Attachment & Couple Therapy (continued) Improve the Couple’s holding and containment to improve shared mentalizing
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Attachment & Abuse Bartholomew, Henderson & Dutton 2001 Risk of Being Abused Secure Dismissing Preoccupied Fearful No Abuse Leaves Abusive Partner At Risk Lower Risk (unless also Preoccupied)
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Attachment & Abuse Bartholomew, Henderson & Dutton 2001 Risk of Perpetrating Abuse Secure Dismissive Preoccupied Fearful Low Risk Likely to Leave Potential Violence/Abuse Not Demanding ? Low Risk
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Attachment & Abuse Bartholomew, Henderson & Dutton 2001 Research Findings on Abusive Couples Preoccupied Men & Preoccupied Women (most common pattern) Preoccupied Men & Fearful Women (a stereotype of abuse) Fearful Men & Preoccupied Women (mutual abuse; more female perpetrators)
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References Clulow, C. (2001). Adult Attachment and Couple Psychotherapy. New York and London: Brunner/Routledge. Fonagy, P., Gergely, G., Jurist, E., Target, M. (2003) Affect Regulation, Metalization, and the Development of the Self. New York: Other Press. Scharff, D. E. and Scharff, J. S. (1991). Object Relations Couple Therapy. Northvale, NJ: Jason Aronson. Scharff, J. S. and Scharff, D. E. (1998). Object Relations Individual Therapy. Northvale, NJ: Jason Aronson. Scharff, D. E. and Scharff, J. S. (eds.) (In Preparation) Treating Relationships: Advances in Object Relations Couple and Family Therapy.
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IPI David E. Scharff, M. D. Jill Savege Scharff, M. D. © 2005
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