Attachment and Trauma in Object Relations Family & Couple Therapy Family Therapy Institute of...

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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

Transcript of Attachment and Trauma in Object Relations Family & Couple Therapy Family Therapy Institute of...

Attachment and Trauma in Object Relations

Family & Couple Therapy

Family Therapy Institute of FirenzeApril, 2005

David E. Scharff, M. D.Jill Savege Scharff, M. D.

International Psychotherapy Institute

Affect Development and Therapy (Schore)

• Early right brain development• Entrainment• Importance of affect match and mis-

match in family & couple relationship

Figure 1

Figure 2

Figure 3

Attachment Theory (Bowlby, Ainsworth)

• Types:

Secure

Insecure - Resistant

Insecure - Ambivalent

Disorganized/Disoriented (Traumatic)

Attachment Theory (Bowlby, Ainsworth)

• Adult attachment (Main)

• Attachment in couplesMatching different attachment styles

Separations and reunions

Therapist and separation

Fonagy, Jurist, Gergely & Target2003

• Transformation of Attachment Theory to Theory of Growth of Mind– Mentalizing– Reflective Function– Interpersonal Interpretive Mechanisms– Regulation of Affect– Development of the Self

Evolutionary Function of Attachment

• Bowlby: Survival in the wild

• Fonagy et al: Building a mind that knows itself and others

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

1st & 2nd 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.

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

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

Playing with Pretend Mode

• Sensitization• Building Representations• State Regulation• Communication• Mentalizing

– Cognitive advances at Oedipal phase

Agency of the Self

• Physical – Somatization of Affect• Social• Teleological – about 1 year• Intentional – 18-24 months• Represenational/Autobiographical – 3-4

years

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

Reading one’s own

and

another’s mind

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

• Low Risk

• At Risk

Two-dimensional, four-category model of adult attachment

(Bartholomew, Henderson & Dutton, 2001)

The dynamics of the secure attachment system

(Bartholomew, Henderson & Dutton, 2001)

Attachment & Psychoanalytic Therapy

• Verbal Exchange is also Exchange of Affect

• Marking

• “Not for real” in pretend mode

• Attunement . . .

Attachment & Psychoanalytic Therapy (continued)

• Emotional regulation

• Sensitive pointing to internal states

• Establishment of 2nd order representations

• Adaptation & transformation of affect through externalization

Attachment & Couple Therapy

• Reading of one’s own and partner’s mind

• Regulation of affective states

• Transforming 1st Order into 2nd 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.” . . .

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 . . .

Attachment & Couple Therapy(continued)

• Improve the Couple’s holding and containment to improve shared mentalizing

Attachment & AbuseBartholomew, Henderson & Dutton 2001

Risk of Being Abused

• Secure • Dismissing • Preoccupied • Fearful

• No Abuse• Leaves Abusive

Partner• At Risk• Lower Risk (unless

also Preoccupied)

Attachment & AbuseBartholomew, Henderson & Dutton 2001

Risk of Perpetrating Abuse

• Secure

• Dismissive

• Preoccupied

• Fearful

• Low Risk

• Likely to Leave

• Potential Violence/Abuse

• Not Demanding? Low Risk

Attachment & AbuseBartholomew, 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)

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.

IPI

David E. Scharff, M. D.Jill Savege Scharff, M. D.

© 2005