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Moving Out – Disruption and Repair to the Internal Setting
Author(s) -
Bridge Marie
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
british journal of psychotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.442
H-Index - 17
eISSN - 1752-0118
pISSN - 0265-9883
DOI - 10.1111/bjp.12043
Subject(s) - psychology , shame , meaning (existential) , relocation , identity (music) , metaphor , social psychology , internal conflict , unconscious mind , grandiosity , psychoanalysis , frame (networking) , distancing , psychotherapist , aesthetics , linguistics , law , narcissism , philosophy , pathology , computer science , telecommunications , covid-19 , political science , programming language , medicine , disease , politics , infectious disease (medical specialty)
Relocation can profoundly disturb the analyst's identity. When the analyst temporarily forgoes aspects of the external frame this can damage the internal setting. The author describes her experience of relocating from London to another English region where there were very few potential colleagues. Although papers exist on the impact of relocation on the patient, very little has been written on the impact of relocating on the analyst. The author links a relatively minor relocation with larger scale migration and with the leaving home of an adolescent, both representing trauma as well as achievement, as discussed in particular by the G rinbergs. She explores how the meaning of relocation differs from other circumstances in which the analyst disrupts the analysis. She distinguishes between guilt towards the patients she has to leave and shame and guilt in relation to the analyst's own ideals. She discusses the impact of this turmoil on her internal analytic identity, in particular how the loss of the familiar external frame and the external setting disturbs the analyst's internal setting. Clinical examples illustrate patients' unconscious perception of the disruption to the internal frame and its possible meanings for the analyst. J oseph C onrad's Heart of Darkness is used as an extended metaphor to explore the risk of grandiosity, or corruption of the superego, if the analyst becomes isolated and internally dislocated, so losing contact with sustaining internal objects.

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