
Rediscovering Sabina
Author(s) -
Rod Sandle
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
ata
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2253-5853
pISSN - 2253-5845
DOI - 10.9791/ajpanz.2020.10
Subject(s) - passion , psychology , balance (ability) , psychoanalysis , social psychology , criminology , neuroscience
Terror arises on the one hand from the fear of death and on the other the passion for life. In working with terror as it manifests in the transference, a challenge for the practitioner is to maintain homeostasis in its physical, intellectual, emotional and relational aspects, as terror is a strong force for tipping the balance of emotional regulation with consequences mentally and physically. This paper will explore this challenge, starting by going back to the roots of psychoanalysis and a paper written by Sabina Spielrein in 1912: “Destruction as the Cause of Coming into Being.” Building on Spielrein’s work, it will attempt to deepen understanding of her theory linking terror to the primitive sexual transference. Of particular interest is the recognition of dissociation in both patient and practitioner and working with it in the therapeutic relationship. The presence of terror and dissociation in the wider community, both currently and historically, is touched on.