Unconscious redirection of feelings from one person to another.
the unconscious tendency to assign to others in one's present environment feelings and attitudes associated with significance in one's early life
Client dependency refers to a client's excessive reliance on a therapist for emotional support and decision-making. Countertransference refers to a therapist's emotional response to a client that is often unconscious and based on the therapist's own unresolved issues or past experiences. Both client dependency and countertransference can impact the therapeutic relationship and effectiveness of therapy.
Transference issues may manifest as participants projecting feelings or experiences onto the facilitator, while countertransference may occur when the facilitator projects their own unresolved feelings or experiences onto the participants. This can impact the dynamic of the group and hinder effective communication and understanding. Addressing transference and countertransference requires self-awareness, boundaries, and open communication.
He would listen, watch for signs of transference and avoid counter-transference. Then he would keep listening.
The act or process of transferring.
Transference is important in psychoanalytic treatment because it provides insight into a patient's unconscious thoughts, feelings, and conflicts. By recognizing and exploring transference reactions, the therapist and patient can gain a deeper understanding of the patient's past experiences and relationships, leading to greater self-awareness and potential for growth and healing.
Irving Steingart has written: 'A thing apart' -- subject(s): Countertransference (Psychology), Philosophy, Psychoanalysis, Transference (Psychology)
Enrique Racker has written: 'Transference and counter-transference' -- subject(s): Counter-transference (Psychology), Transference (Psychology)
Glen O. Gabbard has written: 'Management of countertransference with borderline patients' -- subject(s): Borderline personality disorder, Countertransference (Psychology), Methods, Psychotherapy, Therapy, Treatment 'Gabbard's Treatments of Psychiatric Disorders, Fourth Edition (Treatments of Psychiatric Disorders)' 'Cinema e psichiatria' 'Textbook of psychoanalysis' -- subject(s): Textbooks, Psychoanalysis, Methods, Psychoanalytic Theory 'Professionalism in psychiatry' -- subject(s): Professional Competence, Professional-Patient Relations, Practice, Professional Practice, Standards, Professional ethics, Psychiatry, Physician and patient, Professional Ethics 'Family experiences' -- subject(s): Public speaking, Public opinion, Parents of children with disabilities 'Love and Hate in the Analytic Setting' -- subject(s): Love, Transference (Psychology), Hate, Psychoanalysis, Psychotherapist and patient, Professional-Patient Relations, Psychoanalytic Therapy, Countertransference (Psychology) 'The Psychology of the Sopranos'
The general concept has to do with transference and countertransference. Tis involves the client or the therapist perceiving the personality and attributes to the other because of past history with other people and relationships.
Arthur Robbins has written: 'Pratt Institute Creative Arts Therapy Review' 'The Artist As Therapist' -- subject(s): Art therapy 'Creative art therapy' -- subject(s): Art therapy, Case studies, Child psychiatry, Creativeness 'Between Therapists' -- subject(s): Case studies, Countertransference (Psychology), Professional-Patient Relations, Psychotherapist and patient, Psychotherapists, Supervision of, Transference (Psychology)
Amine Azar has written: 'Freud, les femmes, l'amour' -- subject(s): Freudian Theory, Psychology, Transference (Psychology), Women
Harold F. Searles has written: 'Collected Papers on Schizophrenia and Related Subjects (Maresfield Library)' 'Collected papers on schizophrenia and related subjects' -- subject(s): Schizophrenia 'My work with borderline patients' -- subject(s): Borderline personality disorders, Countertransference (Psychology), Personality disorders, Psychoanalysis, Psychoanalytic Therapy, Psychotherapist and patient, Transference (Psychology), Treatment, Borderline personality disorder, Personality Disorders 'The Nonhuman Environment' -- subject(s): Effect of environment on, Environment, Human beings, Schizophrenia
Countertransference - 2008 was released on: USA: 28 March 2008 (Columbia University Film Festival)
Otto F. Kernberg has written: 'Love relations' -- subject(s): Love, Object relations (Psychoanalysis), Psychoanalysis 'Internal World and External Reality Object Relations Theory Applied' 'Objektbeziehungen und Praxis der Psychoanalyse' 'Severe personality disorders' -- subject(s): Borderline personality disorder, Diagnosis, Methods, Narcissism, Personality disorders, Psychotherapy, Therapy, Personality Disorders 'Aggressivity, narcissism, and self-destructiveness in the psychotherapeutic relationship' -- subject(s): Countertransference (Psychology), Pathological Psychology, Personality disorders, Psychoanalytic Therapy, Psychology, Pathological, Psychotherapy, Therapy, Transference (Psychology), Treatment 'Ideologia, Conflicto Y Liderazgo En Grupos Y Organizaciones'
Robert Obojski is known for writing a book titled "Project Beta: The Story of Paul Bennewitz, National Security, and the Creation of a Modern UFO Myth." In this book, Obojski explores the intersection of UFO sightings, government cover-ups, and conspiracy theories surrounding the topic.
The Time of the Transference was created in 1986.
Transference is a phenomenon in psychology characterized by unconscious redirection of feelings of one person to another. For instance, one could mistrust somebody who resembles an ex-spouse in manners, voice or external appearance; or be overly compliant to someone who resembles a childhood friend. In a therapy context, transference refers to redirection of a client's feelings from a significant person to a therapist. Counter-transference is defined as redirection of a therapist's feelings toward a client, or more generally as a therapist's emotional entanglement with a client. Transference was first described by Freud, who acknowledged its importance for psychoanalysis for better understanding of the patient's feelings. Transference is often manifested as an erotic attraction towards a therapist. It's also common for people to transfer feelings from their parents to their partners (emotional incest) or to children (cross-generational entanglements). Although transference is often characterized as a useful tool for building trust between a client and a therapist, transference can also interfere with a therapist