Psychotherapy

My interest is in the area of ​​the psychodynamic approach of psychotherapy, namely the object relations model. This direction was started by Melanie Klein, thats why this approach is often called Kleinian analysis.

Let me introduce you more closely to the ideas of this approach. The psychodynamic model involves building a psychotherapeutic relationship between therapist and client. A relationship in which, on the one hand, there are clear boundaries and rules, which gives security, and on the other hand, freedom within the session to be heard, to bring your own different content, to be bad and not receive condemnation. Built trusting relationships allow you to gain a new emotionally correcting experience of containment and understanding.

The object relations model suggests that the psyche consists of internal objects, which are internalized external objects: people and situations. People’s attitudes toward others and situations in their adult lives are shaped by family experiences during infancy. These images of people and events in the unconscious become objects that the self carries into adulthood, and they are used by the unconscious to predict the behavior of people in their social relationships and interactions.In a psychotherapeutic session, the client unfolds his inner world of objects through the relationship with the analyst, so this is a long-term relationship and a process that allows one to transform the client’s internal objects and world.

Any questions left?