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Psychoanalysis is the revelation of unconscious relations,
in a systematic way through an associative process. The fundamental subject matter of psychoanalysis is the unconscious patterns
of life revealed through the analysand's (the patient's) free associations. The analyst 's goal is to help liberate the analysand
from unexamined or unconscious barriers of transference and resistance, that is, past patterns of relatedness that are no longer
serviceable or that inhibit freedom.
Psychoanalysis was first devised in Vienna in the 1890s by Sigmund Freud, a doctor interested in finding an effective treatment for patients
with neurotic or hysterical symptoms. As a result of talking with these patients Freud came to believe that their
problems stemmed from culturally unacceptable, thus repressed and unconscious
desires and fantasies of a sexual nature. Since Freud's day psychoanalysis has
developed in many ways, and there are various different schools as well.
The basic method of psychoanalysis is the transference and resistance analysis of free association. The patient, in a relaxed posture, is directed to say whatever comes to mind. Dreams, hopes, wishes, and fantasies are of interest, as are recollections of early family life.
Generally the analyst simply listens, making comments only when, in his or her professional judgment, an opportunity for insight on the part of the patient
arises. In listening, the analyst attempts to maintain an attitude of empathic neutrality , a nonjudgmental stance designed to
create a safe environment. The analyst asks that the analysand speak with utter honestly about whatever comes to awareness while
interpreting the patterns and inhibitions that appear in the patient's speech and other behavior.
Although psychoanalytic techniques have been used in a few cases to successfully treat psychosis (with great effort and major sacrifice on the part of the analyst), psychoanalysis is generally thought
by analysts to be useful as a method in cases of neurosis and with character or
personality problems. Psychoanalysis is most useful in dealing with ingrained problems of intimacy and relationship and for those
problems in which established patterns of life are problematic. As a therapeutic treatment, psychoanalysis generally takes three
to five meeting a week and requires the amount of time for natural or normal maturational change (three to seven years).
Psychoanalysis is:
- A therapeutic technique for the treatment of neurosis.
- A technique used to train psychoanalysts. A basic requirement of
psychoanalytic training is to undergo a successful analysis.
- A scientific technique of critical observation. The successors and contemporaries of Freud: Carl Jung, Alfred Adler, Wilhelm Reich, Melanie Klein, Wilfred Bion, Jacques
Lacan, and many others have refined Freud's theories and advanced new theories using the basic method of quiet critical
observation and study of individual patients and other events.
- A body of knowledge so acquired.
- A clinical theory. See, for example, http://www.sdp.org/sdp/papers/wynn_ess.html
- A movement, particularly as led by Freud, to secure and defend acceptance of
the theories and techniques.
Today psychoanalytic ideas are imbedded in the culture, especially in childcare, education, literary criticism, and in psychiatry, particularly
medical and non-medical psychotherapy. Though there is a mainstream of evolved
analytic ideas, there are groups who more specifically follow the precepts of one or more of the later theoreticians.
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