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Original Article

The unreachable object? Difficulties and paradoxes in the analytical relationship with borderline patients

Pages 585-606 | Accepted 09 Sep 2011, Published online: 31 Dec 2017
 

Abstract

The author investigates the main difficulties the analyst encounters in borderline patient analysis, focusing on the specific way in which such patients put the analyst’s mental functioning to the test and highlighting the most salient elements of the transference–countertransference dynamic. The author picks out several of the paradoxes that characterize the analytical relationship with these patients, who are constantly seeking contact with the object, which is inevitably traumatic for them. On the basis of highly detailed clinical material, the author demonstrates how – no matter which theoretical–clinical model is adopted – a specific technical problem with these patients is how to manage their intense destructiveness. With these patients, countertransferential difficulties are inevitably predominant because of the looming threat of the destruction of the analytical relationship. Maintaining a balance between the recognition–legitimization of primary narcissistic mirroring needs and the recognition–control of narcissistic demands and attacks on the analytical link is as crucial as it is complex. The paper examines the most important therapeutic and anti‐therapeutic factors, highlighting the importance of countertransference analysis and self‐analysis as ways of accessing as yet unrepresented elements of the patient and analyst respectively. Particular attention is given to the role played by the analyst’s subjectivity and to the enactment.

1. Translated by Harriet Cooper.

1. Translated by Harriet Cooper.

Notes

1. Translated by Harriet Cooper.

2. Translator’s note: That is, his wife conceived his child without consulting him. In the Italian used by the patient, this act is expressed as a ‘betrayal’.

3. Translator’s note: literally, the ‘flower in his buttonhole’.

4. Ferro uses this term to refer to the process of the development of the baby’s apparatus for thinking, which is the outcome of a felicitous meeting between the infant’s raw sensory experience (roughly speaking, Bion’s so‐called beta elements) and maternal reverie (the so‐called alpha function, the dreamer–creator function of the mind).

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