Abstract
In this autobiographical sketch, I describe the influences that contributed to my ideas in psychoanalysis as well as the implications that the modular-transformational model of the organization of the psyche has for psychopathology and for treatment. I examine subtypes of depression and of pathological mourning, and how they require specific interventions. I review what type of needs (attachment, narcissistic, protection, psychobiological regulation, erotic) each participant satisfies for the other in the analytic relationship, as well as the meetings and clashes between the needs and wishes of the members of the dyad. I differentiate between attachment and intimacy and the various ways each subject feels intimacy is achieved. I discuss the need to deconstruct the psychopathological categories and replace them with configurations that combine different elements.
Notes
1 For a detailed discussion of this topic see Bleichmar (Citation1996, Citation2004, Citation2010) and Abelin-Sas (Citation2008).
2 See Lichtenberg et al. (Citation2011) for their updated version to motivational systems.
3 See the clinical example in Bleichmar (Citation2004).
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Hugo Bleichmar
Hugo Bleichmar, M.D., is a member of the Argentinean Psychoanalytic Association and Director of the Postgraduate Program in Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy at the Pontificia Comillas University in Madrid, Spain.