ABSTRACT
This essay describes a treatment with a young Chinese woman whom I call Lily. It deepened during the COVID pandemic when the vulnerability and tenacity of therapeutic aspiration of my patient and me brought forth a serious reckoning in me with my hitherto largely unexamined understanding and practice of psychoanalysis as “epistemological,” foregrounding knowledge, insights, and explicit verbal intervention. I became more aware of an “ontological” dimension of psychoanalytic work that emphasizes “being” and “becoming,” and asks basic questions such as “who are we,” “what are we like to each other,” and “what we could possibly be like.” For me, this changed vision of psychoanalytic work leads to a focus more on cultivating a deep human bond between the analyst and the patient and recognizing a fragile but also potentially powerful “therapeutic striving” presumably inherent in all humans. This shift in conceptual and clinical focus brought about significant change and growth both in my patient and in me.
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank the patient who generously gave me permission to use her treatment for this essay. Her identifiable info has been thoroughly disguised to ensure confidentiality and privacy. I thank my supervisor Dr. Hattie Myers for her unwavering support. The ideas of this essay were developed, to an appreciable extent, in my weekly discussions with her about clinical work and beyond during the last two years, inspired by her extraordinarily humane and attuned therapeutic approach. I thank my dear colleague and friend Dr. Richard Grose who generously lent me his expert editorial skills and unique clarity of vision. His probing questions helped bring my thoughts and ideas into sharper focus. I thank Dr. Susan Warsaw for her valuable advice on additional references and writing about clinical cases.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).