Transference Theory
The Role of Transference in the Psychoanalytic Cure So long as it is positive it serves us admirably.
Transference theory. The way the patient related to their psychoanalyst was the same as and based on their relationship with their mother. Transference is never impartial it is either positive or negative. In cases where the transference.
5282019 Transference occurs when a person redirects some of their feelings or desires for another person to an entirely different person. Transference is when a client unconsciously projects onto their therapists past feelings desires expectation or attitudes they had toward their caregivers or significant people in their lives Corey. 5202018 Transference means that a person superimposes something previous onto something current with the goal of healing.
Origin of the Concept of Transference Viennese psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud first identified the phenomenon of transference in 1901 when he worked with a client called Dora. I Have Transference To Someone In My Life. 9252019 Transference is a psychology term used to describe a phenomenon in which an individual redirects emotions and feelings often unconsciously from one person to another.
In psychoanalytic theory transference occurs when a client projects feelings about someone else particularly someone encountered in childhood onto her therapist. The patient transfers unconscious ideas about a figure from the past onto the person of the physician and also noted that this compul- sion or illusion melted away with the conclusion of the. In hindsight he realised that the reason she had not completed treatment with him was that he had failed to recognise that she saw him as a father figure.
7282015 Exponents of the psychodynamic talking therapies suggest that transference is the process that occurs within the context of the therapeutic relationship as the client interacts with the therapist and visa-versa counter transference. In psychology transference is described as a situation that occurs when an individuals emotions and expectations toward one person are unconsciously redirected toward another person. Frequently spoken about in reference to the therapeutic relationship the classic example of sexual transference is falling in love with ones therapist.
Almost from the beginning of his interest in the psycho-neuroses Freud felt uncomfortable with the use of hypnosis as a treatment. In the beginning Freud considered transference as a huge obstacle in the therapeutic process. To other major theory clusters such as humanisticexperi-ential or cognitivebehavioral its importance ranges from modest to trivial p.
