And Then There Was Intersubjectivity: Addressing Child Self and Mutual Dysregulation During Traumatic PlayIn Memory of Louis Sander

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Version: Final published version
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Serval ID
serval:BIB_2B89B87990F3
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Title
And Then There Was Intersubjectivity: Addressing Child Self and Mutual Dysregulation During Traumatic PlayIn Memory of Louis Sander
Journal
Psychoanalytic Inquiry
Author(s)
Schechter Daniel S
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2019
Peer-reviewed
Oui
Language
english
Abstract
This article asserts that a traumatized mother, to maintain her psychobiological homeostasis, must avoid intersubjective connection with a child who
is seeking it to regulate his own distress. In this case, what Lou Sander
described as a “moment of meeting” cannot take place (Sander, 1995, p.
590). Case examples are used to illustrate how, when all are together in the
consulting room, the reflective, mutually regulating therapist can facilitate
moments of meeting between therapist, a mother who has been subjected
to interpersonal violence, and her child, who has similarly been traumatized. Furthermore, I show how the therapist, in the face of the child’s
traumatic reenactment in play that can further trigger and dysregulate
the traumatized parent, can intervene to coconstruct meaning, for both
the traumatized child and mother, obviating mother’s need to avoid the
child’s distress and post-traumatic re-experiencing. This allows meeting to
occur, reordering the implicit relational knowing of both mother and child.
Create date
19/11/2020 17:22
Last modification date
20/11/2020 7:26
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