The author investigates bodily aspects of the defense organization in the treatment of a soldier suffering from a war traumatization. The patient reports two situations-a bomb attack and the subsequent confrontation with wounded comrades-that had a traumatizing impact. In the treatment process, a phase of stagnation is described before the shared attention is focused on the bodily perception of the patient. His petrified body feeling ("my body feels like concrete") was systematically examined in the therapeutic process then slowly transformed through shared perception, leading to a process of vitalizing reorganization. This method is called somatic narration. It reverses the defense processes of the encapsulated body engram. This capsule results from the threatening impact of a traumatic event, disorganizing the patient's body-self. This disorganization then is encapsulated through a process of petrification and avoidance of awareness. The therapeutic process is described in detail. The structure of the bodily unconscious is revealed. The process of reorganization of perception and memory is outlined.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00332828.2023.2237501 | DOI Listing |
Memory
August 2024
Department of Psychology, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark.
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether narrative identity challenges are specific to Bipolar Disorder (BD) as a mental illness or a reflection of living with chronic illness. Nineteen individuals diagnosed with BD, 29 individuals diagnosed with Type 1 Diabetes Mellitus (T1DM) and 25 controls without chronic mental or somatic illness identified past and future life story chapters which were self-rated on emotional tone and self-event connections and content-coded for agency and communion themes. Individuals with BD self-rated their past chapters as more negative and less positive, and their chapters were lower on content-coded agency and communion themes compared to T1DM and controls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Psychoanal
August 2023
Independent Researcher.
Besides the symbolic unconscious, psychoanalysis today investigates unconscious structures that are dissociated from mental functioning (Lombardi 2017) and encoded in bodily inscriptions. These bodily configurations often stay outside of the psychoanalytical attention and technique of treatment. Two concepts - encapsulated body engrams and somatic narration - provide a theoretical and technical proposition for the bodily encoded unconscious.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychoanal Q
September 2023
Lindenstraße 8, Saarbrücken 66128, Germany
The author investigates bodily aspects of the defense organization in the treatment of a soldier suffering from a war traumatization. The patient reports two situations-a bomb attack and the subsequent confrontation with wounded comrades-that had a traumatizing impact. In the treatment process, a phase of stagnation is described before the shared attention is focused on the bodily perception of the patient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPsychoanal Q
April 2023
Lindenstraße 8 66128 Saarbrücken.
are considered important obstacles to the psychoanalytic process. They describe elements that are beyond the reach of the symbolic network with which psychoanalysis is used to working. The emergence of unrepresented states has often been described as the failure of the caregiver to symbolize the child's emotions and thereby enable the child to connect his or her bodily states to the psychic representation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Anal Psychol
April 2023
Buenos Aires, Argentina.
This presentation attempts to show the healing potential underlying the inclusion of the patient's body in the analytic process, while honouring and revisiting the understanding of the psyche-body connection described by Jung in his early work. In addition, the author offers reflections on the impact of collective trauma whose aftermath, among others, has been the disappearance of thousands of people, consequently breaking the family genealogy, leaving hundreds of children stripped of their roots and true identity. Referencing clinical material, the author describes how the process of translation and integration-from the sensory-perceptual to the conceptual-symbolic-can be halted on account of collective trauma occurring at an early stage in development.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEnter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!