ABSTRACT

Secret wishes, forbidden pleasures, and painful memories hide below the false bottom of consciousness. How do we decipher the desire and pleasure located between the words spoken in psychotherapeutic treatment, and how can we identify and interpret them? This book, following the author's previous work which focused mainly on Lacanian theory, is dedicated to the practice of psychological treatment. Given its general clarity, the book can also be useful to those who are not deeply versed in Lacanian thinking.



How does one interpret symptoms, dreams, and other expressions of the unconscious? What is transference, and how is it put to work in treatment? How do we work with anxiety, depression, suicidal tendencies and other types of distress? What is the Lacanian approach to these things? How does diagnosis relate to how we orient the treatment? And, finally, what is the secret of termination of the treatment, which happens to coincide with the analyst's training process?

chapter Chapter One|28 pages

Ethical foundations

chapter Chapter Two|19 pages

The clinic as a symbolic space

chapter Chapter Three|7 pages

Transference

chapter Chapter Four|9 pages

Symptom

chapter Chapter Five|8 pages

Trauma, anguish, and depression

chapter Chapter Six|11 pages

Clinical structures as subject positions

chapter Chapter Seven|5 pages

The end of treatment