ABSTRACT

This book describes a series of cases where the child’s presenting complaint is seen to be the expression of an underlying emotional conflict that the child expects the parents to understand and help him or her to overcome. The parents’ interpretation of the child’s symptoms cannot but be influenced by their own previous life experiences and if their eventual response does not meet the child’s anxiety, the child feels misunderstood and the physical complaint remains unchanged. When seeing child and parents in a consultation, an attempt is made to discover the unconscious fantasy that underlies the presenting physical complaint, and also to investigate what led the parents to approach their child in the particular manner that, in practice, perpetuated the symptom. The proposal is put forward that the symptom can be seen as a language, a manner of expressing an underlying emotional anxiety. Once the therapist formulates this message in words the child can understand, and helps the parents to understand their response to the child, it becomes possible for the parents to approach the child in a more effective manner – and the symptom disappears.

chapter |7 pages

Jeremy

chapter |9 pages

Andrew

chapter |4 pages

Thomas

chapter |5 pages

Charles*

chapter |5 pages

Paul

chapter |10 pages

Claude

chapter |3 pages

Wendy

chapter |6 pages

Dorothy

chapter |13 pages

Jane*

chapter |11 pages

Leon

chapter |4 pages

Eve

chapter |5 pages

Jennifer

chapter |3 pages

Diana

chapter |3 pages

Alex

chapter |8 pages

Angela*

chapter |6 pages

Henry

chapter |4 pages

Peter

chapter |3 pages

Gloria

chapter |12 pages

Carol*

chapter |10 pages

Mandy

chapter |9 pages

Fatima

chapter |4 pages

Daniel*

chapter |2 pages

Peter

chapter |2 pages

Mark

chapter |2 pages

Summing Up