ABSTRACT

There comes a point for some patients in psychoanalytic therapy when they experience the treatment as a threat. Often this occurs early on when the vulnerability so necessary to the process feels dangerous to them. Rather than risk a relationship with the analyst they demur, disengage, and assume a “resistant” stance. The analyst may be disoriented, frustrated and perhaps even despairing. A protracted impasse may result. This chapter explores this form of cotransference from the perspective of ISP as being characterized by the interaction of the patient’s and the analyst’s fears of failure and longings for success. With the aid of a dramatic case illustration, the authors show how these reciprocally interacting needs and dreads contribute to the development of treatment impasses as well as opportunities for effective interpretation and therapeutic change.