ABSTRACT

This chapter describes certain Jungian concepts related to integration and repair. Fundamental to this is Jung ‘s concept of the self which Fordham has made the basis of his model of development. To Jung’s notion of the self as an integrator and organiser of experience, Fordham has added the idea that the self divides up, or deintegrates. Three corollaries of Fordham’s model, pertaining to whole and part objects and the depressive position, are amplified through infant studies.

Clinical material from the treatment of a pigeon-phobic adolescent is presented, which attempts to demonstrate that a significant part of what the phobia represented was an infantile state of projective and introjective identification with an anxious mother. Treatment facilitated actions of the self that contributed to the integration of the experiences represented by the pigeons, so that what had been split off became a deintegrate capable of being reintegrated. The focus of this chapter is on the developmental as well as the pathological. Both are conceived in relation to the treatment.