Borderline Psychopathology and Its Treatment |
Contents
Ambivalence | 3 |
The BorderlineNarcissistic Personality | 5 |
Ambivalence or Insufficiency? | 10 |
Copyright | |
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abandonment achieved affects aggressive aloneness ambivalence theory aspects avoid awareness behavior borderline patients borderline personality borderline personality disorder borderline psychopathology child clarification clinical cohesiveness concept confrontation countertransference danger defenses described destructive devaluation developmental DSM-III dyadic emerge empathic environment evocative memory capacity experience experienced external failure fantasies fears feelings ference formation grandiosity holding introjects holding selfobject holding-soothing security hospital idealization impulses incorporation and fusion infant inner emptiness inner world intense internal involved issues Kernberg Kohut loss of self-cohesiveness maintain ment narcissistic personality disorders neurosis neurotic patients nonregressed object representations oral pathology patient and therapist phase pist positive present primitive projective identification psycho psychodynamic psychological psychotherapy qualities rage reality recognition memory regressive loss relatively response schizophrenic self-worth selfobject function Semrad separation anxiety soothing stable selfobject transferences staff subjective sense superego sustain thera therapeutic alliance therapy tion transiently transitional object treatment vulnerability Winnicott wishes