
Psychiatric News June 18, 2004
Volume 39 Number 12
© 2004 American Psychiatric Association
p. 34
Analysts Urged to Consider Couch Replacement
Joan Arehart-Treichel
Two techniques to make psychoanalysis more fruitfula face-to-face
encounter and "free associating" on paperwere proposed at
the annual meeting of the American Academy of Psychoanalysis and Dynamic
Psychiatry.
One technique of psychoanalysis is to get patients to tell their life
stories as freely as possible. Thus, analysts might be wise to try two
techniques to achieve this aim, at least with certain patients. One is a
face-to-face encounter instead of using the couch. The other is having
patients "free associate" on
paper.
These two methods were proposed at the annual meeting of the American
Academy of Psychoanalysis and Dynamic Psychiatry, held in New York City April
29 to May 2the former by David Forrest, M.D., a clinical professor of
psychiatry at Columbia University, and the latter by Sharon Farber, Ph.D., an
analyst with the New York School of Psychoanalysis.
The psychoanalysis couch is symbolic, Forrest pointed out. Some patients
may think of it as a womb, a crib, a sexual nest, an operating-room table, or
a coffin. And some analysts may view it as a shield. Freud reputedly used a
couch because he couldn't stand to have his patients look at him.
But is the couch really ideal for a good analysis? This subject is
especially crucial at this time, Forrest said, since the American Academy of
Psychoanalysis and Dynamic Psychiatry has now been joined by dynamic
psychiatrists who are curious about it.
The couch is supposed to promote regression in the patient, sort of a
hypnotic regression, Forrest explained. But is the patient really able to
describe what is happening to him, or has happened to him, in such a state?
Forrest has his doubts. He also thinks that use of the couch may inhibit some
patients from divulging their deepest sexual secrets and yearnings.
Couch Fosters Power Position
"The couch is seen as a way of putting the patient's feet to the
fire," he said. "It may not be a rack, but it is a position of
power for the analyst."
Thus, analysts might consider replacing use of the couch with a
face-to-face analysis, at least in certain situations, Forrest
proposednot just because it might eliminate some of the more negative
aspects of using the couch, but because it would make the patient's and
analyst's facial expressions accessible to each other. And access to affect
would undoubtedly enrich communication between patient and analyst and promote
analysis.
Yet an alternative to couch analysis and direct face-to-face analysis,
Forrest said, is to have the patient sit in a chair across from that of the
analyst, but tilt the two chairs slightly to avoid a total facial
confrontation between patient and analyst. Such an arrangement would
presumably enhance communication between patient and analyst without either
feeling threatened by the other.
All in all, Forrest implied, a decision to use the couch or to go it face
to face should probably be influenced by a patient's preference. In fact, he
has found that college students in analysis may want to alternate lying down
with sitting up. His most mobile patient, he said, is a college student with
bipolar disorder.
Encouraging Free Association
Certainly Freud used verbal free association to get patients to disclose
emotionally painful memories, Farber reported, and it has become a fundamental
of psychoanalysis. But getting a patient to "free associate" is
not always easy, she reminded her audience. So are there ways other than
verbal free association to get patients to open up about painful memories?
Asking the patient to write down whatever comes to mind is one possibility,
she advised. "Writing is a way of communicating to the self what has
been repressed," she said. The analyst can then interpret what was
written.
Writing, of course, has been found to be helpful in some types of
psychotherapies other than analysis, Farber pointed out, for example, in
psychotherapy for trauma survivors. Farber has introduced writing into her
group therapy for compulsive eaters.
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