
@article{ref1,
title="&quot;In a black hole&quot;: the (negative) space between longing and dread: Home-based psychotherapy with a traumatized mother and her infant son",
journal="Psychoanalytic study of the child, The",
year="2005",
author="Arons, Judith",
volume="60",
number="",
pages="101-127",
abstract="This paper offers fragments from the first year of a home-based mother-baby psychotherapy, in which I attempted to help a traumatized and dissociated mother to emotionally engage with her infant son. The treatment was organized in part around certain developmental objectives common to both attachment and psychoanalytic theory. These include: The ability to name and metabolize feelings, to evoke a soothing maternal introject, and to relate to the partner's mind as a separate, understandable center of initiative and intention. In addition, attachment theory, with its emphasis on the critical psychobiological role of containing fear and distress in infancy, was a useful guide in formulating the treatment. The paper reviews research findings on mother-infant pairs described as frightened-disorganized, discusses some of the challenges encountered in home-based mother-infant psychotherapy and then discusses the case of Mary and John. The case illustrates how mother-infant psychotherapy may interrupt the intergenerational transmission of disorganized attachment by working within the couple to name, metabolize and flexibly respond to painful, dissociated or frightening experiences.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0079-7308",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}