## Abstract In this article, I give an overview of the “Brief Intervention Model of work with Under Fives,'' focusing on ways in which observational skills, awareness of transference and countertransference phenomena, and addressing the underlying feelings thereby conveyed, can facilitate understan
Focusing the lens: The infant's point of view. Discussion of “Brief interventions with parents, infants, and young children: A Framework for thinking”
✍ Scribed by Brigid Jordan
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 69 KB
- Volume
- 32
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0163-9641
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
This is a discussion of the article “Brief Interventions With Parents, Infants, and Young Children: A Framework for Thinking by Louise Emmanuel.” Questions of symptom formation, the difference between a defense and developmental phenomena, and different therapeutic techniques are explored from the perspective of The Baby as Subject (an infant–parent psychotherapy approach developed at the Royal Children's Hospital in Melbourne, Australia). The relationship between feeding difficulties and the dynamics of the infant–parent attachment relationship are discussed with reference to whether the infant's apparent self‐sufficiency is interpersonally generated and whether bids for autonomy are a sign of healthy, age‐appropriate developmental drives at play. The use of representational toys in infant–parent psychotherapy to enable infants and toddlers to represent their experience or for the therapist to visually express what he or she understands the infant's experience to be and thus to work directly with the infant's representations is outlined. In addition to the linguistic content of verbal interpretations, the infant is receptive to the experience of another thinking mind and the emotional language, facial expressions, and gestures that also convey to the baby the experience of being understood or misunderstood.
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