The following paper explores the core principles of as applied to the treatment of trauma and dissociation, primarily drawing from the work of Robert Stolorow and his collaborators.
Stolorow defines trauma as the experience of . Crucially, pain itself is not inherently traumatic. It becomes traumatic when an individual’s central affect states (such as intense fear or grief) fail to evoke an attuned response from a caregiver or significant other. Healing the Heart of Trauma and Dissociation wi...
: Healing requires a "relational home" where painful feelings can be held, understood, and integrated. 2. Dissociation as Traumatic Temporality The following paper explores the core principles of
Traditional psychoanalytic models often view trauma and dissociation as internal failures of a "mental apparatus." In contrast, , founded by Robert Stolorow and George Atwood, shifts the focus to the relational context. This paper argues that trauma is not a product of isolated intrapsychic mechanisms but rather an experience of unbearable affect that fails to find a "relational home". Dissociation is subsequently understood as a defensive walling off of these affects to protect the person's psychological organization. Introduction: From the Cartesian Mind to Intersubjectivity It becomes traumatic when an individual’s central affect
: When a child's distress is ignored or invalidated, the affect remains unintegrated and overwhelming.
: Trauma disrupts the normal linear flow of time. The traumatic past is "freeze-framed" into an eternal present.
: The ISP perspective focuses on both the patient's strengths (Leading Edge) and repetitive traumatic patterns (Trailing Edge).
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