Foundations of Treatment 119
Methods of Psychodynamic Therapy
Freud and his followers developed a variety of techniques to allow the analyst
and patient to glimpse the workings of the patient’s unconscious and to pro-
mote insight.
The Therapeutic Alliance
Both psychoanalysis and psychodynamic therapy emphasize the importance of a
therapeutic alliance, the positive relationship between the therapist and the patient
(Greenberg & Mitchell, 1983; Klein, 1932; Kohut, 1977; Sullivan, 1953; Winnicott,
1958). This patient-therapist collaboration, a social factor, provides the trust and
good will needed to undertake the challenging work of the therapy. The therapeutic
alliance also can supply patients with a corrective emotional experience, an oppor-
tunity to work through past unresolved experiences in a safe environment with the
therapist (Alexander & French, 1946). This experience can lead to improvements in
symptoms, personality, and behavior.
Free Association
One method that Freud developed in order to determine patients’ unconscious
confl icts is free association, in which patients report aloud their train of thought,
uncensored. Psychodynamic therapists believe that the content and pattern of
patients’ unedited thoughts reveal unconscious urges and responses to those urges.
Interpretation
Free association is usually used in conjunction withinterpretation, in which the
therapist infers the unconscious meaning or motivation behind a patient’s words
and behaviors and shares this inference with the patient. Thus, the therapist
might fi rst note a patient’s thought pattern during free association and then point
out possible unconscious meaning in the patient’s associations. The therapist also
uses interpretation when a patient makes a speech error, such as saying “father”
instead of “bother”; such errors are thought to be laden with meaning and are
often called Freudian slips. According to Freud, interpretation should help the
patient become aware of his or her unconscious confl icts. The patient’s own in-
terpretations are not generally considered as accurate as the therapist’s because
the patient’s unconscious urges and confl icts are presumed to make him or her
less objective.
Dream Analysis
Another method that Freud developed to plumb a patient’s unconscious is dream
analysis, in which the therapist interprets the content of a patient’s dreams. Freud
P S
N
Therapeutic alliance
The positive relationship between the
therapist and the patient.
Free association
The psychodynamic technique in which
patients report aloud their train of thought,
uncensored.
Interpretation
The psychodynamic technique in which the
therapist infers the unconscious meaning
or motivation behind a patient’s words and
behaviors and shares these inferences with
the patient.
Dream analysis
The psychodynamic technique in which the
therapist interprets the content of a patient’s
dreams.
Table 4.2 • Differences Between Psychoanalysis and Psychodynamic Therapy
Psychoanalysis Psychodynamic Therapy
Frequency Four or fi ve times a week Usually not more than twice a week
Duration Years, or indefi nitely A few years or less
Seating Arrangements Patient lies on a couch;
the analyst sits behind
the patient, off to the
side, out of the patient’s
view.
Patient and therapist both sit on chairs,
facing each other.
Emphasis More emphasis on
sexual and aggressive
urges and childhood
experiences
Less emphasis on sexual and aggressive
urges; more emphasis on current—rather
than past—experiences
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