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 Christian Counseling Center Indonesia / Isi : Pastoral Konseling II
Transference adalah istilah psikologis untuk menunjuk pada gejala pemindahan perasaan dari yang seharusnya ditujukan pada obyek lain pada masa lampau kepada obyek yang baru pada masa kini.
Sebagai gejala dari alam ketidaksadaran (unconsciousness), transference terjadi mula-mula oleh karena adanya banyak kebutuhan pada masa lampau yang tidak atau belum terpenuhi, yang terpaksa ditekan untuk dilupakan (repressed).
Transference adalah gejala yang tidak mungkin dihindari yang pasti akan terjadi dalam setiap interpersonal relationship antara dua pribadi.
http://www.sabda.org/c3i/materi_konseling/isi/?id=183&mulai=0

  
 Beyond Janov
His own transference and counter-transference feelings may provide stifling feedback and keep the patient "stuck" in therapy.
That "repetition", in the therapy sphere, is transference to and from the patient and the therapist.
The elimination of transference is an ideal goal which may be approached for the greater good of both patient and therapist, if the therapist continually directs his patient and himself back to the underlying origins of the transference neurosis.
http://www.primals.org/articles/weiner.html

  
 Counter Theory
If transference is a theory, this is the counter: personality and situation aside for the moment, the therapist is responsible for two fundamental behaviors -- understanding and misunderstanding -- which account for love, or for hate, and their associated affects.
If transference is a fiction to protect the therapist from the consequences of his own behavior, it is time to examine some behaviors - and their normal consequences.
Not everything is transference that is experienced by a patient in the form of affects and impulses during the course of the analytic treatment.
http://www.allanturner.co.uk/papers/counter.htm

  
 Transference
Transference is proof that you have a healthy relationship with your therapist.
They know that when they have a client who is truly in transference with their therapist, they have someone who has sessions between sessions.
Are motivated to change behaviors to please the therapist.
http://www.angelfire.com/mn/kaleidoscope28/transference.html

  
 Ttransference and ego states
Transference can be client or therapist in origin and so can counter transference.
Transference can be client or therapist in origin and so can counter transference...
Transference and TA Transactional Analysis is a theory of personality and a systematic psychotherapy for growth and personal change.
http://www.ta-psychotherapy.co.uk/transference_and_ta.htm

  
 Daily Times - Site Edition
If the psychotherapist fails to discover the dynamics of counter transference i.e., his own emotional reaction towards the patient, it could prove devastating for the patient because of his or her vulnerability and disastrous for the therapist both personally and professionally.
In case of counter transference, the psychotherapist perceives the patient as a ‘significant other’, and is attracted or repulsed by the patient.
As a patient may transfer the positive effect to the therapist, he or she may also transfer the negative effect to his or her therapist.
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=story_11-3-2004_pg3_2

  
 Evaluating Therapists and Therapy by Jeannie Riseman
I've spent so much time on transference, counter-transference and resistance because misuse of these concepts is fairly common and can lead to long periods of being stuck in therapy.
Transference means feelings that you transfer onto the therapist.
Now if the therapist assumes it's "all" transference, and there's no reason for the client to be hurt by the therapist's lateness, then the client is going to feel mind-fucked.
http://members.aol.com/SMARTNEWS/jr04.htm

  
 What do you understand by the terms transference and counter-transference? Comment on your own awareness of the transferential relationship. Use personal examples and examples from client work to illustrate the discussion.
Another possible response of the counsellor in relation to the client, in terms of transference and countertransference, is that behaviours and/or feelings not overtly accessed during the counselling session are projected onto the counsellor by the client.
This suggests that transference and countertransference are two-way, in as much as the client's transference may have an effect on the counsellor, and the counsellor's countertransference, in turn, may affect the client.
"Transference invariably shapes, and is revealed in, the analyst's countertransference; and conversely, the analyst's countertransference partly shapes, and is revealed in, the patient's transference." (Fiscalini, 1995).
http://www.coursework.info/i/63967.html

  
 Quote of the Day
For example, this could be done by analysing the processes as they occur, or by controlled experience of such processes occurring alongside or prior to a particular transference or counter-transference situation for which the person is professionally responsible as in training analysis or some kinds of supervision.
Contrariwise, the analyst is liable to transfer to the patient his emotions deriving from the analyst’s early family experiences.
In classical psychoanalytic usage ‘transference’ describes the phenomenon whereby the patient transfers to his analyst the emotions and feelings he had for his parents.
http://www.cyc-net.org/quote2/quote-604.html

  
 Counter Transference in Social Research : beyond Georges Devereux
It is defined as "the overall reactions of the analyst to the patient as a person and towards his/her transference" (Laplanche and Pontalis, 1967).
According to this definition transference and counter-transference refer to the reactions of the two people in the "here and now" of the therapeutic setting as well as to the repetition of the past of both participants actualised in the setting.
In psychoanalytic theory "transference" refers to the process by which the unconscious desires of the analysand become actual and are projected ("transferred") onto the person of the analyst.
http://www.ethnopsychiatrie.net/giami.htm

  
 encycl.html
Transference, from an Adlerian perspective, is the tendency of the client to transfer inappropriate positive or negative feelings, originally experienced toward a parent, sibling, or other significant figure from childhood, toward the therapist.
In this perspective, transference is a resistance to the cooperation that is necessary between client and therapist.
Consequently, the therapist diplomatically unveils the transfer of perception and feeling as a long-standing habit that needs to be corrected.
http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/hstein/encycl.html

  
 THE ANALYTIC SPACE: COUNTERTRANSFERENCE AND EVOCATIVE KNOWLEDGE
In a way, then, transference is a mistake, and, as Freud was to learn, the analytic process is based on this mistake — that the patient experiences the analyst as someone else.
The concept of transference became increasingly enriched, however, so that it was eventually perceived that what is transferred is the total situation, a relationship or objects in a context, and not merely an individual.
A transference interpretation is basically pointing this out to the patient.
http://www.shef.ac.uk/uni/academic/N-Q/psysc/staff/rmyoung/papers/paper2h.html

  
 Transference
The practitioner working with psychologically immature clients has a serious responsibility, because such clients may be unaware of the transference they bring to the therapeutic relationship.
This situation is known as transference, a normal, unconscious phenomenon that appears during a therapeutic process.
Individuals more prone to transference include children or adolescents, needy clients, and clients that have been referred by mental-health professionals to assist in the processing of psychological issues.
http://www.massagetoday.com/archives/2004/03/06.html

  
 PS: Re: Transference and Counter-Transference.
The transference and countertransference are interpretations of the analytic relationship and setting, and rarely imposed upon others in a meaningful way in any other setting, certainly not by an analyst, because then he/she would not get paid for it.
I claim that erotic transference is and should be a function of the interpretative ability of the analyst and that abstinence is an ethical guideline in order to cure the patient not to engage in sexual relations.
It is considered a medical technique!!" [DB] You may wish to regard the transference as an "interpretation", but this is merely to exclude from consideration the factor of unconscious projection by means of which parts of one's self are transferred on to one's image of another individual in the "normal" course of human interaction.
http://shef.ac.uk/uni/academic/N-Q/psysc/psychoanalytic-studies/msg03965.html

  
 Following.rtf
the possibility of shifting defences of the patient, manipulated transference by instructions for body exercises, and the risk of a positive correction of experiences while negative developments in transference are overlooked.
A sufficient degree of the analyst's own experience and lon g-term supervision in body-related work "in transference" give the analyst a feel for the rhythm, dosage and tact that is not only required for verbal interpretations but also for the technique of using physical interventions.
\par \par Hence, the notion of transference I consider adequate is a concept assuming that there is a readiness to interact on both sides \endash on the part of the patient as well as the analyst \endash and that the readiness of the therapist to act is a significant element in the scene established together.
http://meineseite.i-one.at/glang/Texte/Texte_ieS/Following.rtf

  
 Mental Help Net - Glossary Item Detail
Counter-Transference occurs when a therapist transfers his or her emotional energy from an older relationship to a patient.
Counter-Transference in any form is undesirable in the therapeutic relationship as it does not help (and often hurts) the patient.
So you might use the term counter transference to describe a therapist who feels hopeless and paralyzed when working with a depressed person, or a therapist who falls in love with a patient (or who seduces a patient).
http://www.mentalhelp.net/poc/view_index.php?idx=37&id=136

  
 Coach Supervision
Supervision is a process parallel to the coaching process, in which coaches can reflect on transference and counter-transference (see section below).
Counter-transference is when the coach has these sorts of feelings toward the client.
Transference happens when the client has irrational or inappropriate feelings (such as guilt, resentment, anger, fear, control or inflation) toward the coach.
http://www.synergycoaching.com.au/html/coach_supervision.html

  
 Writing Is/And Therapy?: Raising Questions about Writing Classrooms and Writing Program Administration
Transference may involve teachers and students in emotional relationships with ethical dimensions (Torgersen), and transference and counter-transference may both have to be dealt with for a therapy or a pedagogy to succeed.
This is not surprising for considering the teaching relationship in a therapeutic light raises questions about transference (students endowing teachers with inaccurate expectations or characteristics [see Scheffler]) and counter-transference (teachers coloring relationships with their own past contexts) in the Freudian sense.
Whether they understand transference or counter-transference, experience identification or alienation, students see any sort of teacher intervention as authoritative, and they always expect to learn from their teachers.
http://jac.gsu.edu/jac/13.2/Articles/13.htm

  
 Homenaje a Paula Heimann
It may be argued that this use of the term is not correct, and that counter-transference simply means transference on the part of the analyst.
It is often pointed out that not everything a patient feels about his analyst is due to transference, and that, as the analysis progresses, he becomes increasingly more capable of 'realistic' feelings.
In passing it is worth while remembering that transference feelings cannot be sharply divided from those which refer to another person in his own right and not as a parent substitute.
http://www.quipu-instituto.com/Paula_Heimann/P_Heimann_1950_ingles.html

  
 Transference - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Transference and counter-transference are often characterized as useful tools for building trust between the patient and the therapist.
Transference is a phenomenon in psychology characterized by unconscious redirection of feelings from one person to another.
In the context of patient-therapist setting, transference refers to redirection of the patient's feelings from a significant person in their life to the therapist.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transference

  
 nordic journal of music therapy
The goal of the re-imaging study was "to develop a form of experiential self-inquiry to uncover unconscious dynamics operating within the GIM experience and to devise procedures for analysing the transference and counter-transference material unearthed through such a self-inquiry." (Bruscia, 1998, p.
http://www.njmt.no/abstract112grocke.html

  
 ZielkeLaw.com: Sexual Misconduct by Doctors
It is not that transference and counter-transference do not occur; they do occur and are frequently and usually dealt with in a responsible fashion.
It is when the doctor or therapist uses and abuses the effects of transference and counter-transference that the HCP has engaged in negligent care and treatment.
Because of transference and the confidential and unique intimate relationship, the patient can develop feelings of love and attraction for the therapist.
http://www.zielkelaw.com/profile/articles-publications/secrets-in-the-exam-room.asp

  
 José Américo Junqueira de Mattos' Paper
When using words like transference or counter-transference, I think it is important to underscore that all these aspects are states or moments that can be very fleeting and dynamic and that, by their intrinsic nature, are essentially transitory.
The words transference and countertransference become important because they serve at least to name and label what we are talking about, even if we are not aware of their full meaning.
I intend to go back to ideas on transference and counter-transference developed previously (1992, 1994, 1995a, 1995b), but now from a new angle, that is, in the light of the concept of transience.
http://www.sicap.it/merciai/bion/papers/mattos.htm

  
 Amazon.co.uk: Books: Erotic Transference and Counter Transference
Offering a range of contemporary views on one of therapy's oldest challenges, "Erotic Transference and Countertransference" presents stimulating material and perspectives that seek to address the concerns of many a therapist about just how connected to patients/clients one can be and how to manage patients/clients affectionate feelings for their therapist.
The contributors highlight similarities and differences in their approaches to the erotic in transference and counter transference, ranging from love and sexual desire to perverse and psychotic manifestations.
Clinical Approaches to the Erotic Transference and Countertransference brings together, for the first time, contemporary views on how psychotherapists and analysts work with and think about the erotic in therapeutic practice.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/0415184533

  
 Transference, and Counter Transference . Michael Conner, Psy.D
Cult therapies are based in part on generating positive transference to control and manipulate people.
Working with transference, or creating transference in therapy can make a therapist look mystical and brilliant.
Once you discover a transference pattern, you can chose to respond in terms of what is really happening instead of what happened 20 or 30 years ago.
http://www.crisiscounseling.com/Articles/Transference.htm

  
 Questions and Answers for Psychology Students
Counter-transference is probably defined in text books along the lines of "the feeling engendered in a psychoanalyst by how a given patient is communicating to him or her during a therapy session".
TRANSFERENCE is the process whereby a patient relates to his or her analyst in a manner which parallels or replicates how they typically relate to another significant person in their life.
In psychoanalytic practice, the analyst closely examines his or her own feelings in response to the words of the patient, to separate out their own personal reaction from objective observations of the patient's distorted (transference) behavior.
http://www.fenichel.com/QAT.shtml

  
 Countertransference, voicework, therapy
How the clinician manages -and is seen by the patient to manage - her own counter-transference, as well as the patient's transference and other emotional issues, can make a significant impact on the success of the therapeutic encounter, and the patient's return to healthy vocal function.
That the clinician can openly acknowledge, and handle her own Shadow material that inevitably emerges in counter-transference, models to the patient how he too might openly explore his own transference, and meet his own Shadow self, without shame or defensiveness.
Any discussion of transference can be an affirmation for the patient that he is not just someone who engages in transference unconsciously, but who is also capable of observing himself, and that he is an autonomous individual able to choose from a range of responses.
http://www.voicewisdom.co.uk/htm/countertransference5.htm

  
 SFWED Remember It Hurts Community - counter transference?
you are correct in that counter transference is commonly when a patient reminds the therapist of someone in their life, but it also really any feeling (positive or negative) that the client evokes in a therapist that causes him/her to react.
The other MAJOR issue is that while I’m having transference issues (which I have been able to identify and talk about), he is having MAJOR counter transference issues.
Your manner of being and personality are probably triggering for him in that trigger a strong emotional reaction, but his inability to deal with you as a client is not your fault nor does it imply that your personality and beliefs are flawed or wrong because they triigger a negative reaction in your therapist.
http://fishyvb.something-fishy.org/archive/index.php/t-89538.html

  
 Conferenczi: Hungarian psychoanalytical ideas revisited
This unusual Conference explores his enduring influence; the ever-present and basic issues of transference and counter-transference, the enigmatic relationship between body-and-mind, the sense of reality, mutuality in analysis, his theory of trauma, and his surprisingly vivid and contemporary theory of mind.
Rediscovering the work of Hungarian analyst Sandor Ferenczi, a pioneer of relationship-based psychoanalysis, has opened up a way of recalling and re-integrating the image, and basic contributions, of not only "the mother of psychoanalysis" (as he has been called) but other "lost children" of the early analytic world.
http://www.freud.org.uk/conferenczi.htm

  
 The IJPA - Letter to the Editors
the transference that appears in a 'classical' psychoanalysis): both can be analytically worked through and shed light on the patient's inner world and the analyst has no right to say that only one of the two is the 'true' transference.
For example, following Gill's ideas, a transference that appears in a cognitive-behaviour therapy may be no less interesting or important than the 'classical' transference (i.e.
Milton seems well aware of that; in fact, she aptly quotes Ryle's (1995) metaphor of the transference as a 'hardy plant' that always grows, regardless of our attempt to control it.
http://ijpa.org/letter2oct01.htm

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