
SummaryStories on the Couch presents three clinical vignettes that illuminate how the analytic relationship becomes a living space where mourning, desire, repetition, and the fragile search for selfhood unfold. The first story traces a patient’s collapse of narcissistic investment: when achievement no longer sustains identity, and the therapist’s silent presence allows a deeper mourning of the self he can no longer be. The second explores jealousy as a repetition of an archaic loss—the "other who existed before him"—showing how the analytic moment can reopen and transform an unconscious triangular drama. The third examines the adolescent who speaks endlessly not to communicate, but to secure the therapist’s presence; here repetition becomes a path toward symbolization, and the frame itself becomes the first stable object capable of holding his emerging voice. Together, the narratives show how analytic work often happens not in interpretations but in the shared psychic space where silence, endurance, and relational presence allow meaning to be born.
on the Couch
on the Couch
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