Top Banner
Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010
27

Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Dec 30, 2015

Download

Documents

Russell Bennett
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Being “Held in Mind”:

Mentalizing and Psychotherapy

Jon Hunter & Michael CordCollaborative Mental Health Care

Network February, 2010

Page 2: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

“Mentalization enables children to ‘read’ people’s minds.”

“Other people, machines of independent mystery”

Page 3: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

The Sally Anne Test(theory of mind)

Frith & FrithScience Vol. 286

26 nov. 1999

Page 4: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Attachment security at 12 months

Success at theory of mind test (5 years)

Secure with Mother

Insecure with Mother

82%

46%

Secure with Father

Insecure with Father

77%

46%

Secure with Both

Insecure with Both

87%

50%

Page 5: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Development – secure parent

Parent:

1. Appreciates type and intensity of emotional signal from the child

2. Conveys explanatory model for internal state

3. Conveys sense of (adult) containment or mastery about state

(think about psychotherapeutic comments)

Page 6: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Development – secure parent

Mature (parental) mentalization:

Reflecting, containing, alleviating

“You’re tired, aren’t you after such a long day, you need to nap, then you’ll feel better”

Page 7: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Development - insecure parent

“The mother unconsciously forces the child into the adaptive strategy which she finds most reassuring” (Fonagy)

“Infant’s pattern of relating reflects parent’s habitual pattern of dealing with the infant’s unpleasurable states”

Parent works to decrease the distress signal, rather then its cause

Page 8: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Frequent maternal interactional errors with disorganized children

(Vondra, Barnett)

Laughs when infant distressed

Uses friendly tone with threatening posture

Handles infant as if inanimate

Uses ‘haunted’ or frightened voice

Mocks or teases infant

Withholds or removes toy

Directs infant to do something, and then not to do it…

“Frightening or frightened” parents

Page 9: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Clinical clues to good mentalizing capacity-

Represents self and others as thinking and feeling

“I assume she must’ve felt angry because…”

Page 10: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Illustration 1:

Patient is reflecting on the way she feels when her boyfriend is preoccupied, distant and dismissive:

“…I just want to be held in mind”

Page 11: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Clinical clues to good mentalizing capacity-

Sensitive to characteristics of mental states

an appreciation of developmental phases, limited power of wishes…

Page 12: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Illustration 2:

Patient’s sister married to alcoholic abusive man

Turns to 18 year-old son for comfort and support

Patient is furious and tells sister:

“you have to give him a stone to stand on”

Page 13: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Clinical clues to good mentalization capacity-

Sensitive to diversity of mental states amongst people

appreciating how much needs to be told, what it’s emotional impact will be

Page 14: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Illustration 3:

Patient is able to work at 3 jobs, and is recognized as very helpful, reliable and capable.

When she needs help people rarely respond, and she ‘writes them off’

She states:

“They’re just supposed to know that when I ask I need it right away”

Page 15: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Clinical clues to good mentalization capacity-

Links mental states to observed behaviours

’teases out’ reasons for behaviour

Page 16: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Illustration 4:

35 y.o. woman, long difficult history of BPD, AN&BN, cocaine abuse, depression.

Therapy x >10 years

Stopped at U.S. border and required to have form filled in by MD.

Long discussion in therapy…form not completed by therapist

Results in being barred from entry to U.S.

“you asshole, you wanted me to suffer”

Page 17: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Clinical clues to good mentalization capacity-

Appreciates possibility of change in mental states, and its relevance for change in behaviour

“I feel this way now, but if that happens, who knows?”

Acknowledges difference between observed behaviour and internal state:

“He acted unconcerned, but must’ve been nervous”

Page 18: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Illustration 5:

Young father recently widowed

4 year old son refers to his 7 year old brother by their private ‘sibling’ name

Father uses that name in same conversation, despite ‘rule’ against it… because he knows that is the best reference in the young brother’s mind

Explains all, with humour, to elder son

Page 19: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Mentalization, Definitions:

“We mentalize when we treat others as people rather then objects”

(Allan, pg.93)

“Knowing ourselves from the outside, and others from the inside”

(Jeremy Holmes)

Page 20: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Using mentalization to guide intervention

Just as secure attachment is a necessary

precondition for mentalization, so a secure

‘therapeutic’ base is required for the

‘exploration’ of psychotherapy

…Help them find their mind, via your mind

Page 21: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Goals

“Making sense”

Promote mentalizing, not discovering a secret, or elucidating a symptom

Increase coherence: “A continuous me’ or “Autobiographical competence”

(Holmes)

Page 22: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Techniques(think developmentally)

Promote safety

Focus on the here-and-now

Create an expectation about:

1) Observing…

2) Labelling…

3) Communicating …

… internal states - affect, wishes, vulnerabilities

Page 23: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Techniques

“Mark” internal states –pay attention to your patient !

‘Wonder’ about intentions

“Small” interpretations, delivered at moments when mentalization is present-

(vs. overarching comments about conflict, past events…)

Page 24: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Techniques

Increase clarity of representation of internal states

Vary object of mentalization: self, other, relationships

Increase coherence of narrative

Strengthen impulse control and self-regulation

Avoid ‘canned’ expressions of concern

“learn to recognize what they say to themselves, the choices they make, in terms of ignoring or approaching others”

Page 25: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Techniques-the 2 things:

Useful for understanding countertransference:

Who does this patient see me as ?

or

Who does this patient think I see them as?

Page 26: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Formulation

Procedural Memory Automatic Behaviour

THREAT

Mentalizing

Page 27: Being “Held in Mind”: Mentalizing and Psychotherapy Jon Hunter & Michael Cord Collaborative Mental Health Care Network February, 2010.

Case presentations ?

“I was thinking about what a friend had said, I was hoping it

was a lie”