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March 18, 2012 LOIS CHOI-KAIN, MD MED DIRECTOR, GUNDERSON RESIDENCE OF MCLEAN HOSPITAL CLINICAL INSTRUCTOR OF PSYCHIATRY, HARVARD MEDICAL SCHOOL Mentalization in Families
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Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Jul 11, 2020

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Page 1: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

M a r c h 1 8 , 2 0 1 2

L O I S C H O I - K A I N , M D M E D

D I R E C T O R , G U N D E R S O N R E S I D E N C E O F M C L E A N H O S P I T A L

C L I N I C A L I N S T R U C T O R O F P S Y C H I A T R Y , H A R V A R D M E D I C A L S C H O O L

Mentalization in Families

Page 2: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

What is mentalization?

�  Making sense of the action of ourselves and others in relation to mental states (thoughts, feelings, desires, beliefs)

�  To see ourselves from the outside and others from the inside

�  Understanding misunderstanding �  Having mind in mind �  Introspection for subjective self-construction – know

yourself as others know you but also know your subjective self (your experience)

Page 3: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Benefits of Mentalizing

�  Connection through shared understanding. �  A “meeting of minds”. �  Leads to better interpersonal functioning, and

therefore, better chance at getting objectives met in life & relationships.

�  Being misunderstood is aversive, it can lead to painful emotions.

�  Many BPD difficulties can result from the temporary loss of mentalizing.

Page 4: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Attachment and Mentalization

Page 5: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Developmental Model

Constitutional self in State of arousal

Marked Expression

Reflection

Resonance

Representation of self-state: internalization of object image

Mirroring Display

Expression of metabolized affect

signal

Non-verbal expression

Symbolic binding of internal state

Psychological Self:

2nd Order Representations

Physical Self: Primary Representations

CHILD CAREGIVER Fonagy et al., 2002

Page 6: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Mentalizing Instabilities in BPD

�  BPD is defined as a problem of instability of mentalizing ¡  Individuals with BPD are often better at mentalizing than

others at times, and under specific conditions, mentalizing fails ÷ Hyperactivated attachment (high distress, activating but

ineffective attachment bids) ÷ High affective intensity

¡  When individuals with BPD are symptomatic, this is associated with controlled, flexible mentalizing going “off-line”

¡  Rigid, automatic prementalistic states arise ¡  Controlling and coercive interactions hyperactivate attachment

further undermining mentalizing

Page 7: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Self Other

Attachment Functioning in BPD

Attachment Bid

Clingy, angry, passive, oscillatory.

Confused, dissociated, conflicted, controlling.

Page 8: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Self Other

Attachment Functioning in BPD

Involving, overprotective, inconsistent.

Hostile, helpless, fearful, frightening.

Caregiver Response

Page 9: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Cycles of Non-Mentalizing Interactions

Family Member 2

Family Member 1

Page 10: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Developmental Model

Constitutional self in State of arousal

Marked Expression

Reflection

Resonance

Representation of self-state: internalization of object image

Mirroring Display

Expression of metabolized affect

signal

Non-verbal expression

Symbolic binding of internal state

Psychological Self:

2nd Order Representations

Physical Self: Primary Representations

CHILD CAREGIVER Fonagy et al., 2002

Page 11: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

MBT in Families

�  Short Term Mentalization and Relational Therapy (SMART) (Fearon, Target, Sargent et al., 2006) ¡  Short term treatments found to be effective in children/

adolescents ¡  Goal to promote longer term resilience in families in the

context of social and psychological problems ¡  Coping rather than problem solving through attachment in the

family relationship

�  Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011) ¡  Increase empathic understanding between parents and

children through mentalizing

Page 12: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

SMART

�  Psychoeducation ¡  Assumption that family problems develop from difficulties in

mentalizing=> this leads to the goal that family members work on observing and discussing the connection between thinking, feeling, and behavior

¡  Understanding mental states are opaque ¡  Encouraging curiosity in mental states ¡  Arousal/stress interferes with mentalizing

÷ Understanding ability to mentalize may simply be limited at times

¡  Interplay between mentalizing, stress, behavior, and relational tendencies in the family

Page 13: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

SMART

�  In the sessions, therapist identifies moments of better and worse mentalizing, and aims to push family members to mentalize actively when prone to fall into unsatisfying and ineffective attachment patterns

�  Games=> e.g. trading places

Page 14: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT)

�  Objectives ¡  Consider the contributions of each family member to problems

of symptomatic family member ¡  Promote awareness of both mental states in self and other ¡  Use mentalizing to strengthen self-regulation ¡  To help families shift out of coercive, controlling

nonmentalizing cycles using mentalizing to promote trust and secure attachment

¡  Promote parental sense of competence in helping children mentalize

¡  Practice mentalizing in communication and decision making

Page 15: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

MBFT

�  Psychoeducation about what successful mentalizing looks like ¡  Relaxed and flexible, rather than stuck ¡  Playful, humorous but not in a hurtful or distancing way ¡  Give and take/interactive quality in problem solving,

respecting different perspectives ¡  Describes own experience rather than focusing on defining

others’ intentions or experience ¡  Conveys ownership if his or her behavior rather than a sense it

is “happening to” him or her ¡  Curious about and responsive to others’ perspectives, adapting

own perspectives in interactions

Page 16: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

MBFT Five Step Intervention

1.  Observing interaction: “I notice that…” �  When you start raising your voice, she stops listening �  In your family, everyone talks at the same time

2.  Checking for consensus: “Is that the way you see it? Is that an issue for you?”

3.  Mentalizing the moment: “What do you think Ann is feeling now?”

4.  Generalizing: “Dad feels this, mom feels that- do you recognize this as something that happens at home?

5.  Reviewing: “So what happened?”

Page 17: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Mentalizing Stance

�  Not-Knowing, but Curious, “Columbo” style �  No single truth to be arrived at �  Empathizing �  Marking- identify difference – ‘I can see how you

get to that but when I think about it, it occurs to me that he may have been pre-occupied with something rather than ignoring you because he hates you’.

Page 18: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Mentalizing Questions

� Therapist continually questions his and patient’s internal mental state:

� What is happening now? � Why is the patient saying this now? � Why is the patient behaving like this? � Why am I feeling as I do now? � What has happened recently in the

therapy that may justify the current state?

Page 19: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

More mentalizing questions

�  Using questioning comments to promote exploration

�  What do you make of what has happened? �  Why do you think that he said that? �  Perhaps you felt that I was judging/

misunderstanding you? �  Why do you think that he behaved towards

you as he did?

Page 20: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Pearls about Using MTZ in Families

�  Core assumption: emotional and behavioral problems are relational in nature

�  Reflection and consideration of mental states are central to healthy relationships

�  Families and individuals vary in their capacity for mentalization for a variety of reasons (e.g. early history, biology, stress)

�  Problems with mentalizing fuel distressing family interactions that further undermine mentalizing

�  Problematic nonmentalizing interactions in families undermine family coping and resilience

Page 21: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Resources

�  Bateman & Fonagy’s Mentalization-based Treatment for Borderline Personality Disorder (2006)

�  Allen, Fonagy, Handbook of Mentalization-Based Treatment (2006)

�  Bateman & Fonagy’s Handbook of Mentalizing in Mental Health Practice (2011)

Page 22: Mentalization in FamiliesCoping rather than problem solving through attachment in the family relationship ! Mentalization Based Family Treatment (MBFT) (Aisen, Fonagy et al, 2011)

Professional Intensive Training

�  Mentalization Based Treatment Intensive Training January 2013: email [email protected]