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Between Unknown Change and Familiar Retreat
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The theme of Dr. Robert Waska’s new book involves how all patients, whether neurotic, borderline, or psychotic, want their problems to ease and their stress to stop but unconsciously they avoid any...
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23 November 2017

The theme of Dr. Robert Waska’s new book involves how all patients, whether neurotic, borderline, or psychotic, want their problems to ease and their stress to stop but unconsciously they avoid any real psychological change. They strive to maintain their psychic equilibrium regardless of how destructive it may be, in an effort to avoid the loss of what is known and to avoid the unknown pain or punishment that change might bring.
Each chapter provides the reader with a contemporary Kleinian focus on central theoretical and clinical concepts such as projective identification, enactment, transference, pathological organizations, and depressive or paranoid acting out. The reader then is shown the careful and thoughtful interpretive work necessary in these complex clinical situations.
Each chapter provides the reader with a contemporary Kleinian focus on central theoretical and clinical concepts such as projective identification, enactment, transference, pathological organizations, and depressive or paranoid acting out. The reader then is shown the careful and thoughtful interpretive work necessary in these complex clinical situations.
Price: $66.00
Pages: 158
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Contemporary Psychoanalytic Studies
Publication Date:
23 November 2017
ISBN: 9789004357136
Format: Paperback
Robert Waska MFT, LPCC, PhD is in private practice in San Francisco and a full analytic member of the San Francisco Center for Psychoanalysis. He has authored thirteen text books, numerous book chapters, and over one hundred journal articles on the Modern Kleinian approach to individuals and couples.