I was duped for a full year by my countertransference with one personality disordered client, for an hour or two by a different one. Countertransference is casually defined as the clinician’s emotional reaction to the client. A little more technically, it means that our “human” side, not our professional side, has been stirred. I believe it is possible for a counselor, with chastity belt and dispassion in high gear, to see the borderline or narcissistic client accurately. We can, a few moments late owing to the primary necessity of our spontaneous reaction, assess his symptoms and review our own feeling reaction. But that’s quite hard to do if we’re going to be a person in the relationship and not merely a removed, computer program-like responder.
I am still flummoxed that I was hypnotized by a “waif”* borderline, with her sad, needy and frankly piteous tears for her childhood sexual abuse. But I was a man, and she was a woman. There is little that grabs me with the force of Jovian gravity more than a tearful, unloved female client. I – the vast helpless Inner Child with his own tremendous stillborn neediness – become the soother and protector. Had I snapped out of it somewhere in that year, I would have seen the razor fingernails, hidden, slowly readying to be released like a switchblade whose spring is triggered.
The second client, another borderline female, had attended the diagnostic assessment session and returned the following week. I erred, somewhat, in providing almost a half-hour of psychoeducation in the nature of therapeutic change without seeking leave to speechify. Seething invisibly, at the end of my presentation she angrily got up, informed me that she had come here to talk, not listen, and exited the room. My countertransference? Number one, I begged her to stay as she flounced past me. I felt like a stupid, clueless person who had ruined everything. Number two, it is now eighteen months since her dramatic act, and this morning her name appeared in my mind and I looked her up to see if she had ever returned to our practice. I was smitten. Or rather, anti-smitten.
Personality disordered
individuals have great power over us in the therapy room (and beyond). We have
childish parts in us that are triggered by their peculiar kind of bleeding – the
failed-child’s blood. A narcissist bleeds perfect superiority that brings out
our envious inferiority. A dependent personality evokes the recondite anger
of our dependent child who had to kill its needs, its self, in order to become
the adult. Grow up! A schizoid, who comes to us but can’t accept our
help, makes us impotent, as we once were. We, with our own childhood bank of swallowed
injustice, may feel rage about a borderline’s justice rage. How dare you
think you deserve so much! Why are your feelings so important?
Their despair is the truth of what we could never allow ourselves to feel, and we are pulled into it, into ourselves.
I believe I’m pretty inoculated, now, against the power of the sick personality. That’s not always a matter of skill, but that I’ve become bland in my old age. I’m somewhat distant, and can aim empathy and activate neurosis at my discretion.
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* One of Christine Ann Lawson’s species of Borderline. https://www.amazon.com/Understanding-Borderline-Mother-Unpredictable-Relationship-ebook/dp/B00BGMZ9CA.
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Comments are welcome, but I'd suggest you first read "Feeling-centered therapy" and "Ocean and boat" for a basic introduction to my kind of theory and therapy.