In Bions Emotional Links, Judy K. Eekhoff explores emotion as a bridge between unrepresented and represented states, highlighting the importance of both internal emotional and external relationships in the development of the mind.
Informed by Bions focus on analytic technique, Eekhoff includes clinical vignettes from her own work with patients who have endured trauma. She explores somatic processes and how effective analysis can break down unhealthy defence mechanisms employed by individuals which often leads to a perpetual cycle of retraumatising the self. Eekhoff shows how, through an understanding of dreams as a representation of the inner self and hope as a means of finding and retaining ones sense of self, barriers can be broken down to free patients from a cycle of dread and dissociation. She places the individuality of the analyst at the forefront of their vital work, eschewing a dogmatic approach while carefully nurturing and respecting traditional psychoanalytic theories. Through this important work, readers will be equipped with the tools to recognize symbiotic relationships, both those in the patients personal life and in the relationship between analyst and analysand.
In Bion's Emotional Links, Judy K. Eekhoff explores emotion as a bridge between unrepresented and represented states, highlighting the importance of both internal emotional and external relationships in the development of the mind.
Acknowledgements Introduction
1. Essence of Being
2. Love, Hate, and
Curiosity: Bions Model of the Development of the Mind
3. Body as Dream Space
4. In Defense of Hope
5. Premonition: Hope and Dread in the Analytic Hour
6.
Psychic Equivalency as an Aspect of Symbiosis
7. The Primordial Symphony of
Life: Truth and the Body
8. Perceptual Identification as Analytic Receptivity
of Dissociative States
9. Between the Real and the Imaginary: Truth and Lies
in the Psychoanalytic Encounter
10. The Perversion of Truth and the
Disruption of Passion
11. Body Relations and the Black Hole
12. Missing
Emotional Links
13. Time, Space, and Dimensionality as Somatic
Representations
14. Catastrophe and Creativity: From Fragmentation to
Emergence
Judy K. Eekhoff is an International Psychoanalytic Association-certified training and supervising psychoanalyst in Seattle, Washington, USA. She is the author of Bion and Primitive Mental States: Trauma and the Symbiotic Link (2021) and Trauma and Primitive Mental States: An Object Relations Perspective (2019).