Synopsis:
This website (which started life as course handout for resident psychiatrists)
presents a way of thinking about psychotherapy integration combining
psychodynamic with cognitive-behavioral theory and technique. The approach
is built on the observation, derived from work with trauma patients,
that lasting change takes place at moments of catharsis or
of internalization or of both at once. Examining these moments
helps to understand the action of therapy and makes it possible to bridge
between competing schools, such as psychoanalysis and cognitive therapy.
Furthermore, a focus on key moments helps to navigate towards healing
and growth.
The
Problem
Tension between
the "art" and "science" of psychotherapy threatens
to split the field. The need for one robust framework to pull different
schools together is acute. The New York Times reports it thus:
It was clear
at this landmark meeting that, although the participants agreed it
was a time for bold action, psychotherapists were deeply divided over
whether that action should be guided by the cool logic of science
or a spirit of humanistic activism. The answer will determine not
only what psychotherapy means, many experts said, but its place in
the 21st century. (Benedict Carey, The New York times, December 27,
2005 reporting on a conference entitled "The
Evolution of Psychotherapy" held in Anaheim, California)
The
Lost Rosetta Stone: How People Change
The key to
resolving this dilemma is simple, but not obvious. Fortunately, all
therapies seek similar results, presumably through basically similar
mechanisms. What is missing is a clear, detailed understanding of how
people change in therapy. Such an understanding would allow translation
between languages and traditions, including the cognitive-behavioral
and psychodynamic ones.
It turns out
that how therapy works is not an easy subject. Change happens but it
is hard to pin down when it happens, how long it takes and exactly what
factors promoted it. Lacking a molecular explanation, each school has
explained change within its own constructs, which tend to be incompatible
with those of other schools. Work with survivors of extreme trauma brings
out the healing processes in dramatic relief.
In addition,
a little recognized factor has worked against bringing change processes
into sharp focus. Imagine that you firmly believed the celestial object
in your telescope is a single body, you will be less likely to notice
that it is actually two. You will describe it as having an irregular
shape. Only when your mind is ready to accept that there are two
bodies, will you begin to see two perfect circles superimposed on each
other.
This is exactly
the situation with regard to psychotherapeutic change mechanisms. Each
school has remained at least partly bound by its original discovery
of a single mechanism. I will argue that there are, in fact, two.
The problem is that attempts to force two processes into one explanation
have resulted in confused and incomplete formulations that have not
been sharp enough to bridge across therapeutic traditions. The psychodynamic
and the cognitive-behavioral traditions have each been subject to the
same phenomenon.
Freud originally
stated that "making the unconscious conscious" could bring
about healing. This single explanation led to the technique of "interpreting"
deeper meanings to bring unconscious thought and feeling to consciousness.
The apparent unity and elegance of this explanation unravel when the
details are examined. Currently most psychodynamic therapists hold a
general notion that interpretation is necessary, but that there is something
crucial derived from the therapeutic relationship.
Cognitive-behavioral
therapists have assumed a similarly unitary notion of what is happening.
Based on learning theory, this tradition has looked for a single healing
mechanism involving repeated exposure to correct cognitions. Current
theory suggests that repetitive identification and correction of errors
of thinking and behavior will gradually realign neural networks. In
line with Watson's original desire for objectivity, cognitive-behavioral
psychotherapy rejects the validity of data derived from "insight"
and sees the therapist more as a technician than a unique individual.
These two approaches
are so different that it is hard to imagine that they are talking about
the same phenomenon. Each, however, offers patients resolution of the
same "entrenched dysfunctional patterns of reaction" that
cause so much human suffering.
Finding
the Rosetta Stone
Work with patients
who have suffered major trauma brings out the fine grain of how people
change and heal. The work clearly and naturally divides into two parts,
resolution of painful affects (I will call it catharsis), and
modification of pathological, internalized attitudes and values (Hereafter
called internalization). An examination of the development
of affect regulation in children will suggest that these two mechanisms
originate at different developmental periods and have very distinct
characteristics. Catharsis is optimized by empathy, while internalization
works best in a context of slight aloofness. Understanding these two
mechanisms in detail makes it clear that the many varieties of psychotherapy
represent different ways of achieving conditions that promote catharsis
or internalization or both.
Armed with
this understanding, not only does it become natural to talk about cognitive-behavioral
and psychodynamic approaches in the same breath, but the barriers to
mixing different techniques begin to fade. It becomes possible to design
and conduct a therapy for each patient based on the easiest and most
comfortable way to foster the needed change processes.
Epistemology
Part of the
difficulty with the psychodynamic and cognitive-behavioral traditions
is that each rejects the other's method of gathering information. I
will bypass the problem by appealing to the reader's common sense and
experience at being human. The facts and observations required to form
a common framework for understanding psychotherapy are within the scope
of experience of most if not all of us.
I am not offering
new data nor contradicting observations that others have made. Instead
I propose a revised framework for making sense of what we have all seen
and experienced. I have high respect for the discoveries and observations
of the many schools of psychotherapy, without which the present understanding
would be impossible. I will suggest the following principle of epistemology:
Everyone is right except when they say the other is wrong.
Lucid
Psychotherapy
The theme of
this writing is to make psychotherapy lucid. By that I mean seeking
a quality of openness and clarity. In today's world of informed consumers,
the more lucid we are in our practice, the more effective we are and
the better is our partnership with our patients. Psychotherapy does
not have to be mysterious or rely only on arcane concepts and jargon.
Beginning with a high resolution examination of how people change, these
pages will give a detailed outline of this approach and its practical
application.
Originally
this website served as the handout for a class on Intermediate Psychotherapy
Technique for psychiatry residents at New York Medical College. The
writing is condensed, as it must be for a website. It is my expectation
that this material will eventually form the basis of a book for therapists
and interested lay people.
DISCLAIMER: I have attempted to make this material
brief and simple, but it is NOT a beginning course in psychotherapy.
Psychotherapy is a powerful tool that should be learned by direct interaction
with a supervisor who has experience. Substantial training is required
to do psychotherapy and to bring new ideas into practice with safety.
These ideas are intended to stimulate thought, not to tell anyone what
to do or to substitute for professional judgment. The ideas presented
here should not be applied blindly or by inexperienced therapists without
consultation or supervision