Gabbard Bessie Walker Callaway Distinguished Professor of Psychoanalysis at the Menninger Clinic, Training and Supervising Analyst at the Topeka Institute for Psychoanalysis, and Book Review Editor of Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association.
An opinion might be quite favorable (Gabbard 1991) or almost entirely positive (Gabbard 1998), and still provide a useful perspective on how the author's viewpoint diverges from or even clashes with that of other contributors in the field.
Gabbard, G.O. (1991).
Gabbard, G. O. (1998). The Talking Cures: The Psychoanalyses and the Psychotherapies.
Gabbard
Paul Williams
The Editorial Board of the International Journal of Psychoanalysis (IJP) is committed to improving cross-cultural dialogue between analysts in different regions of the world.
Gabbard
Paul Williams
El Comité Editorial del International Journal of Psychoanalysis (IJP) está comprometido con el desarrollo del diálogo intercultural entre analistas de distintas regiones del mundo.
Gabbard
Paul Williams
O Corpo Editorial do International Journal of Psychoanalysis (IJP) está comprometido com a ampliação do diálogo trans-cultural entre analistas de diferentes regiões do mundo.
Hall G (2001). Introdução. Em: Burgoyne B, Sullivan M, editors.
Gabbard
Heritage Mental Health Clinic
2921 SW Wanamaker Drive
Topeka
KS 66614
bramad@heritagemhc.com
Topeka, KS
The authors propose that although the psychoanalytic constructs ‘reflective functioning’ and ‘potential space’ overlap and are sometimes used interchangeably, a knowledge of their distinctions and the ways in which they interface have important clinical implications.
In their conceptualisation of ‘romantic space’, Wilkinson & Gabbard (1995) point out how the state of being in love depends on a similar integration of depressive and paranoid-schizoid elements in dialectical tension with one another.
One of us (GOG) provides a clinical vignette that illustrates this process (Gabbard, 1997). A woman in analysis expresses concern about her relationships with men, who feel overwhelmed by her intensity.
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Flexibility of the Frame Revisited
Commentary on Tony Bass' “When the Frame Doesn't Fit the Picture”
Glen Gabbard Is Brown Foundation Chair of Psychoanalysis and Professor of Psychiatry, Baylor College of Medicine, and Training and Supervising Analyst at the Houston-Galveston Psychoanalytic Institute.
Elsewhere (Gabbard, 2000) I have argued that each patient must do analysis in the way that he or she must do it.
I came to this
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conclusion after evaluating and treating many analysts who had engaged in sexual boundary violations (Gabbard and Lester, 2003). I can remember numerous instances where an analyst who had sexual relations with his patient stared directly at me and said, “Everyone is emphasizing the negative aspects of what I did.
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Gabbard, G. O. (2000), On gratitude and gratification.
Gabbard
Glen O. Gabbard, M.D.The Menninger FoundationP.O.
The Stereotyped Exit
Mr. G., a young professional man with an obsessive-compulsive character structure, left his analytic session every day in the same stereotyped manner: he rose from the couch, walked to the door, and said, "See you tomorrow."
It was a great discovery for him, and
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as he left during this pivotal session, he rose from the couch, walked to the door, and said with a twinkle in his eye, "See you tomorrow … I think."Mr. G.'s stereotyped exit line was a character defense against being affected by the analysis.
Gabbard
Glen O. Gabbard, M.D.The Menninger ClinicBox 829Topeka, Kansas 66601
All I ever needed was the music and the mirror and the chance to dance for you.
Elsewhere (Gabbard, 1979) I have pointed out that the stage-fright experience stems from the reactivation of certain key developmental experiences of a universal nature.
A comprehensive review of the literature on the subject is contained in my previous paper (Gabbard, 1979).
Review of the Literature
Most writers pay little attention to narcissistic elements in the stage-fright phenomenon.
Gabbard
Glen O. GabbardThe Menninger FoundationBox 829TopekaKS 66601
Those who are sounding the death knell for long-term psychoanalytic hospital treatment are premature in their heralding of doom.
While controlled studies of the efficacy of truly long-term hospitalization of a year or more versus that of short-term hospitalizations of several weeks' duration have never been performed (Gabbard & Spohn, 1983), these difficult-to-treat patients who arrive at the steps of the long-term psychoanalytic hospital confirm in a very real sense the need for such extensive treatment.