The Curious Observer: The Mindful Path to Working with Countertransference with Eating Disorder Patients
It is a normal experience to be affected by our patients. As clinicians, we will find ourselves touched by the pain, courage, and resiliency of those who come to us for help. We will care deeply for their psychological, spiritual, and physical well-being. We also sit in the consultation room with our own bodies, our own stories, and our own woundings. Our countertransference reactions may present in the form of compassion fatigue, anger, frustration, admiration, caretaking, boredom, worry, over-personalizing, or psychosomatic symptoms. Clinicians working with patients diagnosed with eating dis...Read moreorders are often presented with clinical issues brimming with complicated multilayered challenges and ambivalence about treatment and recovery. Due to the nature of these problems with eating, food, and body, this may present itself in the therapeutic relationship or treatment milieu as a significant disconnect in treatment goals between clinician/treatment team and the patient. These scenarios may be ripe for transference and countertransference work. While the therapist-patient relationship is known to be a reliable predictor of positive outcomes in treatment, transference and countertransference opportunities require care and attention or they may become obstacles impeding the healing effects of this relationship.
There are additional challenges in the current climate where we are negotiating teletherapy, establishing new boundaries, and navigating differing political opinions. During a global pandemic, the clinician is also experiencing a crisis and may be dealing with their own stress, fears, and traumas along with their clients. Our experience of the patient is influenced by our own past and current life experiences and clinicians may find themselves struggling with difficult to manage countertransference reactions.
This talk will explore symbolic meanings and proposes use of the teachings and practices of mindfulness and specifically, the constructs of curiosity and non-reactivity to manage therapist countertransferential reactions in working with eating disorder patients as well as discussing the use of clinical discernment for when and how to bring countertransference reactions and the therapists’ own mindfulness practices into the room with that patient. Less...
Learning Objectives
- Identify common countertransference reactions in working with eating disorder patients.
- Recognize signs of somatic countertransference in their own bodies.
- Discuss specific ways in which the use of mindfulness practices help manage countertransference reactions.
Friday, October 23, 2020
12:00 PM PDT - 01:30 PM PDT
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CE Information - Earn 1.5 CE Credit Hours
CE Approvals
American Psychological Association
CE Process Info
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