A Three-Factor Model of Couples Therapy

Projective Identification, Couple Object Relations, and Omnipotent Control

By (author) Robert Mendelsohn Foreword by Richard Billow postgraduate, Derner Institute

Hardback - £95.00

Publication date:

07 August 2017

Length of book:

284 pages

Publisher

Lexington Books

Dimensions:

240x157mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9781498557078

Couple psychotherapy extends the work of the psychotherapist to the patient’s most significant committed adult relationship, yet the therapy is difficult both conceptually and technically. One major reason for this difficulty is that in every couple’s treatment there is a confusing array of psychological defenses as well as regressive and nonregressive couple object relations-as distinct from the object relations that each individual member brings to the couple. Further, many of these processes are occurring outside consciousness and at the very same time. This book is an attempt to clarify all the confusing issues by presenting a three-factor model of couple psychotherapy within a psychodynamic framework. This model has been found to be very effective with many different kinds of couples. The book suggests that there are three powerful couple dynamics that shape every couple’s treatment: (A) the quality and quantity of the couple’s projective identifications; (B) the level of their “couple object relations”; and (C) the presence or absence of the defense of omnipotent control. These three variables are the most important factors in the therapy; they determine the success or failure of every therapy with every couple. These dynamics also determine quite a bit about how to conduct a couple therapy with regard to the therapist’s level of activity, tone, the way of sorting the material in his or her head, and even the kinds of interventions he/she chooses (whether or not, for example, the therapist will use certain resistance techniques). Understanding these three variables and how they interact is key to the success of the therapy.
A Couple’s Therapist is destined for 'déjà vu,' a career of groundhog days. Dr. Mendelsohn shares the phenomenology of his discovery process—as he understands how he comes to be (by necessity) a major player in the couple’s parasitic, symbiotic, narcissistic, sibling, or Oedipal dramas. The journey makes for compelling reading, and is inspirational. Mendelsohn’s style his inimitable, it's his and his alone. But the concepts and techniques he offers are adaptable; they may free up the thinking and practice of a contemporary couple’s therapist, no matter his or her orientation.