67th
Annual Conference
Friday, February 26
Morning Workshops
10:00
A.M. - 12:30 P.M.
Workshop
42
Sexual
Feelings? What Sexual Feelings? Therapist Erotic Countertransference
in Group Therapy
Chairs:
Nancy
Kelly, Ph.D., LCSW, CGP, Private Practice, Austin, Texas
Robert Murphy,
LPC, LMFT, CGP,
Private Practice, Austin, Texas
Group
therapists - no less than other therapists - may feel bewildered,
self-critical, or ashamed whenever they encounter their own erotic
or sexual feelings toward a client. This workshop will offer an
opportunity to explore the presence (and absence) of sexual feelings
in our work with clients, as well as a chance to explore ways we
avoid such feelings. We'll explore the concepts of subjective and
objective countertransference, examine forms of therapist
resistance, and offer one framework for understanding the power of
erotic feelings in our work as group and individual therapists.
didactic-experiential-sharing of work experiences-demonstration
Learning
Objectives:
The attendee will
be able to:
1. Distinguish
between subjective and objective countertransference.
2. Identify two
therapist behaviors that might indicate resistance around erotic
countertransference.
3. Describe how a
therapist's erotic countertransference might be useful in working
with a client or group.
Course References:
Mann, D. (1997).
Psychotherapy: An Erotic Relationship. New York: Routledge.
Morrel, A. (1992). Countertransference and the analyst's response to it: Feelings about
feelings. Modern Psychoanalysis, 17, pp. 85-99.
Pope, K., Sonne,
J., and Greene, B. (2006).
What therapists don't talk about and why:
Understanding taboos that hurt us and our clients. Washington, D.C.:
American Psychological Association. |