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The Narcissistic Borderline Couple: New Approaches to Marital Therapy 2nd Edition PDF

249 Pages·2003·1.61 MB·English
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The Narcissistic/Borderline Couple The Narcissistic/Borderline Couple New Approaches to Marital Therapy Second Edition by Joan Lachkar, Ph.D. BRUNNER-ROUTLEDGE New York and Hove Published in 2004 by Brunner-Routledge 29 West 35th Street New York, NY 10001 www.brunner-routledge.com Published in Great Britain by Brunner-Routledge 27 Church Road Hove, East Sussex BN3 2FA www.brunner-routledge.co.uk Copyright © 2004 by Taylor & Francis Books, Inc. Brunner-Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group. This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005. “To purchase your own copy of this or any of Taylor & Francis or Routledge’s collection of thousands of eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk.” All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Lachkar, Joan. The narcissistic/borderline couple: a psychoanalytic perspective on marital treatment/ by Joan Lachkar.—2nd ed. p.; cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-415-93471-0 (Print Edition) (hardcover: alk. paper) 1. Marital psychotherapy. 2. Borderline personality disorder. 3. Narcissism. 4. Psychoanalysis. 5. Couples—Psychology. [DNLM: 1. Marital Therapy—methods. 2. Borderline Personality Disorder. 3. Narcissism. 4. Object Attachment. 5. Self Psychology. WM 430.5.M3 L137n 2003] I. Title. RC488.5.L348 2003 616.89 ′156—dc21 2003009288 ISBN 0-203-50125-X Master e-book ISBN ISBN 0-203-57546-6 (Adobe eReader Format) Contents Acknowledgments v Introduction vii Chapter 1 The Narcissist and the Borderline: Clinical 1 Description Chapter 2 Theoretical Implications 14 Chapter 3 The Couple: The Dance, the Drama, and the Bond 32 Chapter 4 Marital Theatrics: The Psychodynamics of the 52 Narcissistic/Borderline Couple Chapter 5 Dynamic Positions and Transference Formation 78 Chapter 6 Group Psychology and the Narcissistic/Borderline 107 Couple Chapter 7 Cross-Cultural Couples 124 Chapter 8 Model of Treatment: Treatment Techniques and 143 Procedures Chapter 9 Final Cases 176 Curtain Call: A Final Note 210 Definitions 212 References 221 Index 228 Acknowledgments I am particularly grateful to all my colleagues and friends in the field of psychoanalysis, as well as to my teachers and codancers in the artistic world of classical ballet. The latter contributed much to my efforts to understand the psychic pain and conflict that occurs in the mental lives of the conflicting couples demonstrated in this book. What better way to learn about narcissism than to have looked at myself in a mirror every day since the age of seven! I feel compelled to acknowledge the special contribution of Carmelita Maracci, Stanley Holden, and Margaret Hills, noted ballet masters of classical dance, with whom I have had the good fortune to study dance for more than 20 years. It was through ballet that I learned the importance of artistic expression, and the blending of technique and discipline. Be it at the barre or within the constraints of the consultation room, one must adapt to “the dance”: Both ballet and the practice of psychoanalytic psychotherapy involve the subtle blending of scientific principles with art (offering one’s unique interpretation while remaining steadfast to analytic principles). The study of narcissism and borderline pathology would not have been possible without the mentorship and influences of the following master blenders to whom I owe much gratitude. They include Drs. Wilfred Bion, James Grotstein, Otto Kernberg, Nancy Kobrin, Albert Mason, Harvey Martz, Hindy Nobler, Marvin Osman, Florence Bienenfeld, Irene Harwood, Orli Peter, Roberta Rinaldi, Judy Warmbrand, James Weiss, Peter Berton, Peter Lowenberg, and the late Drs. Samuel Eisenstein and Alexander Rogawsky. Also, my ex-husband Robert Kahn, M.D., whom I met when I was 18, taught me more about psychoanalysis than any supervisor. I am also grateful to Lloyd deMause, Jerry Piven, Jerry Atlas, Howard Stain, and all the others at the Journal of Psychohistory who gave me permission to delve into the political arena, blending political and marital conflict as a new dimension in the study of cross-cultural couples. I am indebted to my editors and the staff at Taylor and Francis— particularly George P.Zimmar, executive editor, Luciana Cassano, senior editorial assistant, Mick Spillane, senior production editor, and Shannon Vargo, assistant editor—for their patience and assistance in the rewriting vi of this book. In addition, I am grateful for the editorial efforts of Joanne Freeman, her patience in enduring an endless plethora of revisions, and her invaluable insights and good ear. I’m also indebted to my research assistants Nicole Lachkar, Rafi Raffee, Scott Raphael, and Alexander Sokhis. I offer special gratitude to my family, friends, and colleagues, to my patients, who paid me to learn from them, and to my dear children— Sharon, Pamela, and Nicole—to whom this book is dedicated. Introduction The first edition of The Narcissistic/Borderline Couple abstracted concepts mainly from classical psychoanalysis, self-psychology (Kohut), and object relations (Klein, Winnicott, Fairbairn, Bion, Kernberg). At that time, clinicians, particularly classically trained psychoanalysts, looked somewhat askance at diagnosing and treating relational disorders. Many thought of self-psychology and object-relational approaches as an “odd couple” relationship. But they can indeed work together, as evidenced by the increasing number of clinicians who have begun to apply an object- relational approach to the treatment of marital conflict. Even those who for many years “avoided” couple therapy on the basis that it went against their classical orientation are now actively working within this modality In the first edition of this book, a number of psychoanalysts and psychoanalytically trained researchers who understand both fields were acknowledged as making major contributions to marital therapy These include Dicks (1967); Lachkar (1984, 1985, 1986, 1989); Lansky (1981, 1987); Scarf (1987); Scharff and Scharff (1987); Schwartzman (1984); Sharpe (1981); Slipp (1984); Solomon (1985, 1986); Strean (1980,1985); and Willi (1982). Since then, an increasing number of researchers who understand both fields have been directing their attention to marital conflict. These include Carlson and Sperry (1998); Kernberg (1995); Lachkar (1998); McCormack (2000); and Rothstein (1998). This edition further emphasizes the contribution of object relations in the treatment of couple therapy, especially in helping couples face internal deficits, conflicts, distortions, and projections. Melanie Klein’s (1957) formulations have proved invaluable in couple therapy, including her introjective/projective process, a priceless construct in helping us understand the tangled web couples weave, how one partner projects a negative feeling onto the other, and how the other then tends to identify or overidentify with that which is being projected. In applying this process to couple therapy, I have renamed it dual projective identification, a term that seems more suited to the codependent nature of the relationship. In conjoint treatment, we see how certain dynamic mechanisms of the narcissist (grandiosity, entitlement, guilt, withdrawal) can arouse states of viii unworthiness and nonexistence in the borderline (shame, blame, envy abandonment, and persecutory anxieties). While the first edition referenced the work of D.W.Fairbairn, it may not have sufficiently stressed his importance. Extending beyond Klein, Fairbairn, more than anyone, helps us understand why couples stay in painful conflictual relationships. His concept of splitting of the ego into multitudinous internal objects deepens our understanding of why couples remain forever loyal to their painful internal objects (rejecting, insatiable, unavailable). My training in classical ballet led to the conceptualization of “the dance of the couple” to help understand the choreography—the ongoing, circular repetitive behaviors and interactions—that takes place within the narcissistic/borderline relationship. This “psychological dance” stirs up highly charged conflict that meets the primitive needs of the individuals involved. Each partner “needs” the other to play out his or her personal relational drama. Within these beleaguered love bonds, the narcissistic/borderline couple is redefined in this volume as two developmentally arrested people who coerce each other into certain roles as each brings into their current reality archaic experiences embedded in age- old sentiments. Together they play out a drama characterized by painful, never-ending patterns of behavior. They form a parasitic bond that leads not to growth and development but to destructive and repetitive patterns of behavior. It is not really important how they find each other; more important is what makes them stay together. Two narcissists or two borderlines do not “do the dance,” but when paired, these oppositional types appear to maintain a bond. It is almost as if they have some extraordinary built-in sonar system or sniffing device to find one another, like a bloodhound after a rabbit. Why are narcissistic/borderline couples more prevalent today? Perhaps the reason many clinicians are encountering more of this kind of pathologic pairing is because of an increasing percentage of single-parent families, higher divorce rates, increased numbers of working mothers, parental unavailability to children, the near extinction of extended families, and, in general, greater social isolation. The 10 years that have elapsed since the first edition of this book have brought the opportunity to present material on couple therapy to mental health professionals and colleagues throughout the United States and Europe. Having evolved and gained new knowledge and insights not only from colleagues and clinicians but also from my students and patients, I have come to recognize the ever-changing states of narcissistic and borderline vulnerabilities. These disorders are not clear entities; rather, narcissistic/borderline states, traits, and characteristics tend to vacillate. In addition, narcissistic vulnerabilities can be recognized in other disorders. As the first edition stressed, the confusion between narcissistic and borderline states, traits, and characteristics is further acknowledged when ix we consider the type of narcissist or borderline we are talking about. A Freudian narcissist? A Kohutian narcissist? A Kernbergian narcissist? A borderline narcissist, an obsessive-compulsive narcissist, an antisocial narcissist, a histrionic narcissist, a depressive narcissist, or a malignant narcissist? Although many couples may not fit into the paradigm of the narcissistic/ borderline configuration, the treatment techniques and approaches outlined in this book are useful for almost all aspects of conjoint therapy This edition ventures beyond narcissistic and borderline vulnerabilities to explore a variety of other dyadic configurations, such as what happens when a histrionic personality hooks up with an obsessive-compulsive, a dependent with a schizoid, or a passive-aggressive with a perfectionistic/ caretaking-type personality Not only are there narcissistic borderlines, narcissistic obsessive-compulsives, narcissistic passive-aggressives, but there are many faces and phases of narcissism. Although they may all show the same pattern, they form different modes of dyadic attachments. Since the appearance of The Narcissistic/Borderline Couple, a remarkable number of therapists have extended beyond narcissistic/ borderline relations. Within these thematic motifs, we now have narcissistic vulnerabilities in couples (Levene, 1997), the narcissistic couple (Kalogjera et al., 1998), the passive-aggressive couple (Slavik, 1998), the dependent/ narcissistic couple (Nurse, 1998), narcissistic disorders and dependent/ narcissistic couples (Carlson & Sperry, 1998; Nurse, 1998), and the psychotic couple (Maniacci, 1998). Others have gone beyond this malaise to address a garden variety of maladaptive strains. Carlson and Sperry, in The Disordered Couple (1998), included the psychotic couple and the eating-disordered couple. Although many theorists have made contributions bridging classical theory and marital conflict, few of these authors have distinguished between narcissistic and borderline vulnerabilities within a particular dyadic relationship. Although psychoanalysts have made significant contributions to the field of marital therapy a review of the literature that has appeared during the last decade reveals that the most inspiring material, oddly enough, has come from non-conjoint therapists. Behaviorists are too directive and ask too many questions. The object relationists are too confrontive and too focused on the internal world. The self-psychologists are “too empathic” and focus too heavily on the external (self objects). The difference between the psychoanalytic/psychodynamic model of therapy and the cognitive approach is that the former holds the relationship to be the number 1 priority while the latter holds the individual to be the number 1 priority My approach begins with regarding “the relationship” as the patient, gradually weaning the couple away from the relationship to self-development. Initially the relationship stirs up many unresolved developmental issues. This new approach holds that even when the

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In this second edition of her groundbreaking book, Dr. Joan Lachkar addresses the ever-changing faces and phases of narcissism within the context of marital therapy and discusses the new developments in the treatment of marital conflict. Drawing from many different theoretical frameworks, mainly sel
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