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The Execution Boundary and Borderline Hatred
by Kathi Stringer
July 19, 2002
[Revision N/A]
Special Thanks to Nicole for Inspiring Me to Write this Paper
The idea of writing this paper came up because after examining my own
feelings and talking to individuals with borderline personality disorder,
the issue seemed to come up frequently that their treater would threaten
to ban them from the practice because of their primitive rage acted out
in transference.
Topographical Model
The material in this paper is based on the modern psychodynamic psychotherapy
model embedded in object relations.
Abandonment and Rejection
The execution boundary and abandonment are one of the same in the mind
of a borderline. That said, before we discuss the execution boundary,
lets reflect on the borderline�s desperation to prevent separation and
loss. Adler reflects the borderline wishes;
�Borderline patients talk vividly about their longings to be held and
contained, and their panic about being dropped, abandoned and rejected
(p.221).�
Searles echoes Adler, �borderline personality-organization itself renders
ever-present, for him, the danger of separation and loss (p.288)�
This basic intrinsic borderline pathology and its
destructive power will be the theme for this paper.
Using Transference in the Analytic Space
Since we are going to include transference in this discussion would be
useful to review it�s basic fundamental significance.
Transference are feelings and attitudes from previous relationships of
the past and brought into the present and directed toward the treater.
Of course, transference is always a distortion but extremely useful to
examine the internal structures of the borderline. Kernberg interprets
transference in this way
�Transference is usually conceptualized as the
transfer of love or hatred from the original object onto the therapist
(p.156).�
For example a client may direct rage to the treater
seen as the parental object since this rage is, in reality, rightfully
at parents. Through this transference a client is able to work out this
anger in the analytic space.
The analytic space is the realm where assigned roles are played out and
examined to identify defenses and developmental organization of regressed
individuals.
Reassignment of Ego Strength
A frighten mistrustful borderline may attempt to devalue the therapist
and reassign the treater�s ego as helpless, weak and insignificant. The
unconscious dynamic that may play out is now the client is in the safe
controlling role of parent, able to torment the child, aka the treater.
To the borderline it gives a sense of being in a position of doing the
rejecting instead of being rejected. The pseudo gain from the switch gives
rise to the prominent idea that the treater cannot destroy the patient.
Truly a paradox since most borderlines have infantile longings to be contained
and nurtured and this exchange prevents exactly that.
Lets talk about the Countertransference Hook
I think it is important to briefly touch on countertransference for a
moment to see how it plays into the execution boundary.
Countertransference is a term that describes a jointly created phenomenon
between the treater and the client. In essence, countertransference is
a reaction from the client�s transference combined with the unconscious
unresolved issues of the treater. For example lets say a client brings
past unresolved anger from a previous relationship and projects it onto
the therapist. When this projection of anger from the client is combined
with pressure, as if to force the treater to behave in line with the clients
wishes, we call this projective identification, since the client is identifying
with the treater to project the object (anger). Think of it as a client
unconsciously pushing the hot buttons of the treater, as if the client
is taking her anger out on the treater. In order for the client to take
her anger out on the treater and get the desired reaction, the treater
must have some sort of weakness that is identified by the client. Once
identified, this becomes a countertransference hook, a hot button, which
of course can hook the treater to behave in such a way as the client is
projecting. One cannot project into a hollow shell. Like a small child
may think, �I made mommy do what I wanted her to do.�
I think it is important to describe the countertransference hook as it
relates to anger projected from the client in transference from previous
relationships. Perhaps if the treater were aware of the dynamic he would
be able to detach and not take the projected anger as personal. Which
is difficult since the projection was custom tailored for the treater
as identified by the client via his ego weaknesses. With practice and
hyper diligence the treater may be able to contain the projection without
retaliating.
Projective Identification via the Hot Button
Some borderlines are so terrified of annihilation, of getting erased,
of being thrown into the dark abyss that they will protect themselves
by zeroing in on the countertransference hook of the treater.
Adler insightfully describes a borderlines fear;
�These patients are expert in perceiving aspects
of the therapist�s personality that are problem areas for the therapist.
Primitive patients probably develop this skill from their style of existence,
in which every encounter with any person is so threatening that they
must perceive his weaknesses in order to be prepared for the final battle
for survival (p.180)�
Most borderlines seem to have a honing device that
directs them to the therapist�s ego weakness. Once this weakness is identified,
a borderline may push the treater�s hot buttons defined previously as
a countertransference hook. Once the treater is hooked through projective
identification, the client has now gained a sense of control, if and only
if, the treater identifies with the projection. If the borderline is successful
and the treater identifies with the projection, (anger in this case) then
what we call projective counteridentification has taken place (Ogden 1982).
In other words the treater now behaves characteristically similar to the
internal drama of the borderline (Adler), as if an alien force has taken
the treater over (Gabbard). Sometimes the projective counteridentification
is so miserable for the treater that he may take this dilemma under consultation.
Kernberg reminds us that,
�Under conditions of projective counteridentification
the therapist may unreasonably feel unfit to treat the patient (p. 86).�
Since the treater may feel unreasonably unfit to
treat the patient, the treater may threaten the client with the execution
boundary. However
In cases under supervision or by consultation, it is here where the opportunity
of magic begins. The treater is now in a position to respond in a kinder
way providing a new experience for the borderline to internalize. This
is what we call an introject. The treater is now offering a positive introject
to the borderline, and if accepted, it may be taken in and assimilated.
This is referred to as introjective identification. Meaning the client
has identified and accepted the new experience from the treater and is
willing to take it in to be assimilated. The client is now able to see
the world as a modified and newer place in which to live.
Advantage of Acting out Anger in Transference
A therapist that prevents regressive developmental behaviors (anger) from
being examined in the analytic space can fixate or prolong therapy since
the dynamic that drives the pattern cannot be identified in the transference.
The threat of an execution boundary for vocally expressing anger may be
interpreted as the ultimate abandonment and rejection; a devastating borderline
injury. The alternative as Adler so eloquently states;
�The therapist�s consistent, tactful, non-retaliatory
handling of the patient�s rage allows the pathological defenses to be
given up slowly and permits the patient to experience the therapist
as the truly good object who can safely be intorjected (p176).�
Gunderson also advocates the tolerance of negative
transference as a basic tenet; �The therapist must be able to withstand
the borderline�s verbal assaults without either retaliating or withdrawing.
By this process, the patient�s hostility can be examined and understood
as part of a more general pattern of relating to important others.�
The Holding Environment and Modified Introjects
The analytic space created in the therapeutic framework is what Winnicott
(1965) referred to as the �Holding Environment.� This provides a safe
environment for the borderline to establish trust in the treater as the
good object. Applegate & Bonovitz suggest that;
�it is only when a sense of safety and trust
finds solid footing in a secure clinical holding environment and ego
relatedness with the clinician is established that clients can begin
to risk testing the clinician�s durability.�
Once testing begins, consciously or unconsciously
a treater can modify the projected hostilely and rage into a softer, soother
objects and offer it back to the borderline as a modified positive introject.
Apparently, since it took years to form the borderline personality, it
will also take collaborative work, bit-by-bit, for the borderline to re-trust,
relearn, and re-identify with something better then their terrifying internal
objects. Some borderlines have burning determination to go back into the
past via transference to the treater and resolve the anger that was emotionally
fixated from an earlier period.
With most borderline personalities, trust is a funny thing. It reminds
me of a tid-bit I remember that goes like this, �If the employee gets
1000 at-a-boys, then he shall receive the promotion as company president,
but one ah-shit along the way, and the process starts all over again.�
It is frustrating to a treater to start over because of a countertransference
reaction caught by a receptive hypersensitive borderline. Perhaps the
treater may reduce the at-a-boys toward a successful conclusion of treatment
if the execution boundary did not constantly raise it�s ugly head and
start the trusting process all over again.
Further exploration in some cases may reveal an unconscious narcissist
longing in the treater, rooted in countertransference, to encourage dependency
from the borderline. Since setting the execution boundary with regular
reminders may cause a borderline to become clingier, more frantic, desperate,
anxious, and distressed, then this would seem to satisfy the treaters
unconscious wish for dependency. The problem is, this may hinder trust
in the therapeutic alliance and of particular discern, treatment may be
extended over a longer duration rising out of what a primitive personality
may perceive as exclusion from the family relationship. �I am still bad
and I can be cast out, and you have been lying to me all along that you
really care about me. See, I knew this would happen.�
Harmful Introjects
Most borderlines worst fears stem from abandonment and rejection ideation.
This terrifying pathology drives them to unconsciously compare any interpretation,
facial expression or gesture as clues to impending doom. This undifferentiatedness
helps explain why the execution boundary acts as a cathexis to feed borderline
fear and regressive behaviors, which causes at times resentment from the
treater in the form of negative introjects. Searles adds,
�Much �self�-destructive behavior on the patient�s
part consists in his having introjected some of this most primitive,
�sickest� components of the analyst�s ego-functioning and, in the acting
out, venting aggression upon this introject (p.323).�
This describes the effect a negative introject
can have on a client in the form of self-destruction. The execution boundary
tossed into the therapeutic arena may certainly be a countertransference
reaction from the treater to punish the client. The problem is, words
are powerful and especially powerful when assimilated by the client from
an idealized treater. The execution boundary is so powerful, so devastating,
and so frightening, that the mere suggestion of it�s essence can set back
treatment for months.
A Paradox
So it seems we have a sort of paradox here. The treater perceives that
setting the execution boundary will limit acting out in rage; however,
this capital boundary may fixate progress, impede the development of trust
and hinder the formation of a constant object. Ironically the very rage
the treater intended to emotionally restrict manifests in the borderline�s
developmental defects giving rise to unwanted regressive symptoms. These
regressive characteristics may take the form of dependency, neediness
and self-destructive behavior since aggression is turn inward on self.
On aggression, Catham explains,
�They have no way to modulate this aggression because they have not achieved
the cognitive prerequisites for doing so (p.197).�
In fundamental nature, setting a capital boundary to contain rage may
also regress the borderlines internal structures leading to desperation.
Conclusion
The mere oppression of the execution boundary can manifest in the form
of regressive defensives in the borderline and prolong or destroy therapy
all together. The borderline may prematurely terminate therapy in anticipation
of getting terminated. This should be of primary concern for treaters
that wish expedient recovery for their borderline patients. I recall a
saying that when like this, �Violence is the last resort of the incompetent�
Execution or a creditable threat in the mind of a borderline is just as
devastating
References:
Effective Psychotherapy with Borderline Patients / Waldinger & Gunderson
[1989]
Countertransference and Regression / Boyer [1999]
Borderline Psychopathology and Its Treatment / Adler [1985]
The Facilitating Partnership / Applegate & Bonovitz [1995]
The Psychiatric Annals Volume 32, Number 6 [2002]
The Narcissistic and Borderline Disorders / Masterson [1981]
Psychodynamic Psychotherapy of Borderline Patients / Kernberg [1989]
Intensive Psychotherapy of the Borderline Patient / Chessick [1983]
Borderline Personality Disorder / Gunderson [1984]
Management of Countertransference with Borderline Patients / Gabbard [1994]
Treatment of Patients in the Borderline Spectrum / Meissner [1995]
Borderline Personality Disorder, A Clinical Guide / Gunderson [2001]
My Work with Borderline Patients / Searles [1990]
Countertransference Issues in Psychiatric Treatment / Gabbard [1999]
Psychodynamic Psychiatry in Clinical Practice DSM-IV Ed. / Gabbard [1994]
Treatment of the Borderline Personality / Chatham [1985]
**************
Compliments of Kathi Stringer � All Rights Reserved
7/19/2002
Kathi's Mental Health
Review
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