Publication | Closed Access
Therapeutic Intimacy
48
Citations
7
References
2006
Year
Trauma (Addiction Psychology)Trauma TreatmentHumanitiesHealth SciencesTherapeutic IntimacyClinical PsychologyTrauma-informed CounselingEducationProfessional CounselingIndividual TherapyTrauma RecoveryTherapeutic RelationshipPsychodynamicSeptember 11Psychoanalytic PsychotherapyTrauma (Critical Care Medicine)Abstract AbstractPost-traumatic Stress Disorder
Abstract Abstract This essay describes therapeutic intimacy as a deeply personal and evolving definition of what each therapist finds uniquely curative. The author arrived at her definition following the events of September 11, 2001, and notes that constructs such as vicarious traumatization do not adequately convey the profound impact that such a catastrophic event can have on the clinician's personal and professional life. She introduces the term "shared trauma" to describe the lasting, transformative changes in one's self-concept taking place when the clinician and client are exposed to a collective trauma. The arbitrariness of professional boundaries is captured through discussion of client narratives. Key Words: Trauma9/11countertransferencevicarious traumatization
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