You are invited into the mind of the analyst as she draws from reverie, memory, and affect to inspire offerings that enliven the moment, moving the analytic pair forward in affective freedom and self-definition. Body Words identify the subjective linkages we make to describe experiencing within and between self and other that leads us to know whether we or our patient are delivering the message in a manner that feels real. Each chapter illustrates how Pizer arrived at this important concept and others in a way that is full of rich, experience-near clinical moments that posed significant challenges.
Body Words and the Analyst's Use of Self is a rare window that allows readers-new and seasoned clinicians of various theoretical persuasions-to become intimate witnesses to the analyst's subjectivity and the creativity of the analytic partnership.
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Hazel Ipp, PhD, chief editor emeritus, Psychoanalytic Dialogues; vice president, IARPP
'Open this book and enter a world of experience. As one of the masters of the practice and theory of Relational Psychoanalysis, Barbara Pizer conveys in exquisite detail how psychoanalysis moves and changes people's lives. She practices and teaches the art of engagement, where feeling and expression, whether verbal or not, are the embodied center of clinical work. You will feel immersed in the living moment of analytic work. More important, you will learn how the shared knots of repetition loosen and transform into a more open way of engaging and living creatively as well.'
Jack Foehl, PhD, joint editor in chief, Psychoanalytic Dialogues; president, Boston Psychoanalytic Society and Institute
'Pizer's book demonstrates her astute capacity to put the world of the patient-therapist relationship before us. Her innovative ideas for how to engage successfully in the dyad are perfect for both experienced and new clinicians. Body Words is an accurate, evocative expression of mind-brain-body connection crucial for a contemporary emphasis on nonlinear process and systems thinking. Finally, there is the poetry in Pizer's prose that her old readers have come to expect and new readers, dreading theory-heavy, unimaginative writing, will welcome.'
Estelle Shane, PhD, training and supervising analyst and faculty member, Insitute of Contemporary Psychoanalysis, Los Angeles, and the New Center for Psychoanalysis, Los Angeles