Lecture with Dr. Chiara Cattelan, Italy
Book ticketsOrganised by:
Frances Tustin Memorial Trust
Description
The title of the lecture is: Co-construction of a common language: from shared silence to psychoanalytic dialogue with a patient on the autism spectrum
Abstract: This paper explores the challenge of constructing a common language between analyst and patient on the autistic spectrum. It describes the difficulties the patient encounters using words and exemplifies the process that leads to a shared way of communicating. It relies on clinical fragments from the work with a patient, now 18, who has been in psychotherapy four times a week since age 3. At the beginning, there was no verbal communication or eye contact and no representation of space between self/other and between the patient’s sounds, which were long, apparently meaningless sequences, sought for the sensation they provided. Crossing the space between inside and outside triggered the anxiety of falling.
Communication began with elementary forms of attunement. The analyst picked up short, repeatable rhythmic sequences in the patient’s sounds. Repeating them, the analyst ‘inverted the imitation’ becoming the ‘learner’ and allowing the patient to be the promoter. Everything the patient proposed was welcome: sounds, postures, isolated or condensed words, objects, books, magazines, photographs, songs, which took on meaning as free associations that made it possible to work within the transference/countertransference. Shared experiences within the setting’s rhythmicity helped to transform the sense of intolerable emptiness into a representation of space within oneself and between oneself and the other. Out of a two-dimensional/adhesive situation, patient and analyst were able to create ‘forms of mediation’ to cross space and adventure into the intangible dimension of imagination, granting at least partial access to abstract conceptions. The way the analyst listened to and addressed the patient as a subject as well as the patient’s role as a promoter were important in this transformation. The patient’s active role in co-constructing a common language led to a more cohesive self and to a capacity to reflect on his own experience.
Dr. Chiara Cattelan is a child and adult training and supervising psychoanalyst with the Italian Psychoanalytic Society of which she was secretary of the Child/Adolescent training program 2021-2024. She is a paediatrician, a child psychiatrist and has headed the Child Psychiatric Unit of Women and Child Health Department at Padua University until 2015, teaching at the postgraduate and Ph.D. She was in supervision with Frances Tustin from 1982 to 1993.