INTERNATIONAL PSYCHOANALYTICAL ASSOCIATION

INTERNATIONAL PSYCHOANALYTICAL ASSOCIATION

The International Psychoanalytical Association is a membership organization and exists to advance psychoanalysis. Founded by Freud in 1910, it is the world’s primary accrediting and regulatory body for the profession. Its mission is: to specify foundational training principles for psychoanalysts; to develop and accredit psychoanalytical societies; to establish ethical standards for its members; and to strengthen the vitality of research and transmission of psychoanalysis. Its central aims are to foster and enhance members’ sense of belonging to an international psychoanalytic community, and to ensure the vigorous development of clinical psychoanalysis and theoretical pluralism. The IPA is committed to understanding the impact of the contemporary world on individuals, groups and communities and to intervening psychoanalytically in social issues.

Пікірлер

  • @juanadrianarquinegogomez3610
    @juanadrianarquinegogomez36107 күн бұрын

    the shed never disappoints. certainly the best psychoanalysis spokesman of these ages.

  • @Broomhills100
    @Broomhills10011 күн бұрын

    Talks on Psychoanalysis Podcast Archive: talksonpsychoanalysis.podbean.com

  • @chaychay1640
    @chaychay164011 күн бұрын

    The book Developing the Psychoanalytic Mind is a great read!

  • @user-nd3fp5fl8n
    @user-nd3fp5fl8n14 күн бұрын

    List of Kernberg's "Affect Systems": Attachment system, sexual system, play/affiliation system, fight/flight system, panic system. He implies that each can be identified in the neurobiology/neuroendocrinology of the limbic system.

  • @marcabolie3469
    @marcabolie346918 күн бұрын

    public intellectual genius

  • @Broomhills100
    @Broomhills10019 күн бұрын

    Buy the book! The Ego and the Id: 100 Years Later is available to purchase from the Freud Museum Shop or online at Routledge.Worldwide shipping is included as well as 30% discount for members and candidates. Order book here: www.routledge.com/The-Ego-and-the-Id-100-Years-Later/Busch-Delgado/p/book/9781032373850 Freud Museum Exhibition A Century of The Ego and the Id extended until September 2024: www.freud.org.uk/exhibitions/the-ego-and-the-id/

  • @nildest
    @nildest22 күн бұрын

    Really interesting to hear people from the Eastern regions, thank you for posting.

  • @havadatequila
    @havadatequila23 күн бұрын

    Has Korean always been this way or more since the introduction of Western consumerism?

  • @mr.anindyabanerjee9905
    @mr.anindyabanerjee990524 күн бұрын

    Very pertinent discussion😊

  • @aussieallstar66
    @aussieallstar6628 күн бұрын

    The first psychologist I saw when I was 20 in 1968 was a Freudian psychoanalyst. I did not know how blessed and privileged I was. It was better than any of the many other therapy modalities I tried throughout the rest of my life. The next best was by Reichian therapist an adherent of Wilhelm Reich a disciple of Freud.

  • @claudiaantonelli4045
    @claudiaantonelli404529 күн бұрын

    It's an amazing video. Well done IPA PDR!

  • @SylviabombsmithUjhy75bd34
    @SylviabombsmithUjhy75bd34Ай бұрын

    so good

  • @ameya6702
    @ameya6702Ай бұрын

    Truly spectacular 👌👌👌

  • @anafabbri5922
    @anafabbri5922Ай бұрын

    Gracias por la grabación

  • @Nicadome1
    @Nicadome1Ай бұрын

    are the slide still available?

  • @pkozielski58
    @pkozielski58Ай бұрын

    I am the case 2 character. And now I am a father and I doing all the same mistakes. Hopefully I could go to therapy and fix it for my sons future health.

  • @cody_go_create
    @cody_go_createАй бұрын

    I am case 2 and have a young son as well. I have started and it has helped in major ways. Good luck you got this man.

  • @poor_jafar
    @poor_jafarАй бұрын

    49:41 59:04

  • @kseniakagan-levinskaya8057
    @kseniakagan-levinskaya8057Ай бұрын

    beautiful and hilarious

  • @chaychay1640
    @chaychay1640Ай бұрын

    What a great discussion on my favorite topic 'treatment frame issues'

  • @chaychay1640
    @chaychay1640Ай бұрын

    Individuality and the American nightmare fr fr

  • @mirgulkz
    @mirgulkzАй бұрын

    🙏👍

  • @xinking2644
    @xinking2644Ай бұрын

    what a great video, what a great peroson. it made to think myself more.

  • @louisegilbert2713
    @louisegilbert2713Ай бұрын

    This was a great presentation

  • @bellakrinkle9381
    @bellakrinkle9381Ай бұрын

    Drives are unconsciously acted out, via feelings. They are almost separate from other forms of treatments for resolution of one's dysfunctional childhood. Everything is chaotic and intertwined until all is unraveled. (Someone will need to describe Freud's death drive to me, because I have not discovered it, and I don't understand it.)

  • @sumdishakhanna5922
    @sumdishakhanna59222 ай бұрын

    insightful. Thank you

  • @bellakrinkle9381
    @bellakrinkle93812 ай бұрын

    Getting back to the possibility of psychosis originating in infancy, while making a 2nd cup of coffee, I decided that there could be something to this theory. Then I realized that my parental, childhood family would be a primary case study. Then, I connected more dots....omg...here goes, in a nut shell. BTW, it's taken me a lifetime to fix myself. Only 2 days ago I finally looked into autism, knowing that my score was 22 out of 35 questions on an online test for autism; but who takes online quizzes seriously, right? I certainly did not, until 2 days ago someone sent me a decent discussion on autism. I was shocked that I could finally make sense of all my oddness. This also explains why I could never let go of my inner world. Here I am, at 77 years old. A few years ago I dreamt that an entire family had been murdered in their pale yellow house. Of course I knew instantaneously that this was my family and that it was a metaphor for my childhood family. Psychologically murdered. I thought to myself, me too? Of course, I needed to die before I could become me. I became me through my self analysis...my experiential analysis. Moving on... My father was introverted and quiet. Not so much that he could not run his self owned office supply business in small town mid America. He was a PK kid and met mom at a Christian college, They had two families, my 2 much older sisters, then, my 1.5 year older brother and I. (who should have been a boy baby according to the doctor - my mother had her heart set on this reality.) After 2 weeks, I was told 54 years later that she was too nervous because my 1.5 yr old brother was getting into things around our small, then, house. The family moved to that pale yellow house (white, in reality) when I was 3. At age 6 or 7 I was distraught that my brother held the nose of our sweet dachshund shut when they were playing together. Clearly Mandy was struggling to breathe. He laughed, I was horrified. There were adults in the room, who said nothing. I yelled at Peter to stop. I don't remember him doing such a thing again. However, in my mind this was the 1st indication that he was different from me, I mean psychologically, years later. Sadistic. Mom, as stated previously had a delusional disorder, unknown to the family. Years later, when in my early 20's dad said to me that mom could not love. I thought that he was saying that she could not love him, her husband. Moving on, my father could love, he was always different from her. I sensed this as a small child. I don't want to drag my comments further into my day, so I need to summarize. My brother could be autistic. He left the family at 16, and later cut off all ties with the family when he and I were in late teens. My oldest sister inherited a different but related delusional disorder, my 2nd sister (and second mother) was BPD. She sadistically teased and bullied me starting most likely beginning in the big house. I adored her as a child, even though she was mean to me, sometimes. This pattern continued until her death at 86. I had "garden variety"delusional thinking when I entered as the female (subject) analysand for the psychiatrist in training. I do not know if he was aware of my delusion, it was never discussed. And to be honest, I only recall telling him my constant, non ending sleep dreams, to which he never attempted to interpret. This is not to say that he couldn't analyze. He was the one who told me that mother emotionally neglected me. (I had no idea to what he meant.) Yet, I had no reason to not believe him, either. I remember always attempting to understand reality when I began college, realizing that there were many. I was always trying to narrow reality down to only mine and that of the world at large. OK, you all need to fill in the blanks, this is the best I will do, in this format. Especially since I can only use one finger entering data because I have no one handed keyboard. To summarize, the infancy origin of pychosis later in life looks to have a probability of nearly 1.0. What a fascinating topic for further research! As I think further, and later in the day, I want to say that my father was not crazy. However, he lost his sense of manhood when he lost considerable money in the stock market. As he said to me, at that time, he was ruined; he was extremely distraught. It was only then that my mother started selling Shaklee Products in SF, NM. It suited her well. She was always interested in nutrition, so she studied and learned more about it. At this stage, my father lost his identity, which in my mind is what trips the dementia switch. He was thought to have Alzheimer's since these were the years it began to make the front covers of Time and Newsweek magazines. I'm reasonably sure he did not. I had more than one intelligent conversation with him before he truly descended into dementia. I lived 60 miles away from them, enrolled in university; I made frequent visits home, to support mom and to hug my father. It was a very difficult time for each of us. Mother was insidious and easily overpowered my quiet, introverted father. Prior to dad marrying mother after graduating college, he knew things were not right with her. However, she was quite beautiful, especially in those years (and far into old age, truthfully.) No doubt he was smitten with her, early on. In one of those honest and open conversations with him during a time mom was taking a break from his care of him, I spent the week with dad during mom's break to visit my oldest sister on the east coast. He told me never to marry unless it felt "right. Nothing more was said, or needed to be said. I understood the implication, then and more so, as I put all the pieces of our dysfunctional family together. I was the sole sibling who connected with dad. Things were always off between my brother and dad. They simply could not relate to one another for as long as I can remember. Not for not trying - they did many activities together such as playing tennis, hunting and fishing. However, there were never any discussions of emotions and feelings, ever. My brother never took any interest in my father's business. Perhaps it was because I did. It seems that one day I got into dad's car and went to work with him. I was very little when this began, 3 most likely. This was not a one time occasion. I have many memories of the two businesses dad had, and all the store bookkeeper ladies who sometimes invited me to their homes for lunch. And of a male employee who rode his Harley motorcycle to work to repair office equipment. I always was intrigued with that big machine with the oversized seat and the shiny chrome handle bars and mechanics. LOL I miss both parents, to this day., in spite of the difficulties experienced.

  • @bellakrinkle9381
    @bellakrinkle93812 ай бұрын

    These beliefs make much sense, instead of Freud's drive theory. I don't discount Freud, entirely, it's his approach to understanding babies that is simply too improvable, hence, nonsensical. I do believe babies have more awareness that makes them aware of an object outside of themselves. I question the concept between infant psychosis and adult psychosis - it's an interesting theory. Yes, what causes psychosis. I 've always wonder about this. I could address much of the transference relationship. However, I don't want to be here all day. I will only say that my 8+ year 5/5 per week was lacking in most realms since my "analyst" was only in training mode. I think he represented both my mother and father, but in the end, years later, I believed he was the holding place for my father. I terminated myself because we were not moving forward, only going in circles. In those days attachment theory was not part of analysis. I attached to my father. My mother was mentally ill with a delusional disorder...I only recently accepted this reality. In my mind, Christianity does far more harm than good. Thank you for uploading this presentation. I love learning.

  • @biancavonmuhlendorf2608
    @biancavonmuhlendorf26082 ай бұрын

    The tone could be improved. Too many backround-noise here

  • @seymourtompkins
    @seymourtompkins2 ай бұрын

    Just wonderful. Thank you for posting this talk.

  • @brucev9166
    @brucev91662 ай бұрын

    promo sm 😆

  • @irinafomina3117
    @irinafomina31172 ай бұрын

    Thank you Journal Club and all participants for orginizing such usefull seminars!

  • @TMcGreenberg
    @TMcGreenberg2 ай бұрын

    Wonderful presentation and great answers to questions. Thanks so much.

  • @janeydick9367
    @janeydick93672 ай бұрын

    Brilliant seminar thank you. Such important work.

  • @HakWilliams
    @HakWilliams2 ай бұрын

    I thought this was going to be about pale ales. 😕

  • @chaychay1640
    @chaychay16402 ай бұрын

    Enriching interactive discussion

  • @Nobody-Nowhere
    @Nobody-Nowhere2 ай бұрын

    1100 people in Israel dies, video comes out supporting Israel and being so worried about them. Almost 40 000 Palestinians now dead, starvation looming but no videos?

  • @kristamoran4181
    @kristamoran41813 ай бұрын

    Timely presentation, answering the question of upcoming wars started by Israel, possibly rooted in the "depositing" theory. Roseanne Barr has talked about this phenomenon as a child of Holocaust survivors. It explains Israel's scewed reports of another holocaust, when in fact they are now the perpetrators. Hope researchers are gathering the data. Perhaps this insight can prevent WWIII.

  • @nildest
    @nildest3 ай бұрын

    So interesting! Many thanks

  • @Broomhills100
    @Broomhills1003 ай бұрын

    Links and videos and pre-information can be found on the IPA website: www.ipa.world/IPA/en/Committees/IPA_Webinar__The_voice_of_resistance_in_culture.aspx

  • @nildest
    @nildest3 ай бұрын

    So many thanks from Buenos Aires

  • @TheVoidDisguised
    @TheVoidDisguised3 ай бұрын

    ''Only psychoanalysis really can help these patients, there are no other alternatives when it comes to serious pathology of the subjective experience of love and the integration of love and sexuality in all its forms.'' - Much needed today!

  • @rimcoeijzenga991
    @rimcoeijzenga9913 ай бұрын

    Kernberg and Twombly , brilliant

  • @poor_jafar
    @poor_jafar3 ай бұрын

    24:04 33:51 25:16

  • @plumjade4584
    @plumjade45843 ай бұрын

    I am so glad she mentioned feeling uncomfortable with some of the interpretations that were made. I am very interested in such a comment. All I could say to myself is yes! finally. However, I just love Melanie Klein and her interpretations often rubbed me the wrong way. Still learning.

  • @user-bp3bf4rk9i
    @user-bp3bf4rk9i3 ай бұрын

    Thank you!

  • @drsamirpatel
    @drsamirpatel3 ай бұрын

    Starts at 4:18

  • @geraldinevillasmil304
    @geraldinevillasmil3044 ай бұрын

    Invulnerable and constantly available 🙃

  • @mariaelenaabdulmassih6918
    @mariaelenaabdulmassih69184 ай бұрын

    I think this issue is very moving. Human beings in our narcissism can stop listening to the pain or anger of the other. Black rage is also the encounter with the pain of the other that can never be thought of or identified as one's own, but is able to experience it and recognize it in the face of one's own situations of helplessness.

  • @manabbose7925
    @manabbose79254 ай бұрын

    Listening to these presentations I ask myself "What's wrong with polarization?" Polarization has always existed in my part of the world where we have lived in harmony with each "other". So, is "toxicity" in polarization a Western, white race trauma? I believe it is a consequence of what lies in the "unconscious" of the West, which continues to live in psychoanalytic denial of the shame arising out of historical truths such as "We did not leave you to yourself in the past. We from Europe came 'at' you in the Americas, Australia, Africa, the East initially as traders but stayed on because we wanted to "grab" the natural riches you had in abundance". Post WW2, the West continues to live in denial of the unconscious shame: "You can't be left to yourself in your part of the world, with your "otherness", to live a life of your choices in your economy?" and "We will come with our WMDs and blow you away if '....you are against us'."

  • @kennethgarcia25
    @kennethgarcia254 ай бұрын

    Relating to Jonathan Shedler's analogy regarding pixels and pictures, there are people who fix TVs. When the color balance is off, flesh tones may appear to have too much magenta or green. Thus, the picture does not accurately represent what was intended to be represented. Those TV fixers will change parts or tune parts so that pixels emit their intended color. The answer to Dr. Shedler's metaphor as it relates to mental health is whether the defect is at the pixel level or at the picture level! The CNS is a hierarchical processor. In practice, practitioners have not appreciated and therefore have not developed the nosological sophistication to reflect whether a specific phenomenon of depression for a particular patient is an issue at the pixel level or at the picture level....whether the issue is a top-down or a bottom-up problem or both. But there are distinctions we can make to distinguish the level at which the causal relationship lies. This is likely the first qualification that can be made to provide mechanistic, therapeutic, and prognostic data.