Mary T. Brady knows very well adolescents and the intensity of the conflicts they face; she captures the essence of the complex and stimulating work of containment and psychoanalytic technique with adolescents. She restores the body issues to a central position and offers rich and radical reflections on working with parents and family dynamics. The complexity of transference and countertransference when working with impulsivity and intensity is explored here and gives rise to fascinating elaborations on psychoanalysis with adolescence. This is a brilliant book, exciting and very accessible: a good combination of education, emotional support, and psychoanalytic thinking.-Christine Anzieu-Premmereur, MD, PhD, Assistant Clinical Professor in Psychiatry at Columbia University; Director of the Columbia University Psychoanalytic Center's Parent-Infant Program; member of the New York Psychoanalytic Institute.
Mary Brady has done it again.This is a remarkable book about adolescents and Brady's own deep engagements with them and their turbulent or sleepy states. She writes profoundly about the erotic field which emerges and the challenge for psychoanalysts to talk about feelings the adolescent may barely have begun to name. She stresses the importance of monitoring when what she calls `erotic sufficiency' in the analysis can be over-stimulating- but she is equally strong on the dangers of erotic insufficiency in the relationship. We all have much to learn from her about how to help patients achieve both intimacy and aliveness.-Anne Alvarez, PhD, MACP, Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychotherapist.
We should celebrate the publication of this new book by Mary Brady, which takes us directly to the core of psychoanalytic work with adolescents. She invites us into her consulting room, where we witness her meeting with young patients to engage in a work that is hard but immensely gratifying. This is an indispensable book because of its clinical honesty. Dr. Brady has found a way of getting close to her patients without intruding, of containing the anxiety generated in the analytic interaction, of interpreting in a way that is both straightforward and subtle, and, above all, of observing and listening. She does not fail to ponder the current conditions of the context in which adolescents live, a world full of danger and violence where social institutions cannot effectively support the process that teenagers must necessarily undergo.-Virginia Ungar, M.D., IPA President.
Mary T. Brady knows very well adolescents and the intensity of the conflicts they face; she captures the essence of the complex and stimulating work of containment and psychoanalytic technique with adolescents. She restores the body issues to a central position and offers rich and radical reflections on working with parents and family dynamics. The complexity of transference and countertransference when working with impulsivity and intensity is explored here and gives rise to fascinating elaborations on psychoanalysis with adolescence. This is a brilliant book, exciting and very accessible: a good combination of education, emotional support, and psychoanalytic thinking.
-Christine Anzieu-Premmereur, MD, PhD, Assistant Clinical Professor in Psychiatry at Columbia University; Director of the Columbia University Psychoanalytic Center's Parent-Infant Program; member of the New York Psychoanalytic Institute.
Mary Brady has done it again.This is a remarkable book about adolescents and Brady's own deep engagements with them and their turbulent or sleepy states. She writes profoundly about the erotic field which emerges and the challenge for psychoanalysts to talk about feelings the adolescent may barely have begun to name. She stresses the importance of monitoring when what she calls `erotic sufficiency' in the analysis can be over-stimulating- but she is equally strong on the dangers of erotic insufficiency in the relationship. We all have much to learn from her about how to help patients achieve both intimacy and aliveness.
-Anne Alvarez, PhD, MACP, Consultant Child and Adolescent Psychotherapist.
We should celebrate the publication of this new book by Mary Brady, which takes us directly to the core of psychoanalytic work with adolescents. She invites us into her consulting room, where we witness her meeting with young patients to engage in a work that is hard but immensely gratifying. This is an indispensable book because of its clinical honesty. Dr. Brady has found a way of getting close to her patients without intruding, of containing the anxiety generated in the analytic interaction, of interpreting in a way that is both straightforward and subtle, and, above all, of observing and listening. She does not fail to ponder the current conditions of the context in which adolescents live, a world full of danger and violence where social institutions cannot effectively support the process that teenagers must necessarily undergo.
-Virginia Ungar, M.D., IPA President.
As the title suggests, it specifically confronts analysis with adolescents, a population for whom sexuality is often closer to consciousness. Brady (San Francisco Center for Psychoanalysis) is not afraid in her own practice to confront sexuality directly with adolescents and provides several well-documented case studies illustrating these confrontations. She also brings in the perspectives of psychoanalyst Wilfred Bion in treating the adolescent and involving parents in analysis. The result is a composition that gently pushes on the boundaries between analyst and patient, serving as a guide for psychoanalysis with pubescent young adults while presenting an intimate view of her own experience as an analyst.
-J. Ostenson, The University of Tennessee at Martin, CHOICE