the low oF enaCtive engagement Welcome to (法律制定的参与度低的欢迎).pdf
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ROBERT G ROSSMARK , Ph.D.
the Flow oF enaCtive engagement
Abstract. In this article, I offer a concept of therapeutic action that I call “the flow
of enactive engagement.” I advance the idea that this flow of enactive engage-
ment is the fulcrum of a contemporary psychoanalytic treatment, just as free as-
sociation was once to classical psychoanalysis. Analyst and analysand live within
the field of the treatment that is created by the two participants but is greater than
the sum of its parts. Just as Freud saw free association as the road to psychoana-
lytic cure and advised the analyst to not intrude on the analysand’s associations,
I suggest that an unobtrusive Relational analyst can allow the process of the field
to emerge and tell its own story. This approach is distinguished from the tradi-
tional Relational/Interpersonal approach that sees the constant examination of
the therapeutic interaction as the key to therapeutic action. I offer a brief vignette
that captures the analytic benefits that accrue when the analyst allows the flow of
enactive engagement to unfold.
Keywords: Enactment, therapeutic action, free association, unobtrusive Relational
analyst, the field, flow
“The enactment is the interpretation”
—Clifford Geertz (1972)
HIS ARTICLE WILL ADVANCE THE IDEA that enactment can be re-
Tgarded as a contemporary form of free association. Freud (1959b/
1913) regarded free association as the key to a successful psychoanalytic
process. Likewise, I conceptualize enactment as the key to the therapeu-
tic action of a contemporary psychoanalysis. Freud recommended that
the analysand say “everything that occurs to him without criticism or se-
lection” (Freud, 1959a/1912, p. 112) and that the psychoanalyst should
maintain a neutral position that allows these associations to flow freely
without obstruction. Although we, as
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