Metaphor Therapy
Request More Info ยป
Metaphor functions as a compromise formation analogous to a dream or symptom in the sense that it simultaneously expresses material from different psychic levels, for example, topographical, structural, and dynamic.[3]
Metaphor use and exploration gives people a way of linking their experiences across diverse times and situations. For example, for one man the metaphorical statement "when I am pushed, I push back" connected with several relationships over the course of his life, from his father to current authority figures and even friendships. The exploration of metaphors encourages a subjective, relative, and symbolic attitude toward one's experience, a "seeing through" one's particular fantasies about an "objective world". This change in perception creates a psychological ground on which movement can occur, and this freedom of movement is the aim of therapy.[4]
By linking different things, metaphors aim at conceptual change through new insight, involving re-categorization of experience along new lines of meaning. Metaphorical interpretation of life, rather than analogical, combines the past with what is new. The transference relationship is thought of as an example of metaphor, a kind of symbolic translation of earlier strivings to present-day circumstances, as opposed to a re-enactment, which would lose the creative power of the metaphor and be merely analogic.[5]
Metaphor functions as a compromise formation analogous to a dream or symptom in the sense that it simultaneously expresses material from different psychic levels, for example, topographical, structural, and dynamic.[3]
Metaphor use and exploration gives people a way of linking their experiences across diverse times and situations. For example, for one man the metaphorical statement "when I am pushed, I push back" connected with several relationships over the course of his life, from his father to current authority figures and even friendships. The exploration of metaphors encourages a subjective, relative, and symbolic attitude toward one's experience, a "seeing through" one's particular fantasies about an "objective world". This change in perception creates a psychological ground on which movement can occur, and this freedom of movement is the aim of therapy.[4]
By linking different things, metaphors aim at conceptual change through new insight, involving re-categorization of experience along new lines of meaning. Metaphorical interpretation of life, rather than analogical, combines the past with what is new. The transference relationship is thought of as an example of metaphor, a kind of symbolic translation of earlier strivings to present-day circumstances, as opposed to a re-enactment, which would lose the creative power of the metaphor and be merely analogic.[5]
- Hearing and suspending making sense of the metaphor.
- Validating and expressing interest in the metaphor.
- Expanding the metaphor by encouraging description of associations, emotions and imagery (may share own associations).
- Playing with the possibilities by exploring what the metaphor might mean.
- Marking and selecting the aspects that support the current treatment goals.
- Connecting with the future by outlining tasks that lie ahead based on shared understandings derived from the metaphor.