Loading…
Venue: Lecture Hall 4014 clear filter
Thursday, July 17
 

10:00 CEST

10:45 CEST

LECTURE - Biography of Defense, Specifically "Acting Out" in Borderline and Psychotic States
Thursday July 17, 2025 10:45 - 11:30 CEST
Introduction
Human suffering exists in two forms. The first arises from traumatic experiences, such as abuse, humiliation, loss, violence, or neglect. This type of suffering, while profoundly painful, can ultimately lead to healing through mourning of grief and processing of feelings like terror, loneliness, despair, and rage. By confronting these feelings, individuals can integrate their trauma and move towards emotional wholeness.
The second form of suffering stems from the very defenses we employ to avoid confronting trauma. Dissociation, projection, and acting out are such defenses, which, while enabling short-term survival, ultimately hinder emotional growth. These defenses, by blocking genuine emotional expression, create a chronic state of inner turmoil and disconnect.
Psychodynamic therapy aims to help individuals understand and gradually dismantle these defensive structures. By exploring the origins and functions of these defenses, clinicians can facilitate the emergence of authentic emotions and experiences. This paper will delve into the specific case of "acting out" in borderline and psychotic clients, examining its biographical origins, which would include looking at the defense intergenerationally, intra-subjectively, and inter-subjectively.

Methodology / Approach
The study employs a qualitative psychodynamic clinical case study approach, affirming that reality is constructed through social processes and is subjective. The population includes university students, faculty, and staff in India.

Results / Findings
In the therapy of clients with borderline and psychotic states, the primary and basic defense mechanism of acting out is frequently encountered. Acting out is characterized by impulsive reactions and expulsions of emotion.
Intergenerationally, acting out is an internalized defense mechanism inherited from the primary caregiver (often the mother) who has exhibited behaviors of abandonment and repulsion toward the infant. She can be referred to as a bad object who desires to throw away the infant from her life and her world. This defense mechanism covers and dissociates the infant's terror of being in the world. The mother, who transfers these feelings and defenses to the infant, often lacks the desire to live and may have experienced suicidal thoughts and depression. This repressed trauma is passed on to the child along with the defense mechanisms. The mother of one of the borderline clients I worked with was suicidal and depressed at various stages of her life.
In the intra-subjective experiences of adult clients with borderline and psychotic disorders, there is often a lack of desire to live. Clients may wish to throw away or waste their lives as a way to cope with underlying feelings of terror, despair, abandonment, and isolation. Their psyche lacks a stable container and has a fragile sense of self, making it difficult for feelings to develop fully. Anger and sexual charge, in particular, need to be expelled. Planning and executing tasks in an organized manner is challenging, and there is a lack of boundaries between the self and the world.
In terms of intersubjectivity, one client exhibited reckless hypersexuality, engaging in sexual activities with many men during her college years. She felt worthless and ugly, believing that being desired by men was the only way to feel important and worthy. By acting impulsively, she desired to live and feel connected to the world. She also had fantasies of being raped and tortured during sex. Another client had a strong urge to break things or end relationships when overwhelmed. If a job became too much, he would leave it. No matter how much emotional good they receive later in life, they would throw it away, regress and won’t be able to digest it.
These findings highlight the complex interplay of intergenerational, intra-subjective, and intersubjective dimensions of the defense mechanism of acting out.

Conclusion / Perspective
Defenses are in some way a consequence of trauma. Trauma not only causes pain but also disrupts our sense of self and continuity, much like a patch or hole that leaves us wounded. Our cultural response to trauma often involves avoiding emotions through learned defenses internalized from caregivers and intimate relationships. This study delves into the biography of the defense mechanism "acting out," exploring its intergenerationally, intra-subjectivity, and intersubjectivity through case studies of clients in psychotherapy. By understanding these complex dynamics, we can facilitate healing through psychodynamic psychotherapy for borderline and psychotic clients, offering pathways to integration and recovery.
Often, the defense mechanism of acting out is accompanied by other defenses. Acting out enables individuals to function in fight mode, whereas shutting down serves as a way to hide and take flight. Frequently, the underlying terror and anxiety are projected outward, leading to feelings of paranoia. Additionally, patients exhibit high levels of dependency. The intergenerational transmission, intersubjectivity, and intra-subjectivity of these defenses warrant further exploration.


Speakers
avatar for Pankaj Suneja

Pankaj Suneja

About the person:Pankaj is a psychodynamic psychotherapist and researcher with a decade of experience. He currently serves as a psychotherapist at BML Munjal University, Gurgaon providing emotional and psychological support to the university community. His professional journey has... Read More →
Thursday July 17, 2025 10:45 - 11:30 CEST
Lecture Hall 4014

11:45 CEST

14:00 CEST

15:00 CEST

LECTURE - A Holistic Approach to Integrating Eastern and Western Cultures from a Transpersonal Perspective - Unification Therapy
Thursday July 17, 2025 15:00 - 15:45 CEST
The purpose of this paper is to introduce a psychotherapy based on the concept of transpersonal wholeness, integrating body, mind, and spirit, the Unification Therapy, and a psychotherapeutic tool, the Psychic Compass. Based on the Holy Trinity in Christian theology and the Tai Chi thought in Chinese philosophy, this study identifies the common element - the unity of heaven and man - in the cultural sources of the East and the West, and uses it to explain the laws of mental activities and the causes of psychological problems, and illustrates the use and effectiveness of this therapy and tool through empirical evidence and case studies.
For the theoretical basis of unification therapy, this paper adopts the conceptual analysis method, analyzing the dynamic balance contained in the Holy Trinity and Tai Chi through the concept of “opening and closing”, pointing out the inherent health model of “unification of heaven and man”. Combining ideas from Genesis and the Book of Changes, we assert that man, as the Image of God and the incarnation of Tao, derives all psychological and spiritual motivation fundamentally from the First Motive, the dynamics of the Tao, that is, the quest for love, fulfillmen, and unity, and thus emphasizes the self-healing and integrity of the life force. At the operational level, this study proposes eight intervention methods: tonic, cathartic, publicizing, connecting, gathering, dispersing, opening and closing. Technically, we introduces the “eight layers of mind” and the “eight steps of Tai Chi”, which describe different levels of the spiritual world and steps of experiencing the spiritual world respectively, and is materialized through the tool of the “ Psychic Compass”. Through “Psychic Compass”, users can precisely locate each level of the mind, identify their own feelings and motivations, so as to achieve inner balance and self-integration.
Regarding the efficacy of the Unification Therapy, this study focused on a group of trainees (aged 25-45 years old, with an education level of middle school or above, including social workers, healthcare workers, psychologists, etc.) in a public welfare program in Hebei Province, China, in 2016, and used a pre- and post-treatment control design. The 80 trainees who had completed 8 sessions of “Unification Therapy - Psychic Compass” were selected to take the pre-test, immediate post-intervention test, and 6-week follow-up test through standardized psychological scales (SAS, SDS, SCL-90) and subjective assessment, and were analyzed by t-test of related samples using SPSS 18.0. The results showed that the total scores of SAS, SDS and SCL-90 of the trainees decreased significantly after the intervention (p<0.01), indicating a significant increase in the level of psychological well-being; in the 6-week post-tracking test, the scores of anxiety and depression indices as well as the dimensions of the SCL-90 were still significantly lower than the baseline level, and there was no significant difference from the post-intervention data, confirming that there is a stability of the therapeutic efficacy.
Unification Therapy provides an innovative approach to cross-cultural psychotherapy, combining spiritual depth and practicality to help individuals realize holistic health through the fusion of Eastern and Western wisdom. The efficacy of the Psychic Compass technique is long-lasting and can be extended to a wide range of occupational groups, providing a new pathway for mental health interventions that is both culturally integrative and empirically supported.
Speakers
avatar for Yan Gong

Yan Gong

About the personYan Gong holds a Master’s degree in Transpersonal Psychology from Sofia University, USA. In 2010, he founded the HE YI (Unity) Therapy approach and, in 2011, invented a psychotherapeutic tool known as the Psychological Compass. He has obtained over 40 intellectual... Read More →
Thursday July 17, 2025 15:00 - 15:45 CEST
Lecture Hall 4014

16:00 CEST

 
Friday, July 18
 

10:00 CEST

11:00 CEST

15:00 CEST

WORKSHOP - Creative Couples Therapy - An Experiential Toolkit
Friday July 18, 2025 15:00 - 18:00 CEST
Speakers
Friday July 18, 2025 15:00 - 18:00 CEST
Lecture Hall 4014
 
Saturday, July 19
 

10:00 CEST

10:45 CEST

14:00 CEST

 

Share Modal

Share this link via

Or copy link

Filter sessions
Apply filters to sessions.