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About The Book
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<p>In <em>Awakening the Dreamer: Clinical Journeys</em> Philip Bromberg continues the illuminating explorations into dissociation and clinical process begun in <em>Standing in the Spaces</em> (1998). Bromberg is among our most gifted clinical writers especially in his unique ability to record peripheral variations in relatedness - those subtle split-second changes that capture the powerful workings of dissociation and chart the changing self-states that analyst and patient bring to the moment.<br><br>For Bromberg a model of mind premised on the centrality of self-states and dissociation not only offers the optimal lens for comprehending and interpreting clinical data; it also provides maximum leverage for achieving true intersubjective relatedness. And this manner of looking at clinical data offers the best vantage point for integrating psychoanalytic experience with the burgeoning findings of contemporary neuroscience cognitive and developmental psychology and attachment research.<br><br>Dreams are approached not as texts in need of deciphering but as means of contacting genuine but not yet fully conscious self-states. From here he explores how the patient's dreamer and the analyst's dreamer can come together to turn the real into the really real of mutative therapeutic dialogue. The difficult frequently traumatized patient is newly appraised in terms of tensions within the therapeutic dyad. And then there is the haunted patient who carries a sense of preordained doom through years of otherwise productive work - until the analyst can finally feel the patient's doom as his or her own. <br><br>Laced with Bromberg's characteristic honesty humor and thoughtfulness these essays elegantly attest to the mind's reliance on dissociation in both normal and pathological variants in the ongoing effort to maintain self-organization. <em>Awakening the Dreamer</em> no less than <em>Standing in the Spaces</em> is destined to become a permanent part of the literature on therapeutic process and change.</p>