Abstract

ABSTRACT A discussion of Micheal Reison’s “The Subjective Importance of Accommodation and Non-Accommodation: Expanding Brandchaft’s Ideas of Pathological Accommodation” explicates Dr. Bernard Brandchaft’s signature contribution—the defense of pathological accommodation. The imperative need to maintain attachment is seen as the primary goal of this defense. Pathological Accommodation is seen as a mode of maintaining attachments to caretakers, an unconscious, compulsively self-limiting behavior which occurs when a child experiences threats to his bond with a needed parent. In Kohutian terms, pathological accommodation functions to protect the self a child has been able to construct despite formidable obstacles. The term “accommodation” is traced through writings by Atwood, Stolorow, and Brandchaft. Accommodation, in Brandchaft’s terms, refers to the child’s response to relational trauma suffered when his or her emotional expressions and/or actions regularly evoke profoundly malattuned parental responses which threaten the child’s attachment bond. Dr. Reison’s case is reviewed through the lens of these ideas and Dr. Reison’s emotional attunement and genuine appreciation of his patient is appreciated. His genuine empathic understanding of his patient is seen as the foundation of the considerable psychological development and growth demonstrated in Reison’s very fine case report. Indeed, the genuine psychological growth demonstrated eventually made the defense of pathological accommodation unnecessary.

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