Abstract

A policy of consistent willingness on the analyst’s part to make his or her own views explicitly available to the patient is discussed and illustrated by clinical vignettes. Playing one’s cards face up is contrasted with contemporary conceptions of selective self-disclosure by the analyst, especially with respect to the way ground rules for the analytic treatment relationship get established. The objective of the analyst playing his or her cards face up is to create a candid dialogue, thus facilitating maximally effective collaboration between analyst and patient. Concerns about the analyst’s self-disclosure foreclosing exploration of the patient’s unconscious fantasies and transferences, or intruding upon the patient’s autonomy, are addressed, as is the relation between self-disclosure and an individual analyst’s personal style.

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