Secret Passageways Into the Unconscious: Interpsychic Experience, Dreaming as Experience, and Titrating the Dosage of “Non-self” in Treatment

Weekend Conference February 23-25, 2024 will be offered Online. Open to any mental health professional or mental health professional-in-training.

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Limited scholarship funds are available for this training. Apply here https://theipi.org/scholarships/

Program Date(s):

February 23, 2024 - February 25, 2024

Overview

Secret Passageways Into the Unconscious: Interpsychic Experience, Dreaming as Experience, and Titrating the Dosage of “Non-self” in Treatment

The IPI is fortunate to have Dr. Stefano Bolognini as our guest presenter at our February 2024 weekend conference. His work has been described as “a feast of many flavors” (Gabbard, 2008, p. xiii). Dr. Bolognini is well known internationally as a creative, innovative thinker who weaves together various theoretical threads in modern psychoanalysis along with threads from other disciplines, including neuroscience, human physiology, cognitive psychology, etymology, and the arts. To this tapestry he adds his own important theoretical contributions. He is adept at using vivid, memorable metaphors to illustrate his theoretical and technical points, such as a sealed door, underground passageways, the family dog, hand luggage, serving someone spaghetti, and the buses and porticoes of his beloved city of Bologna, Italy.

In this weekend event, participants will learn about aspects of the mind that they may not have considered before, including the way productive connections between patient and therapist can and do occur at the preconscious level, bypassing the “border guards” that might otherwise turn them away. Using his theory of the interpsychic as a background, Dr. Bolognini will highlight aspects of the unconscious mind that are beyond the limits of the repressed.

Other highlights will include the following:

  • Novel techniques to reach seemingly unreachable patients, including challenging adolescents.
  • Innovative approaches to dream interpretation
  • Demonstration of his clinical thinking as a discussant to IPI member, Ana-Maria Mateescu’s clinical presentation.

Overall, the conference is sure to be a rich experience that offers something to clinicians of all levels and palates, and will enhance our understanding of our patients, our relationships with them, and the approaches we can use to help them.

 

The course will use lecture, large group discussion, small group/GAM group discussion, case presentation and discussion and informal discussion to achieve the course objectives.

General weekend schedule

Friday 9:30am – 6:30 pm US ET

Saturday 9:30am – 6:30pm US ET

Sunday 10:00am – 2:00pm US ET

Detailed times, reading lists, and educational objectives will be provided to registered participants.

Reference: Gabbard, G. O. (2008). Foreword. In Bolognini, S. (2008), Secret passages: The theory and technique of interpsychic relations. London, UK: Routledge.

Stefano Bolognini

Psychiatrist, Training and Supervising Analyst of the Italian Psychoanalytical Society, Stefano Bolognini is former President of the Italian Psychoanalytical Society (SPI) and Past-President of the International Psychoanalytical Association IPA) (2013-2017), after having been IPA Board Representative for two mandates and member and Chair of several IPA committees.

For 10 years (2002-2012) he was member of the European Editorial Board of the International Journal of Psychoanalysis; he was member of the EPF Theoretical Working Party (2001-2004); from 2016 he is also Honorary Member of the New York Contemporary Freudian Society (CFS) and of the Los Angeles Institute and Society for Psychoanalytic Studies (LAISPS); from 2018, Honorary Member of the Florence Psychoanalytic Center (CPF); from 2013, member of the Advisory Board of the International Psychoanalytic University of Berlin (IPU).

He has been the founder (2014) of the IPA Inter-Regional Encyclopedic Dictionary of Psychoanalysis (IRED), where he worked as Chair until 2021.

His main scientific interests regard Psychoanalytic Empathy, Interpsychic Dimension, Institutional Organizations and Issues, Educational Process, Theory of Technique.

Bolognini has published 275 psychoanalytic papers in international books and reviews.

  • He is author of the following books:
  • Come vento, come onda. Dalla finestra di uno psicoanalista, i nostri (bi)sogni di gloria (Bollati Boringhieri, 1999) [Like Wind, Like Wave (Other Press, 2006)], in Farsi (2018) and in Turkish (2022);
  • Il sogno cento anni dopo (“The Dream 100 Years after”), (a cura di) Ed. Bollati Boringhieri, Torino, 2000;
  • L’empatia psicoanalitica (Bollati Boringhieri, 2002) [Psychoanalytic Empathy (Free Association, 2004), translated also to German, Spanish, Brazilian-Portuguese and French];
  • Passaggi segreti. Teoria e tecnica dell’interpsichico (Bollati Boringhieri, 2008) [Secret Passages (IPA New Library/Routledge, 2010), translated also to German, Spanish, Brazilian-Portuguese and Iranian Farsi];
  • Lo Zen e l’arte di non sapere cosa dire [Zen and the Art of Not Knowing What to Say] (Bollati Boringhieri, 2010);
  • Das Ereignis der Einfuehlung. Zwei Psychoanalytische Reflexionen” (Verlag Turia+Kant, Wien-Berlin, 2017);
  • Flussi vitali tra Sé e Non-Sé” (“Vital Flows between Self and Not-Self”) has been published in 2019 by Raffaello Cortina Editore, Milan, and by Routledge (London, 2022), and by Blucher (Brazil, 2022), and is in press by APA Editorial (Buenos Aires);
  • Freud e il mondo che cambia. Psicoanalisi del presente e dei suoi guai”, (“Freud and the Changing World: Psychoanalysis of the Present and its Troubles”) by Stefano Bolognini and Luca Nicoli, Enrico Damiani Editore, Brescia, 2022 (english version in preparation by Phoenix Publishing House, Bicester, Oxfordshire).

He lives and works in Bologna (Italy).

Registration

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Registration options:

  • Full Conference
    • $475 up to 21 days in advance; $525 thereafter
    • *Full members: $359
    • *Associate members: $410
    • Full time students: $175

  • Saturday All Day (morning and afternoon): $175

  • Saturday Morning only: $100

*Login to the website with your member information to access your discounted registration rate

Limited scholarship funds are available for this training: https://theipi.org/scholarships/ apply at least 2 weeks prior to conference start date.

Full Weekend Conference (14.5 CE credits)

23 Feb
Hidden Unconscious, Buried Unconscious, Implicit Unconscious
Stefano Bolognini
23 Feb
GAM
small group
23 Feb
Interpsychic Functioning and Its Use in Making Connections with Patients
Stefano Bolognini
23 Feb
GAM
small group
24 Feb
The Bar in the Desert: Symmetry and Asymmetry in the Treatment of Difficult Adolescents
Stefano Bolognini
24 Feb
GAM
small group
24 Feb
Adolescent case presentation
Ana-Maria Mateescu, Psychologist, Psychotherapist for children, adolescents and adults with discussant: Stefano Bolognini
24 Feb
GAM
small group
24 Feb
Plenary
large group
25 Feb
The Dream as an Experience
Stefano Bolognini
25 Feb
GAM
small group
25 Feb
Closing Diaglogue
large group

Saturday All Day (6 CE credits)

24 Feb
The Bar in the Desert: Symmetry and Asymmetry in the Treatment of Difficult Adolescents
Stefano Bolognini
24 Feb
GAM
small group
24 Feb
Adolescent case presentation
Ana-Maria Mateescu, Psychologist, Psychotherapist for children, adolescents and adults with discussant: Stefano Bolognini
24 Feb
GAM
small group
24 Feb
Plenary
large group

Saturday Morning Only (2.5 CE credits)

24 Feb
The Bar in the Desert: Symmetry and Asymmetry in the Treatment of Difficult Adolescents
Stefano Bolognini
24 Feb
GAM
small group

Educational Objectives

Friday February 23, 2024

Hidden Unconscious, Buried Unconscious, Implicit Unconscious

  1. Explain the difference between the hidden, the buried, and the implicit unconscious.
  2. Identify one reason why these distinctions were important in Bolognini’s treatment of one of the patients he described.

GAM Group

  1. Describe one clinical vignette that utilizes the concepts of the hidden, buried, and implicit unconscious.
  2. Describe one way that the hidden, buried, or implicit unconscious is at work in the group process.

Interpsychic Functioning and Its Use in Making Connections with Patients

  1. Define the term “interpsychic” as used by Bolognini.
  2. Describe one example of an interpsychic exchange between a therapist and a patient.

GAM Group

  1. Apply one aspect of interpsychic functioning to the group process, making links with clinical examples, theoretical ideas, or personal associations.
  2. Describe two examples of connections between patient and therapist that occur at a preconscious level.

Saturday February 24, 2024

The Bar in the Desert: Symmetry and Asymmetry in the Treatment of Difficult Adolescents

  1. Explain how alternation between relational symmetry and asymmetry facilitates treatment with adolescents.
  2. Describe the treatment technique of dosing “Non-self.”

GAM Group

  1. Discuss relational symmetry and asymmetry and its relevance to the GAM group process.
  2. Use the group experience to discuss and process the concept of “non-self,” making links with clinical examples, theoretical ideas, and/or personal associations.

Adolescent Case Presentation

Presenter: Ana-Maria Mateescu, Psychologist, Psychotherapist for children, adolescents, and adults

Discussant: Stefano Bolognini

  1. Explain 1 reason why the therapist must be prepared to renounce interpretive activity, perhaps for a long time, in the treatment of adolescents.
  2. Describe how a therapist might use the concept of the interpsychic to create an alliance with a difficult patient.

GAM Group

  1. Utilize the GAM group to discuss one of Bolognini’s suggested interventions with the patient from the case material.
  2. Describe one example of working with a challenging adolescent.

Plenary

  1. Describe one possible instance of interpsychic functioning during the plenary discussion.
  2. Identify one possible instance of hidden, buried, or implicit unconscious during the plenary discussion.

Sunday February 25, 2024

The Dream as an Experience

  1. Explain how dreams can be “true even if not real.”
  2. Identify 2 clinical techniques for working with dreams that strengthen the patient’s sense of self.

GAM Group

  1. Discuss one innovative principle presented during the lecture on dreams.
  2. Utilize the group process to explore the concept of “true even if not real,” making links with clinical examples, theoretical ideas, and/or personal associations.

Closing Dialogue

  1. Name and describe 2 main themes of Bolognini’s work.
  2. Describe 1 way you might integrate what you learned in this conference into your clinical work.

Continuing Education Credit Hours

Full Weekend Conference:

  • 14.5 CE credits

Saturday All Day:

  • 6 CE credits

Saturday Morning only:

  • 2.5 CE credits

 

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Membership Benefits

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HIPAA compliant Zoom video accounts are an optional add on for all IPI memberships. IPI has a HIPAA Business Associate Agreement with Zoom, which provides a HIPAA compliant platform for our accounts. HIPPA compliance is strongly recommended for all internet-mediated clinical work and clinical teaching. The “+ Zoom Pro” add-on to the IPI membership gives the user the ability to host online meetings with multiple people at the same time. [Current members can upgrade to the “+ Zoom Pro” account and only pay the difference in price from your current membership level.]

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Continuing Education Information

The International Psychotherapy Institute, IPI, is approved by The American Psychological Association to sponsor continuing education for psychologists. IPI maintains responsibility for the program and its content. The International Psychotherapy Institute has been approved by NBCC as an Approved Continuing Education Provider, ACEP No. 6017. Programs that do not qualify for NBCC credit are clearly identified. The International Psychotherapy Institute is responsible for all aspects of the programs. The International Psychotherapy Institute is authorized by the Board of Social Work Examiners in Maryland to sponsor social work continuing education learning activities and maintains full responsibility for this program. This training qualifies for Category I continuing education units. The International Psychotherapy Institute is recognized by the New York State Education Department’s State Board for Social Work as an approved provider of continuing education for licensed social workers #SW-0299.

Participants are responsible for verifying that IPI CE credit is accepted by the licensing boards in their own states.

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IPI Administrative Team - contactus@theipi.org