Golden fantasy

Golden fantasy is a secret (or not-so-secret) expectation that all one's problems can be solved by interaction with a perfect and all-caring relationship figure. The fantasy can be found both in psychotherapy and in ordinary life.

Structure

The golden fantasy was first named as such by Sidney Smith in 1977.[1] Arguably however, the concept had been anticipated by Karen Horney,[2] and by Charles Brenner;[3] and it was rooted in earlier psychoanalytic understanding of passive-receptive mastery.[4]

Such a fantasy may resonate to unfortunate effect with the therapist's own “rescuer” phantasies; and has to be gradually given up, and mourned, if progress in therapy is to be made.[5] In the form of compulsive acting out of the fantasy in real life, it can constitute a formidable obstacle to analysis of the transference.[6]

Later writers have placed more emphasis on the adaptive nature of the fantasy in ego-maintenance – its role in fending of a primitive sense of angst[7] – and on the necessity of its sensitive handling, to strengthen the therapeutic alliance.[8]

Residential care workers see the fantasy emerging in split form, with carers first seen as fulfilling it in entirety, in opposition to the bad parents; and then the parents being seen as the answer to the golden fantasy, with the care home becoming all bad.[9]

Cultural examples

See also

References

  1. Glen O. Gabbard, Long-Term Psychodynamic Psychotherapy (2010) p. 143
  2. I. Solomon, Karen Horney and Character Disorder (2005) p. 98
  3. L. M. Vaillant, Changing Character (1997) p. 136
  4. Otto Fenichel, The Psychoanalytic Theory of Neurosis (1946) p. 561
  5. Glen O. Gabbard, Long-Term Psychodynamic Psychotherapy (2010) p. 160 and p. 171-2
  6. I. Solomon, Karen Horney and Character Disorder (2005) p. 98
  7. S. Teitelbaum, Illusion and Disillusion (2007) p. 113
  8. Adaptive nature
  9. D. P. Zimmerman, Psychotherapy in Group Care (2013) p. 67
  10. E. Bronfen, Sylvia Plath (1998) p. 38

Further reading

Sidney Smith (1977), "The golden fantasy: a regressive reaction to separation anxiety", International Journal of Psychoanalysis, 58, 311–324

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