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90 Development of feeling
process of separation from the parents can seem desirable in theory, but is felt as
something emotionally painful.
In the maturing process of puberty, the adolescent is faced with the task of
parting from his parents as primary love objects in order to find inner space for
seeking a partner among his peers. At the same time, opposing currents are acti-
vated: at times, the early Oedipal desires to win the parent of the opposite sex as
a lover are revived. This is something like a car accelerating inexorably but with
the driver’s foot also on the brake now and again. This situation reminds me of
an experience I had in a bus in Havana, Cuba. The bus driver always acceler-
ated before a red light, before sharply braking. The passengers, mostly standing,
were thrown amongst each other, held onto each other, their bodies thrown into
contact, laughing and apologizing simultaneously. Nobody seemed surprised or
irritated. Thus did a routine experience of stopping for a red light become an
intense group experience. Adolescents and their parents are also thrown towards
and away from one another. These forces of nature become comprehensible when
we understand that while massive changes are occurring not only in the adoles-
cent’s inner world, deep layers of the parents’ personalities and inner worlds are
also stirred up. Parents must deal with real changes in living with their growing
children: sexual maturity and physical changes demonstrate their daughter’s or
son’s awakening sexuality and remind them of their own aging process. One gen-
eration will take over for the previous one, i.e., the younger generation pushes to
center stage and attempts to push back the older generation. The sexual maturity
of the parents’ children often coincides with a wane in sexual potency and the end
of child -bearing in menopause. The adolescents have something that the parents
can envy. Winnicott (1984, 203) writes of adolescents’ inexhaustible but precious
potential as eliciting adult envy. On a deeper, often unconscious level, fears, hopes
and experiences from the parents’ own adolescence arise, as well as the basic pat-
terns of their own experiences of separation. All experiential patterns of separa-
tion, beginning with birth, weaning, loss of Oedipal illusions (the boy as mother’s
lover, the girl as father’s princess), become virulent. It is very difficult to deal with
all of these unexpected feelings now emerging, to perceive them, reflect on them
and accept them as a part of oneself. It is easier to not perceive them in oneself but
instead criticize them in one’s son or daughter. This tendency to find the problems
in others and not in oneself can also be found among adolescents.
An important characteristic of adolescence is the tendency to not reflect but
instead project one’s feelings onto others, acting instead of reflecting. Adolescents
unconsciously want to elicit in their parents the feelings they prefer not to see
in themselves. Admiration for the parents turns to its opposite, with the parents
described in unflattering terms and rendered ridiculous. Adolescents often bla-
tantly display their sexual attractiveness in order to provoke their parents’ envy.
This means that the parents must bear a double burden: as they are bombarded
by their adolescent child’s projections, they simultaneously must deal with their
own unconscious envy. Bion compared the image of bearing projections with the
soldier’s experience at the front in World War I: remaining capable of thinking
Psychoanalytic Perspectives on Puberty and Adolescence
The Inner Worlds of Teenagers and their Parents
- Titel
- Psychoanalytic Perspectives on Puberty and Adolescence
- Untertitel
- The Inner Worlds of Teenagers and their Parents
- Autor
- Gertraud Diem-Wille
- Verlag
- Routledge
- Datum
- 2021
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-1-003-14267-6
- Abmessungen
- 16.0 x 24.0 cm
- Seiten
- 292
- Kategorien
- International
- Medizin