She had suggested he find a psychoanalyst to help him fight the cancer mentally. |
|
Since the analysand comes to the analyst because of pain, the role of the psychoanalyst in my book is naturally the relief of that pain. |
|
She rises like the proverbial phoenix from the ashes of her lunacy to become the first woman psychoanalyst in Switzerland. |
|
A trained psychoanalyst, he offers a compellingly persuasive theory on the motive of the murders. |
|
In Down and Out in Beverly Hills, there is even a psychoanalyst, Dr. Von Zimmer, who treats neurotic canines. |
|
Moreover, it is also possible to imagine that a different psychoanalyst would be able to conduct an analysis with this patient. |
|
He was a devotee of therapy and continued to see his psychoanalyst in the home. |
|
So I suppose I've been sitting here, sorting out what do I do as a pastoral carer that is different to what a psychotherapist or a psychoanalyst does. |
|
For a psychoanalyst, working, which always starts with the ordeal of failure and powerlessness, is all about emotions. |
|
The trainer, in the seminars we organise, is in a position similar to that of psychoanalyst. |
|
A child needs a man and a woman to structure itself emotionally, confirms psychoanalyst Tony Anatrella. |
|
Alice Miller is a psychoanalyst and researcher on the effects of child abuse. |
|
According to the feminist psychoanalyst Nancy Chodorow, female children in particular strive to uphold the unity with their mother even after the pre-Oedipal phase. |
|
The psychoanalyst Darian Leader will give a talk about sleep disorders, dreams and art. |
|
Leconte deepens and enriches the situation by having Faber consult the real psychoanalyst in the office next door, who gives him gnomic advice and a large bill. |
|
The English psychoanalyst John Bowlby is regarded as the founder of the Attachment Theory. |
|
With one psychologist or psychoanalyst for every 164 inhabitants, Buenos Aires is possibly the most psychoanalysed city in the world. |
|
The psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud drew on Shakespearean psychology, in particular, that of Hamlet, for his theories of human nature. |
|
The Papster, my stepmom, her sister Angela the psychoanalyst, and Angela's husband Eric the kazillionaire were strolling along the canal. |
|
The local anesthetic cocaine was used for anesthetizing the cornea during eye operations in 1884 by Viennese surgeon Carl Koller, acting on the suggestion of Austrian psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud. |
|
|
To get under Freud's skin for A Dangerous Method, he not only learned to write like the psychoanalyst but also bought first editions of the books that the good doctor would have had on his study shelves. |
|
Will a psychoanalyst, for example, have to follow a number of steps? |
|
How has your work gone as an economist and psychoanalyst? |
|
The first sub-theme was introduced by Mr Daniel Sibony, writer, psychoanalyst and philosopher, who pointed out that destructive violence originated in the same sources as the violence that brought life: creation and change. |
|
A writer, a cultural studies expert and a psychoanalyst try their hand at identifying the effects of art, and subject cultural policy makers and their related claims to the third degree. |
|
In 1914 she began training as a primary school teacher but in 1918 she also began training as a lay psychoanalyst, receiving her own analysis from her father. |
|
He is a clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst in private practice in Toronto, a graduate of the Toronto Institute for Contemporary Psychoanalysis, and is on the Executive of its Society. |
|
The psychoanalyst tapped her fountain pen against the edge of her desk. |
|
Stephen Grosz has clocked up an estimated 50,000 hours as a practising psychoanalyst. |
|
Grosz presents aphoristic stories drawn from his practice as a psychoanalyst. |
|
William Martens, MD, PhD worked for decades as psychoanalyst and researcher in forensic psychiatric settings with psychopaths. |
|
I'd like to tell you why I love being a psychoanalyst and why you might, too. |
|
What a psychoanalyst would make of Drew's strange behaviour is something that might prove fruitful. |
|
The author of this book is both an historian and a psychoanalyst and he makes use of both areas of his training. |
|
Rocard, whose two marriages had failed during his long years as the left's boy scout, was reported to be living with a psychoanalyst. |
|
This notion has been supported by various figures since, including the psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud. |
|
After that he did voluntary service in one of psychoanalyst Alfred Adler's clinics for children. |
|
To learn more about himself and how to live life to the fullest, Demian goes to Jorge, a psychoanalyst who is known for his unorthodox treatments. |
|
Liebert, a psychoanalyst and not an art historian, shows us that artists' lives and works are fruitfully examined by the non-artist and non-art historian. |
|
Many such as June Singer have argued that Blake's thoughts on human nature greatly anticipate and parallel the thinking of the psychoanalyst Carl Jung. |
|
|
Psychoanalyst Carl Jung said that flying saucer reports in reality and fiction reflected a psychological projection of nuclear fears. |
|