Psychoanalytic treatment is based on the idea that people are frequently motivated by unrecognized or unconscious wishes and desires, as well as fears and anxieties. These desires and fears are often set up in early childhood and tend to persevere as relationship issues in adulthood or persistent personality traits. Moods, substance abuse, repetitive failures, traumatic reactions, and severe anxieties all may have a basis in these early traumas. In adult life, these patterns tend to repeat in actions but out of conscious awareness.
These can be identified through the relationship between the patient and the analyst. By listening to patients’ stories, fantasies, and dreams and discerning how patients interact with others, psychoanalysts offer a unique perspective that friends and relatives might be unable to see. The analyst also listens to how these patterns occur between the patient and the analyst. What is out of the patient’s awareness is called “transference,” and what is out of the analyst’s awareness is called “countertransference.” The psychoanalyst is trained to understand these transference patterns and find ways to communicate these patterns in the treatment. The psychoanalyst also uses his or her emotional reactions as a guide to what his or her patient might be feeling and as an empathic way of relating.
Talking with a trained psychoanalyst helps identify underlying patterns and behaviors. By analyzing the transference and countertransference, the analyst and patient can discover paths toward the emotional freedom necessary to make substantive, lasting changes and heal from past traumas.
Typically, psychoanalysis involves the patient coming three to five times a week and communicating as openly and freely as possible. While more frequent sessions deepen and intensify the treatment, the frequency of sessions is worked out between the patient and analyst. The length of treatment can vary but typically is several years or more.
In psychodynamic psychotherapy, the primary difference is that the patient and analyst meet less frequently, sometimes only once a week. As with psychoanalysis, the frequency of sessions can be customized to the patient’s needs. Another difference is that the patient usually sits upright and opposite the therapist rather than reclining on a couch with the therapist out of view.
Other than these differences, psychoanalytic psychotherapy is very much like analysis in its use of free association, the importance placed on the unconscious, and the centrality of the patient-therapist relationship.
With the onset of COVID-19, psychoanalysts have been experimenting with virtual sessions. While there is no consensus on its effectiveness, many patients find these sessions helpful.