Enmeshment and Merger in the Parent-Child Relationship
Image credit: Illustration by pzAxe

Codependency in Adulthood

Enmeshment and Merger in the Parent-Child Relationship

NOW CLOSED

This webinar was recorded and is now available as a Talk on Demand. Click here for more details.

Friday 27 May 2022

A live webinar or in-person event with Dr Aileen Alleyne, Dr Tamara Feldman, Mark Linington, Dr Arlene Vetere

CPD Credits: 5 hours

  • Attend live webinar OR in person at Confer’s premises (Please see our FAQ)
  • Includes a subtitled recording of the event with access for a year (14 days post the event)
  • Bookings close 9:00am BST Tuesday 24 May

In this conference we will explore ways of working psychotherapeutically with those who are drawn into enmeshed adult relationships that inhibit healthy separation and autonomy. Enmeshment as an attachment style may originate with the needs of a narcissistic parent or family culture where personal boundaries are diffused, roles undifferentiated and an over-concern for the other can lead to a failure in autonomous development.

READ MORE...

FULL PROGRAMME

13.00 BST
Registration and Coffee (attending in person only)

13.30
Introductions

13.35
Dr Aileen Alleyne
An Intercultural Perspective

Enmeshment is the opposite of individuality, a view easily endorsed if we only embrace Western theories that measure therapy outcomes through the process of achieving individuation and personal autonomy. In this presentation, Aileen will draw on her clinical and social experiences of working with individuals who hail from non-nuclear or culturally extended families where staunch cultural values and belief systems present dilemmas for both the client and practitioner working with enmeshment issues. To highlight some of these intercultural dilemmas, we will be addressing the following areas: the immobilising conflict experienced when faced with being between two loyalties, that to one’s self and simultaneously to one’s family; the challenge of separating out and letting go from unhealthy family bonds; managing expectations borne out in phrases such as, “when you marry The One, you also marry The Entire Family”; and, the complex subject highlighting the impact of absent fathers on lone parent/child bonding.

14.15
Q&A

14.30
Break

14.50
Dr Arlene Vetere
Triangulation in Family Relationships: A lifespan developmental perspective

This presentation will explore triangulation in families as a process of enmeshment. In our search for safety and security in our close relationships we sometimes form both stable and unstable tryadic relationships that can have consequences for our psychological development and long-term wellbeing. Using examples from research and therapeutic practice with domestic violence and eating disorders Arlene will explore how an integration of systems theory, attachment theory and trauma theory helps us formulate and intervene with processes of power and influence in relationships, secrecy in families and the positive intentions in our corrective and replicative scripts as partners and parents.

15.35
Q&A

15.50
Break

16.10
Mark Linington
Enmeshment As a Response to Childhood Abuse

When there have been sexually abusive and physically violent experiences with attachment figures, it can contribute to the development of enmeshed relationships. This may be an adaptive development for survival at the time but can lead to difficulties in later life. Such enmeshment can be apparent in both external relationships and in the structure and dynamics of the person’s internal world. In this presentation, using anonymised clinical examples, and including work with those with dissociative identity disorder, Mark will explore from an attachment-based psychoanalytic perspective, how we can understand and work with such external and internal relational responses to abusive attachment experiences.

17.00
Q&A

17.15
Break

17.35
Dr Tamara Feldman
From Container to Claustrum: Projective identification in couples
This presentation will explore the concept of enmeshment through the lens of projective identification as it relates to couple relationships. Projective identification as a defence is well suited to couples as intimate partners provide an ideal location to deposit unwanted parts of the self. This paper illustrates how projective identification functions differently depending on the psychological health of the couple. For healthier couples, projective identification is a form of communication; for the more disturbed, it is used to invade and control the other, as captured by Meltzer’s concept of “intrusive identification”. These different uses of projective identification affect couples’ capacities to provide what Bion called “containment”. In disturbed couples, partners serve as what Meltzer termed “claustrums” whereby projections are not contained but entombed in the other. Applying the concept of claustrum helps illuminate common feelings these couples express, such as feeling suffocated, stifled, trapped, or held hostage. Finally, this paper presents treatment challenges in working with more disturbed couples.

18.20
Q&A

18.35
Discussion with all speakers

19.00
End / Drinks Reception (in person only)

FEES

Bookings close at 9:00am BST Tuesday 26 April

Live Webinar:

£80 (Member £64)
(Click here to become a member)

Includes a recording of the event

In person at venue:

£130 (Member £104)
(Click here to become a member)

Includes refreshments & a recording of the event

CPD

Certificates of attendance for 5 hours will be provided

VENUE

Live webinarZoom

Zoom is free to download and use.

For more information about Zoom click here.

To download Zoom free of charge click here.

In person:

Confer
Strype Street
London
E1 7LQ
View on Google Maps >>

SCHEDULE

Friday
13.00 BST Registration and Coffee (attending in person only)
13.30 Introductions
13.35 Dr Aileen Alleyne
14.15 Q&A
14.30 Break
14.50 Dr Arlene Vetere
15.35 Q&A
15.50 Break
16.10 Mark Linington
17.00 Q&A
17.15 Break
17.35 Dr Tamara Feldman
18.20 Q&A
18.35 Discussion with all speakers
19.00 End / Drinks Reception (in person only)

BOOKING CONDITIONS

Regrettably, refunds cannot be given in any circumstances except as follows:

  • You cancel in writing to info@confer.uk.com 60 days before the first date of the event you have booked, in which case you will be entitled to a 100% refund.
  • You cancel in writing to info@confer.uk.com 30 days before the first date of the event you have booked, in which case you will be entitled to a 50% refund.

This does not apply to parts of an event such as a seminar within a series but only to a whole event or complete series. You may give your place to another person if you let us know that person's name at least 24 hours before the event begins.

We reserve the right to change a speaker at one of our conferences without offering a refund. However, if a solo presenter cancels we will offer a full refund OR transfer of your fee to another Confer event. If the entire event is cancelled we will offer you a full refund.

We reserve the right to change our prices at any time. Regrettably, discounts offered after you made your booking cannot be claimed or applied retrospectively.