Dynamic Consultations with Psychiatrists. Jason Maratos

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of her early privation and that it was these feelings that were driving her (even to her own cost) to rush to meet the grandchildren's needs immediately. In this way Ms. A was attempting to overcompensate for her own privation, and this feeling was so powerful that living with her daughter had become impossible.

      JM asked if there any chance that she may live with her daughter again. It was clear that her daughter will welcome her back. JM responded that there is a hope that if she resolves this mourning that she will be able to live with her daughter and have a life in which her need to be connected is more likely to be satisfied than it is presently. This change will address one of the main reasons for her depression. Once she has resolved that grief, she is more likely to see the separateness of her own experience from the experience of her grandchildren and she will be able to have a more contemporary life experience with her daughter. Ms. A is likely to feel that her grandchildren, being raised in the way that her daughter and her husband wish, is not a repetition of her own deprivation and that her grandchildren are having a pretty good life. Feeling like this, will make it easier for her to take a grandparenting role, which is secondary to that of her daughter. She will be a grandmother helping her daughter instead of going against her. This will enable her to adopt the new role of “the helpful grandmother” and will remove one source of frustration and conflict in the new extended family situation.

      JM noted that because her depression has a large element that is reactive to the situation, an improved life situation is likely to improve the feelings of depression. It is fortunate that the relationship with her daughter is not irrevocably broken down and it is conditional. “Mum, if you respect my way of bringing up my children, I will welcome you to live with my family.” So the line of therapy could be two‐pronged: one line is to help her accept, mourn, and complete the grief about her own childhood experience and the second to point to the direction that she can strengthen the connection with her daughter (instead of threatening it with antagonism) and in this way remove one of the main sources of her depression.

      JM noted that another aspect of her life is her need to develop other relationships not related to her eldest daughter and her family. She needs to have her own adult and separate connections and sources of support. If she remains with the only connection of that with her daughter and her family, this is likely to create serious difficulties. There is a high risk that she will become overbearing and overdemanding. There will need to be a separate focus on why her relationships with her own peers have not gone well. Relationships with her peers are a whole new chapter. My guess is that she breaks the relationships with her peers before they have any chance of becoming genuinely supportive. It seems that she does not have the patience to negotiate the relationships with her peers so that they become mutually supportive. Ms. A's approach is good in the beginning of a relationship, but she seems to break it at the initial stage without working at developing the relationship with her peers. She misses the opportunity of advancing the superficial relationship to make it a more substantial one. The doctor agreed to work with her in moving through her previous experience and on developing new relationships with her family and with her peers.

      JM then noted that it seems that her difficulty in proceeding in the mourning process is reflected in her reluctance to even contemplate her early life experience. She needs to be shown that it is possible with a professional's presence and sympathetic understanding to undertake this painful mourning process. Her chances of moving on will improve if she completes this mourning process and accepts that the past was past and is not being repeated in the present. This has been an interesting case; thanks for presenting it so well.

      Scientific Literature

      The other focus for this case is one of the “loss of role” and loss of connections in the later stages of life. References to “retirement” in more general terms (not only from gainful employment) are cited in relation to other cases in this work.

      Introduction

      Mrs. Z is a 56‐year‐old unemployed woman, living alone in her elder brother's public housing unit.

      History of Present Illness

      Mrs. Z began to complain of low mood in the last 2 to 3 years. She also realized that she was never happy throughout her life. She had on‐and‐off crying spells. She slept poorly. She had intense anticipatory fear when she knew that her brother would be returning to the city. She had fleeting suicidal ideation from time to time, but there were never actual attempts or related preparation. She sought help from general practitioner and was later referred to psychiatric outpatient department.

      Personal History

      Mrs. Z was born in the city. She has two older brothers and one younger sister, with each sibling was born 2 years after the previous one. She reported that she was treated badly by her father and elder brothers since childhood. She was often blamed and scolded by them for being “stupid,” while her mother turned a blind eye toward such treatment. She had always been a submissive child to her young sister and to her father and elder brothers, hoping that she would be scolded less frequently. She tended not to express her feelings to others. She stopped studying after the first year of secondary education and started working. She recalled that she never had plans to study further or get married because her father kept telling her that she should stay at home to care for her parents. During this time, her siblings moved out of the family home one by one after having their own families; Mrs. Z continued to live with her parents.

      Mrs. Z's mother died 10 years ago (2007) from breast cancer, and her father died of a heart attack 6–7 years ago (2011). Although she put much effort in taking care of her parents when they became ill during their final years, she never received any gratitude from her father until the last moments of his life. Yet, she continued to take care of her parents and never considered abandoning them.

      After her parents died, her younger sister moved back to live with her because she was having marital problems and was in the process of divorcing. After several years, her younger sister remarried and her husband moved in to live with them. As it was inconvenient to live with her brother‐in‐law, she moved to her second elder brother's home 3 years ago. Her second elder brother's family had already emigrated, and they returned to visit the city several times a year. She described that whenever her second elder brother returned to the city that he criticized her daily for being useless and told her to go to die so that she would not be a burden to this world, although she would prepare meals for her brother's family

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