On Tone, Play, and Healing: Commentary on Riordan's Case Studies

Authors

  • Nancy McWilliams Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology, Rutgers University; & Private Practice, Flemington, NJ

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.14713/pcsp.v8i3.1772

Keywords:

narcissism, , narcissistic personality disorder, play, prosody, psychotherapy, case study, clinical case study

Abstract

The clinical work reported by Riordan (2012) is discussed, with attention to prosody (tone) and other subjectively inferred aspects of his therapeutic style with narcissistically troubled clients. Consideration is also given to cultural contexts relevant to understanding the reported increase in narcissistic problems in contemporary patients, the personality and genuineness of the therapist as factors in psychological healing, and the role of play and playfulness in reducing the suffering of clients who rely on narcissistic defenses to compensate for a fragile, erratic, or unrealistic sense of self-esteem. The focus throughout is on the less specifiable, more artistic elements of the psychotherapy process.

Author Biography

Nancy McWilliams, Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology, Rutgers University; & Private Practice, Flemington, NJ

Nan Fishman, Ph.D. Editor-in-Chief, Pragmatic Case Studies in Psychotherapy Professor of Clinical and Organizational Psychology Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology Rutgers University Mailing address: 57 Jaffray Court Irvington, NY 10533 914-693-8549 fax: 603-917-2567 email: dfish96198@aol.com

Downloads

Published

2012-10-04

Issue

Section

Case Study