PDTL Time Limit Psychotherapy
PDTL Time Limit Psychotherapy
PDTL Time Limit Psychotherapy
The PDTL approach places emphasis on two aspects: the current transactions
between patient and therapist; and increasing the patient's understanding of their
role in functioning in their life. To do this, the therapist makes use of the relational
dyad where he uses empathic listening, psychodynamic understanding of relational
difficulties in the context of his personal history and clarification of his self-defeating
character as the main tools. To achieve this, the therapist will also take into
account the patient's resistance aimed at making the therapist's efforts fail.
The PDTL has also generated an extensive body of research that has proven its
effectiveness (Vanderbilt project) and has generated a manual, all in the new line
of approaches that aim to demonstrate its effectiveness.
(1) The selection of patients for this approach is made not so much by the type of
symptomatology presented but rather by their ability to engage in a therapeutic
relationship evaluated in the initial interviews (footer "test interpretations").
(2) A dynamic theme or focus is sought on which to focus the therapeutic work,
which unlike other dynamic psychotherapies focused on themes such as the idyllic
focus (Siphons), separation (Mann), parent-other transference (Mallan) or the
resistance (Davalo); here the focus is on cyclical patterns of interpersonal
relationships.
(3) The main area of work focuses on therapeutic transfer; But unlike Mallan's
orientation, it is considered that this derives not only from previous relationships
with parents, but that the therapist has an active role in its current maintenance or
modification.
(4) Initial treatment duration limits are established: 25 to 30 sessions lasting 1 hour.
(5) Patients of the other brief dynamic psychotherapies are selected if they present
a formulation of their difficulties such as: "I am currently a person with a specific
conflict, and that conflict derives from my previous and inadequate relationships
with my parents in the childhood". However, the PDTL observes that not all
patients provide historical and current material that fits the previous scheme, and
that therefore, they are erroneously discarded for psychotherapy. Patients have
personal and idiosyncratic, subjective and particular "narrative styles." The PDTL
takes into account these subjective differences and how they occur in the
therapeutic relationship.
(6) The PDTL rejects metapsychological terminology and concepts whose clinical
relevance is more than questionable. It is about being closer to clinical
observations, avoiding as much as possible complex theoretical formulations that,
rather than bringing the therapist closer to the transference relationship, conceal it
from apparently irrelevant knowledge.
(7) PDLT is an approach that can be proven effective compared to other
therapeutic approaches and offers a psychodynamically oriented framework
adaptable to community mental health services.
The patient, as a result of his early childhood learning and current relationship
dynamics, has unrealistic expectations of himself and others and frequently feels
bad. Due to the avoidance of painful feelings related to unfinished business with
significant figures, these relational aspects and their causes are excluded from
awareness, although they continue to affect you in your current relationships. The
patient's behavior not only perpetuates previous conflicts but also currently
deprives him of opportunities for their modification.
The child, however, is not a passive being where the influence with his parents is
imprinted in a mechanical and automatic way. As Freud pointed out, the child's
fantasies and the meanings he attributes to his parents' behaviors are very
relevant. He is therefore influenced not only by the actual behavior of his parents
but also by his first theories about the meaning of said behaviors.
The attitude of the PDTL therapist is based above all on the skill of listening.
Basically it is about empathizing with the patient's internal world without being
punitive and avoiding the compulsion to act without understanding the relational
dynamics.
The PDTL work approach is based on the evaluation of four aspects of the
patient's interpersonal transaction:
2nd-Acts of oneself: Role that the patient adopts in his or her interpersonal
relationships that includes his feelings and desires toward significant others, his
cognitions (thoughts about himself and others) and his behaviors (behaviors
toward significant others). They can vary in their degree of consciousness
4º-Acts of other people towards oneself: They refer to the behavior of other people
in response to one's own actions.
5th-Acts of oneself towards oneself (Introjection): It is how one treats oneself (self-
controller, self-punisher, etc.). They are connected to the previous sections.
In this way, the interpersonal transaction that constitutes the focus of the PDTL
would be as follows:
In relation to the PDTL technique, it focuses on two aspects: (1) Providing a new
human experience and (2) Provoking changes through that experience in the
inadequate learning that the patient has carried from the past. The therapist tries to
identify the patient's "unconscious games" through which he constructs his
relationships and tries to induce the therapist to adjust to them. To do this, the
therapist will have three technical aspects: (A) A series of guides to understand the
patient's conflicts, (B) A line of guidance for his interventions and (C) The
identification of resistance and its management.
Regarding the intervention guide, the PDTL the therapist is attentive to the
therapeutic relationship, uses the focus format referred to above (the four elements
of the transaction) and makes interpretive connections of the patient's relationship
with him, the connections being little used. interpretive with external relations.
Basically interpretation is the most important technical tool. Interpretations of this
approach avoid psychodynamic jargon (penis envy, masochistic attitude...etc.) and
are based on data that both participants have observed over the course of the
relationship, following the four-element transaction.
The greatest obstacles in PDTL come from resistance, which is defined here as the
patient's unconscious operations aimed at maintaining a sense of security and the
avoidance of fears and threats, all governed by unconscious beliefs about self and
others. The clues to identify resistance to therapeutic collaborative work are found
in the way the patient relates to the therapist from the first session. This usually
presents itself as observable behavior through a theme that is often repeated in the
relationship. Generally resistance refers to the patient's difficulty in being aware of
his transference towards the therapist. The therapist manages resistance by being
attentive to topics loaded with affect, where the patient's anxiety will cause him to
seek protection with habitual behaviors (anger, abandonment). The therapist then
points out these modes as a form of avoidance and seeking security.
Resistance can also come from the therapist himself, if he fails to empathize with
the patient or plays a reciprocal role in the transactional game (attacking, being
impatient...). By allowing the patient to explore and evoke his or her feelings about
the therapeutic relationship, the therapist becomes the target of the patient's
fantasies, emotions, and desires; which can generate threats to his self-image and
self-esteem. It is common for the therapist to then adopt defensive reactions of a
rationalized type such as: (1) Telling the patient that he needs more time to
establish the therapeutic relationship before continuing with such painful topics, (2)
Stop insisting on resistant interpretations if the patient does not abandon it, for
another better time and (3) If the patient does not respond to a resistance
interpretation, believe that he has gone ahead to make it. Let us remember, the
interpretation of resistance is based on the patient's difficulties in becoming aware
of the transference towards the therapist. The therapist's own resistance is in turn
based on a difficulty in becoming aware of his countertransference towards the
patient.