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I P T F O R P T S D
disorder at baseline; it was the most prevalent Axis II diagnosis. A mere
14 weeks later, however, 10 of 19 patients who had carried that personality
disorder diagnosis, a full 53%, no longer did (Markowitz et al., 2015b). This
rapid resolution of an apparent personality disorder surely justifies a “watch
and wait” diagnostic stance. On the other hand, a clinician would be unwise
to ignore a patient’s interpersonal behavior in and outside the office. In IPT,
characteristically, the therapist notes the behavior but attributes it to the trau-
matic event (and/ or to the patient’s current environment). Chuck’s
therapist
confronted it gently but directly.
Therapist: After what you went through in Iraq, it’s hard for you to
trust anything or anyone. I don’t really expect you to trust me at
first, either. When we meet, I’m not going to be trying to surprise
or frighten you, or to push you to do anything you don’t want to do.
So if something comes up in our treatment that annoys or bothers
you, or makes you anxious, please tell me. I won’t be offended; on the
contrary, it’s just the kind of issue I’d love to discuss. Your feelings—
annoyance, anger, anxiety— tell you something about what’s going
on with other people
…
.
As you start to feel better, it may become
clearer whom you can trust and not trust, and you will be able to feel
more control over your situation and the people in it.
Chuck grunted assent. Throughout the treatment, the therapist was careful to
ask Chuck’s permission at every juncture, lest he feel threatened or manipu-
lated. This was not someone to tell what to do, but rather to ask, to support his
competence.
The therapist also suggested that Chuck minimize alcohol use— alcohol
lowered anxiety in the short run but could make his mood and anxiety worse
and his behavior feel more out of control. It was also clear that Chuck was
struggling to ward off powerful internal feelings. Towards the end of the third
session, the therapist
incorporated this into a
formulation
:
Therapist: You’ve given me a lot of helpful information, and I know
that it hasn’t always been easy. Can I ask you if I understand what’s
happened to you?
Chuck: Uh- huh.
Therapist: You’ve been through bad trauma in the service— we
haven’t discussed the details, but it’s clear you’ve been through hell in
a hellish war, seeing some of your buddies die. In a place like Iraq, it’s
hard to know who or what to trust. The deployment left you feeling
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89
numb, and then when you came home, nothing felt real or safe,
either. It was hard to adjust. And you’ve kept reliving the war even
though you’re not in Iraq anymore.
Chuck: Yes sir, that’s right.
Therapist: So we call the symptoms you’ve developed PTSD. It’s a
treatable problem, it’s
not your fault, and I think we have a good
chance of you getting a lot better in just these 14 weeks— we’re at week
3 now. With PTSD, it’s like the war’s still going on: you’re expecting
bombs to go off in your environment, and inside you feel numb but it’s
like there are bombs of powerful feelings, too, that you have to ward
off. Booby- traps everywhere. And feeling numb, it’s hard to read the
terrain, hard to adjust to being stateside again. We call the difficulty
in adjustment a
role transition
. What I suggest is that we spend the
remaining 11 weeks of treatment helping you decode your feelings so
that you can decide whom you can trust and whom you can’t. If you
get more in touch with your emotions, less numb, it will be a whole
lot easier to read what’s going on, you should feel a lot safer, and your
symptoms should fade away. Does that make sense to you?
Chuck: Yeah. I guess. Just don’t know that anything’s going to be much
better in any 11 weeks.
Therapist: That might be a happy surprise. So if it’s okay, I’m just
going to ask you to focus on your feelings when you’re dealing with
other people, to try to see what your feelings
are telling you about
what’s going on.
They agreed to meet at a regular time each week, and that there would be
no formal homework except for Chuck to pay attention to his interpersonal
encounters and his feelings. With agreement on the formulation, they passed
into the middle phase of treatment.
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