On Counter-transference and Exorcism.

And when this one, this professor of psychology, a Lacanian, one that God, if he sought to offer a testimony of his omnipotence, must use all of his arts and crafts to orient into a Lacanian analyst, that one who has spoken about counter-transference- to this astute sage it is de rigueur to quote a proverb, not taken from any methodic text, but from a wisdom that has withstood the force of time and most likely has been translated into all the languages of the universe: that English one saying that “Only a donkey brays in front of another donkey.” It could be something saccharine to tingle one’s ear when in the place of the supervisor, that place of asininity of the analyst’s analyst, not dealing with the analyst’s counter-transference, neither with the desire of the analyst: rather, with the failure of the same desire, because one does understand- the acting out akin to pantomime commands not for an interpretation of the message but of the messenger. A good companion would be a decent book on exorcism- as it is stated and never heard, a demon will not abandon a subject unless the analyst calls it by its name- in such a way the invoking of Gabriel’s hymn settles the amusement with the name of the father. It is not nomination but a singing- a note pausing the refrain and stops the session at the koriphosis, for, the best way up is the way down, according to Heraclitus, as the analyst’s desire has its own destiny as much as the drive does. But for that precision an analyst ought to have a fine-tune voice and a dose of astigmatism when it comes to the letters, so to perceive their kinesis. Braying is a first class exercise with one’s dummy.

 

The Psychoanalytic Act: On the Formation of the No-Body.

By Petros Patounas.

The School of the Freudian Letter Publications.