Davies, J.M. (1994). Love in the Afternoon: A Relational Reconsideration of Desire and Dread in the Countertransference. Psychoanal. Dial., 4:153-170
The psychoanalytic exploration of the analyst's erotic countertransference has remained a subject rarely addressed
in open collegial dialogue. This paper addresses this professional reticence as a manifestation of two interwoven
resistences. The first, an avoidance of the physiologically based substrata of self and object organization growing
out of certain preconceptions derived from a structural-drive model. And the second, an unwillingness to view the
parent/analyst as a full participant in the child's romantic oedipal struggles. An alternative formulation based on a
reconfigured, relational model of mental structures is suggested. Here the physical experience of self in relationship
to a host of significant internalized others becomes a meaningful organizing component for both the patient and the
analyst, one that must be incorporated into the ongoing exploration of transference-countertransference
manifestations. Likewise, the unfolding oedipal situation between parent and child, patient and analyst, is viewed
from the perspective of a two-person model within which the shared symbolic participation of both becomes a
necessary prerequisite for the kind of resolution that lays the groundwork for mature love. A clinical example in
which the analyst felt it necessary to disclose the presence of erotic countertransference is explored from several
perspectives.