Afterburn (psychotherapy)
Afterburn is a psychological term coined by Eric Berne, who defined it as "the period of time before a past event is assimilated".[1]
Berne's formulation
For Berne, afterburn is the flip side of
Remedies
Berne considered that "dreaming is probably the normal mechanism for adjusting after-burn and reach-back",[4] but that sex and holidays were also useful remedies. "Most normal after-burns and reach-backs run their courses in about six days, so that a two-week vacation allows the superficial after-burns to burn out, after which there are a few days of carefree living. ...For the assimilation of more chronic after-burns and deeper, repressed reach-backs, however, a vacation of at least six weeks is probably necessary."[4]
Other views
In terms of exam stress management, "afterburn is the time needed after the exam to... set it to rest", a period of "afterburn time... [with] a host of unexpressed feelings and incomplete tasks".[5]
"Referring to soldiers recently returned from Iraq, Sara Corbett described this type of delayed reaction as 'psychological afterburn'... [quoting soldiers who spoke of it to the effect of:] 'My body's here, but my mind is there.'"[6]
With respect to therapy, some consider that "you are not ending well when you find that you are thinking about the person's problems after sessions. This is called afterburn".[7] Others however see opportunity in such occasions: "You're sorting out your countertransference, you're owning your projections, you're separating out you from the family"—in short, one is usefully employing "those lagging emotions that afterburn following a session".[8]
Goffman
Erving Goffman has a related but rather different usage of the term "to refer to a sotto voce comment, one meant not to be a ratified part of an encounter, an afterburn ... a remonstrance conveyed collusively by virtue of the fact that its targets are in the process of leaving the field".[9]
See also
- Fugue state
- Future shock
- Gunnysacking
- Psychological trauma
References
- ^ Eric Berne, What Do You Say After You Say Hello? (1975) p. 442
- ^ Berne, p. 263
- ^ Berne, p. 264
- ^ a b Berne, p. 267
- ^ W. E. Schafer, Stress Management for Wellness (nd)p. 82 and p. 181
- ^ P. T. Clough/J. O'Malley Halley, The Affective Turn (2007) p. 269
- ^ D. L Roberts/C. Roberts-Williams, Living as Healer (2001) p. 81
- ^ Robert Taibbi, Doing Family Therapy (2007) p. 256
- ^ Erving Goffman, Relations in Public (Penguin 1972) p. 214-5 and p. 187