
The Life Scientific Peter Fonagy on a revolution in mental health care
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Jan 28, 2020 Peter Fonagy, a Hungarian-born clinical psychologist and psychoanalyst, shares his remarkable journey from a bullied immigrant to a pioneer in mental health care. He reveals how therapy transformed his life and led to groundbreaking research on attachment styles. Fonagy discusses his development of mentalisation-based treatment (MBT), a simple yet revolutionary approach for treating borderline personality disorder and other mental health issues. His insights on emotional regulation and the community's role in mental health delivery are both inspiring and thought-provoking.
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Mentalising Is The Core Buffer
- Mentalising is the capacity to represent thoughts and feelings in oneself and others and is central to human social life.
- When mentalising fails, people experience raw feelings without the buffer of understanding and become socially reactive.
Therapy Saved A Suicidal Teen
- Peter Fonagy was a lonely refugee teen who failed exams and became suicidal at 16.
- Therapy at the Hampstead Child Therapy Clinic transformed his life and set him on his career path.
Parental Narrative Predicts Infant Attachment
- Attachment theory shows infants adapt strategies based on caregiving sensitivity, shaping later relationships.
- Fonagy's work found mothers' attachment narratives predict their infants' attachment before birth.

