Conceptions on Conception: Dreams and imagery
about conception and pregnancy

Judith Setton-Markus, M.Ed. R.Psych. FIPA

Scientific Meeting | Saturday, November 19, 2016 | Venue: Arbutus Club
2001 Nanton Avenue, Vancouver, B.C. V6J 4A1

The usefulness of dreams for understanding and facilitating the mastery of the developmental challenges of pregnancy and working through related unresolved conflicts and earlier developmental problems has been documented in the psychoanalytic literature (Bibring & Valenstein, 1976); (Birksted-Breen, 1986); (Lester & Notman, 1986, Ablon, 1994). Less has been written about how similar conflicts and developmental problems emerge more directly in women as they contemplate the desire to conceive. Through the analysis of dreams and unconscious phantasies, this presentation will illustrate the usefulness of dreams and imagery in revealing and working through unresolved developmental conflicts during the pre-pregnancy period as well as during pregnancy. Caught in the throes of the desire for a baby, and the emotional blocks that complicate that desire, women’s ‘conceptions of conception’ offer the opportunity to work through the prevailing conflicts in regards to the maternal object, stemming from their experience of being the child to that mother. A focus will be on the expression in the body of anxieties that emerge in anticipation of and as a natural consequence of the physical changes that occur during pregnancy and how these relate to the emotional genetic inheritance.

Learning Objectives:

  1. View the usefulness of dreams and imagery in revealing the developmental challenges of becoming pregnant and pregnancy itself.
  2. Develop an appreciation of the function of dreams and imagery in the working through of unresolved conflicts and developmental problems as these emerge more fully with sight on conception and during pregnancy itself.
  3. Discuss some bodily anxieties associated with conception and with the physical changes during pregnancy.

Judith Setton-Markus, M.Ed., R. Psych., FIPA, is a psychoanalyst in private practice in Vancouver. She is past president of the WBCPS, where she has fulfilled many roles, including the development and chair of the Western Branch Scientific Program since 2005, and faculty member of the Western Branch extension program. She is an assistant clinical professor in postgraduate education at the University of British Columbia and a clinical associate of Simon Fraser University. Judy runs infant observation seminar groups and has a deep interest in treating pregnant women and mothers in her psychoanalytic practice.

The Arbutus Club in the Terrace Room
2001 Nanton Avenue, Vancouver, B.C. V6J 4A1
Time: 9:30 am to 12:30 pm

Cost: Members, Guests: No charge
Non-Members: $ 40.00 per event
Students, VIP: $ 25.00 per event

For further information please contact: info@wcpsi.digitalswan.com

The event is an accredited group learning activity as designed by the Maintenance of Certification Program of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Canada. 2.75 hours CME credit.

PARKING INFORMATION: Attendees of the Program will be asked to register at the front desk when they arrive at the Arbutus Club. Free parking is available within the indoor garage, only within the spaces designated for visitors. Entry to the club is through the main door. Garage entry to the building is not available.

CANCELLATION POLICY: The WB Scientific Program offers refunds, minus an administration charge of 20%, only if requested 6 or more business days prior to an event. The Program is unable to offer refunds within the period of 5 business days before an event, since that is when hotel arrangements and catering costs are finalized. If an event in the Program were to be cancelled, all registrations fees would be refunded.

The 2016 Scientific Program Committee: Judith Setton-Markus (Chair), M.Ed., R. Psych, Karin Holland Biggs, PhD., RCC, James Fabian, MD, FRCPC, Endre Koritar, MD, FRCPC, Catherine Young, PhD, R. Psych.