“…This conception is important because the process by which the patient and analyst construct meanings in analysis or psychotherapy is subsequently moulded by enactments. They identify that ‘someone’ exists in the mind of ‘some other someone’ and that, as a consequence, this other is being responsive (Loewald, ; Smith, ; Gabbard, ; Reed, ; Feldman, ; Jones, ; Allen, ; Frank, ; Anchin, ; Gerson, ; Sullivan, ; Ivey, ; Stern, ; Yerushalmi, ; Steiner, ; Gilhooley, ; Pagano, ; Boston Change Process Study Group, ; Skogstad, ; Sapisochin, ; Bohleber et al ., ; Cassorla, ; Coren, ). This content reinforces what some authors refer to when they associate the occurrence of enactments with the possibility of corrective emotional experience through which early unconscious conflicts can be experienced with better resolution in the present (Loewald, ; Friedman & Natterson, ; Varga, ; Sullivan, ; Ivey, ; Pagano, ).…”