@Laura 2 interesting you see it as a distraction from the real work - do you not think it might BE the real work?
The very nature of transference is that is is unresolved (emotional) intimacy issues, where our therapeutic relationship starts to mirror past relationships; ....
@NovemberStar - your questions are very interesting, I think it's good to review and explore this transference issue.
The way I see it is less complex. I was traumatised by people and events completely outside my control, exacerbated by seemingly endless subsequent abuse when I was exceptionally vulnerable: the fact of my vulnerabilities induced cruel/callous/psychopathic individuals to abuse me - not because of anything intrinsically lacking or damaged in me. I need help with overcoming the horrendous after-effects of the trauma they inflicted. My position is that the cruel/callous/psychopathic people are really in more need of serious MH treatment and even locking up.
That the people and events were outside my control completely doesn't suggest to me first and foremost that I need to revisit my parental relationships.
Reading this forum in the last few weeks has, though, made me look at those parental relationships and wonder if I too had such bad parents. I realised that I could indeed ruminate on all my parents' faults and abuses and build a whole nightmare of them...so I looked at their overall results again and can see that, whilst I definitely didn't get the ideal parents I might have wanted and might have had a better start in life with, they were good enough, especially considering the difficulties they were struggling with and had overcome.
A very wise woman once told me her opinion that 'Most of life is unfinished business' and I've often pondered her wisdom over the years. For me, a better solution is to work on a realistic balance of acceptance in the manner of
"God, grant me the serenity to accept the things I cannot change,
The courage to change the things I can,
And wisdom to know the difference."
Equally, I've had experience of transference in therapy - as I described in previous posts where the therapist utterly abused her power and made me into her 'good mother' and 'good counsellor' because she trusted neither her mother nor counsellors but, because she had power over me and I'm a nice, kind sort she felt in control enough to be able to be herself and try and get
her needs met (sod mine!!).
Also in this long therapy-search I've also encountered quite inept or ego-maniacal individuals who e.g. will make you, the client, feel stupid for asking for help; those who are insistent that PTSD is
your issue, your mind that's at fault and because I-can't-help-you,-
you-must-be-too-defective; those who don't even know what PTSD is and thus you are somehow misinformed for raising the problem or you know too much for your own good; those who chortle at the most sensitive parts of the history; those who are defeatist and tell you that well, perhaps there isn't any help for you, etc etc. These are also forms of transference - transferring their inadequacies and ignorance onto you. It can be a dangerous process and, from what I've seen, the NHS and the private sector are not as good as we need them to be in the boundary department, especially where potential for permeable boundaries arise.