Abstract Psychoanalytic work requires that clinical material be understood in relation to the mental state from which it is communicated, rather than treated as meaningful in itself. This paper presents a composite case study drawn from an assessment of Jane, a 23‐year‐old woman with a history of anxiety, depression and identity disturbance. Focusing on four early consultations, the paper examines how rapidly shifting mental states, paranoid, depressive and manic, were communicated primarily through the pressures they exerted in the transference and countertransference. Particular attention is paid to the use of countertransference as a diagnostic and technical guide in conditions where the patient's need for certainty forecloses the clinician's capacity for independent thought. Gender identity is treated here not as a separate clinical category but as a particularly high‐pressure instance of the general technical problem: the demand that the clinician respond to the content of the patient's certainty rather than to the mental state from which it arises. Within this framework, questions of gender identity are understood not as fixed statements about the self, but as expressions of particular mental states, in which defensive certainty and concrete thinking may temporarily displace symbolic communication. The paper highlighted the technical challenge of sustaining a reflective analytic stance when both the patient and the wider cultural and institutional context exert pressure toward premature certainty or action and argues that psychoanalytic work may function as a counterforce to such pressures, preserving the conditions for symbolic thought where cultural and institutional forces might otherwise foreclose them.
Marcus Evans (Sun,) studied this question.