1 / 26

Transactional Analysis

Transactional Analysis. A Newer Analytical Approach Text: Chapter 11. Upstate. Transactional Analysis. Developer: Eric Berne Historical development View of human nature - Motivated by three fundamental needs:  Stimulus hunger  Structure hunger  Position hunger. 2.

Mercy
Télécharger la présentation

Transactional Analysis

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Transactional Analysis A Newer Analytical Approach Text: Chapter 11

  2. Upstate Transactional Analysis • Developer: Eric Berne • Historical development • View of human nature - Motivated by three fundamental needs:  Stimulus hunger  Structure hunger  Position hunger. 2

  3. Upstate • Stimulus hunger - the need to be affirmed/ recognized by others - The need to receive strokes - Can be positive or negative - Strokes result in either good or bad feelings called stamps which can be cashed in when enough are collected • Structure hunger - the need to structure time effectively/maximize the number of strokes received. 3

  4. Upstate Ways of structuring time: Withdrawal - safe, avoids risk Rituals and pasttimes - low risk, non- involving social interactions, pleasantries Activities - work, hobbies which bring strokes Games - interactions based on unwritten rules designed to create pay off; usually covert and dishonest; common problem in relationships Intimacy - an honest, game-free relationship with mutuality, no exploitation. 4

  5. Upstate • Position hunger - The need to have our fundamental life decisions validated and affirmed - To be told we are either OK or not OK - Early in life we make basic decisions about self and others: “I’m OK.” or “I’m not OK.” “You’re OK.” or You’re not OK.” - This decision serves as the basis for a script which we use to structure time and seek strokes • TA belief: We can overcome early experience and write healthy scripts. 5

  6. Upstate Structure of Personality • Personality is composed of three ego states: • The Parent, the Adult, and the Child P • The Parent ego state: - Thinking and responding influenced by our parent’s way of interacting with us - Filled with values, injunctions, shoulds & oughts, and behaviors internalized from childhood. 6

  7. Upstate The Parent is subdivided into 2 parts: • The Nurturing Parent - Internalized messages that were loving, supporting and accepting - Results in adult nurturing responses • The Critical Parent - Internalized messages that were rejecting, controlling, and judgmental - Results in adult critical responses. 7

  8. Upstate • The Adult ego state: A - The objective part of personality - It processes information - Has no feeling - Asks factual questions: what, when, why? - Mediates between Parent and Child - Focuses on decision-making - Presents situations in an organized and intelligent way. 8

  9. Upstate • The Child ego state: C - Child-like; reflects the little boy/girl that never grows up - Reflects child-like feelings - Is fun-loving, affectionate, selfish, mean, playful, whiny, manipulative, spontaneous - Is divided into 2 parts: • The Natural/Free Child • - impulsive, pleasure-seeking, uninhibited, aggressive, rebellious, creative, affectionate, etc. 9

  10. Upstate • The Adapted Child - Ignores own instincts and tries to please parents - Duplicates reactions individuals had toward parents in childhood including feelings, such as guilt, fear, and anger - It complies, procrastinates, negotiates • To be healthy, one must balance responses and ego states appropriately • People are generally in one ego state or another • Comparison between id, ego, and superego and ego states. 10

  11. Upstate Development of Maladaptive Behavior Ego State Boundary Problems • Contamination - When Adult ego state is interfered with by the prejudicial or irrational ideas of the Parent. (Parent contaminates Adult) • Example: All young people today are going to the dogs • This is a statement coming from the critical Parent, but is stated with the belief that it is a fact. 11

  12. Upstate • Contamination - When the Adult ego state is interfered with by the archaic feelings of the Child. (Child contaminates Adult) • Example: I’m no good, can’t do anything right • This is a statement coming from the archaic Child, but is stated as if it were a fact. 12

  13. Upstate • Exclusion - When one or more ego states are effectively prevented from operating. 13

  14. Upstate Games • A reoccurring set of transactions • Superficially rational with a concealed motive • A series of transactions with a gimmick or negative pay off • Sometimes called ulterior transactions • Are played compulsively over and over • Basically dishonest, involves the avoidance of intimacy • Usually supports one’s life position regarding self and others. 14

  15. Upstate Rackets • Habitual ways of feeling • Originating in the experiences we had in growing up • Often are unpleasant feelings that we hold on to after playing games • Become a basic part of life’s script • The Guilt Racket, the Depression Racket, the Worry Racket • Convinces one of his/her not OK position. 15

  16. Upstate Injunctions • Parental messages that tell children what to do and how to be • Stem from parent’s own anxiety, frustration, unhappiness • Children decide to accept or challenge injunctions • Examples: don’t be, don’t succeed • When children decide to accept negative injunctions, this leads to maladaptive behavior. 16

  17. Upstate Life Positions • Early in life, individuals take a position regarding their intrinsic worth and that of others • Environmental experiences influence these positions • Four life positions: • “I’m okay - you’re okay.” • “I’m okay - you’re not okay.” • “I’m not okay - you’re okay.” • “I’m not okay - you’re not okay.” 17

  18. Upstate Scripts • A personal life plan which dictates behavior • Formed early in life in reaction to important experiences such as the injunctions one is exposed to • Relates to these questions: “Who am I?”, “What am I doing here?”, and “Who are all those others?”. 18

  19. Upstate Functions and Goals of Therapy What the therapist does. • Structural analysis - analyze client’s ego states • Are you a “Constant Parent”? • Are you a “Constant Adult”? • Are you a “Constant Child”? • Perhaps use egogram - a diagram portraying the energy one expends in each ego state. 19

  20. Upstate Analysis of Transactions – functional analysis • Diagnosing the ego states that emerge in a social interchange • Three kinds of transactions: • Complimentary transactions • Crossed transactions • Ulterior transactions. 20

  21. Upstate Complimentary Transactions • Lines of communication are parallel • Communication can proceed smoothly and indefinitely. P P P P A A A A C C C C 21

  22. Upstate Crossed Transactions • Lines of communication are crossed • Communication is broken off • Relationship breaks down. P P P P A A A A C C C C 22

  23. Upstate Ulterior Transactions • Two messages are sent, one overt, the other implied and unspoken • Can lead to repetitive game playing. P P P P A A A A C C C C 23

  24. Upstate Analyze Games • Why don’t you - yes, but . . . • Seduction • Uproar • Blemish • Look how hard I tried • Cops and robbers. 24

  25. Upstate • Analyze injunctions and client’s response to injunctions • Common injunctions (Goulding) - “Don’t.” - “Don’t be.” - “Don’t be a child.” - “Don’t be close.” - “Don’t be well.” - “Don’t succeed.” (“Don’t do well.”). 25

  26. Upstate • Analyze scripts and decisions carried over from childhood • Analyze predominant life position based on understanding injunctions and scripts • Change script, early decisions, and life position through redecision: an emotional, intellectual, and behavioral process which takes place in therapy session • TA is also a contractual approach. 26

More Related