Saturday, 16 September 2023

Cathexis - Cathect

Verb 

cathect (third-person singular simple present cathectspresent participle cathectingsimple past and past participle cathected)

  1. (transitive, psychology) To focus one's emotional energies on someone or something. quotations 
  2. 1978 [Simon & Schuster], M. Scott PeckThe Road Less Travelled, 2012, Random House (Rider), page 105, The feeling of love is the emotion that accompanies the experience of cathectingCathecting, it will be remembered, is the process by which an object becomes important to us. Once cathected, the object, commonly referred to as a 'love object,' is invested with our energy as if it were part of ourselves, and this relationship between the us and the invested object is called a cathexis.
  3. 1994, Howard Kamler, Identification and CharacterSUNY Presspage 56: Narcissism theorists talk about the work of the narcissism period being a "cathecting of the self." In fact, they should be talking about a "cathecting of the rudimentary self." Since all that gets cathected here are merely individually emerging ego self representations and not ego self structure—the latter amounting to an internally integrated network of agency dispositions—it really makes no sense to talk about cathecting a self per se.
  4. 2013, Carroll E. Izard, Human Emotions, page 193: Apparently it is possible for an individual to cathect any person, object, idea, or image. Of considerable importance to a possible analogy between cathexis and the emotion of interest, is Freud's notion that an individual can cathect thought or thinking as well as attention and perception.
  5. For Cathexis see 

    Cathexis see here

Friday, 8 September 2023

Transactional Analysis Theory and Practice: Other Terms relevant to TA Theory

This blog comes from Ajit Karve, Transformational TA Coach
+919822024037; ajitpkarve@gmail.com
See the other blogs here : Table of Contents

Other Terms Relevant to understanding TA Theory

1. Meaning: We at times inadvertently and unawarely attach meaning to what is said, expressed, done or caused to be done. Wikipedia lists these seven meaning of the word meaning.
  • Meaning (Existential), the worth of life in contemporary existentialism.
  • Meaning (Linguistics), is a meaning that is communicated through the use of language.
  • Meaning (Non-Linguistic), a general term of art to capture senses of the word "meaning", independent from its linguistic uses.
  • Meaning (Philosophy of language), definition, elements, and types of meaning  discussed in philosophy.
  • Meaning (Psychology), epistemological position, in psychology as well as    philosophy, linguistics, semiotics and sociology.
  • Meaning (Semiotics), the distribution of signs in sign relations.
  • Meaning (the meaning of life), a notion concerning the nature of human        existence.

The word meaning is significant in Transactional Analysis because what a parent says and what the child makes out of it, may not be the same thing. It is the meaning that the child attaches to the spoken statement that is true for it. It structures its belief system.

2. Personalisation: Personalisation means customisation. In other contexts personalisation means making several aspects of any thing appealing to one or another. This is used in marketing and advertising. In Transactional Analysis context, it is a part that is held to be true by a person. Thereafter it becomes a not-but statement for the person.

3. Attribution: It means naming a person for a quality. The person is identified with a particular quality, characteristic or trait. It is also significant in the self naming mode. This happens because we may rigidly hold on to a quality which may not be present. It however limits the person's capacity. This is true in script beliefs.

4. Bias: An prejudiced view of another which may not be entirely true. This shows up frequently in the cross-up after switch in Game.

5. Cybernetics: ‘Noise’ reduces or affects the quality of communication in electronics. ‘Noise’ however improves the quality of communication in human conversations or interactions. ‘Noise’ is incorporated by accompanying facial expressions, head slants, pose and posture, and gestures of sorts. ‘Noise’ is incorporated as part of what we say or express by use of words such as assertions. Berne says that a precise message is psychologically inconceivable. This phenomenon is called cybernetics.

Orthogenesis Paul Federn, in his psychoanalytic-based ego psychology, theorized that when awakening from deep sleep the ego's development, deprived of cathexis during that sleep, recapitulates.  




William James - about


William James
Source : https://www.famousphilodophers.org

Born on January 11, 1842, Sir William James is known around the world as the Father of American psychology. He was an accomplished philosopher and psychologist, and received recognition for his works during his lifetime. He integrated the tightly structured ideas of his times with psychology to present original theories rich in philosophical expertise.
The study of psychology was distancing itself from philosophy and was emerging as a subject on its own during the end of the nineteenth century. William James contributed greatly to the slow process of developing the science of the mind and established it as a study of states of human consciousness. He also published two of his major works of psychology in 1890s.
James also presented the Theory of Self in which the self is divided into two parts; namely the ‘Me’ self and the ‘I’ self. The ‘Me’ self is further broken down into the materialistic, the social, and the spiritual self.
James linked the ‘I’ category with what we call the mind, and gave it the name of Pure Ego. The ‘I’ self is essentially the thinking self. Pure Ego is what we call the soul; it is the thread linking a person’s past, present and future. It is not a concept which can be studied through science, according to James.
The material self is what physically constitutes a human being. It foremost includes the body. The attire, family and money are also included in the material self of a person. The social self is a person’s behavior which he takes up during various social situations. The more social situations he is put in, the more social selves he is able to possess. Lastly, the spiritual self is what we truly are at our core. It includes our personality, moral values, ethics and nature. It is permanent; taking care of the spiritual self is far more rewarding than the material and the social self.
The Theory of Self raised questions about mindful actions and decisions a person makes throughout his life, which compelled him to delve into philosophy. There he studied the truth of ideas not abstractly, but in the concrete results they give, and applied it in the fields of metaphysics, religions, and social philosophy. This study resulted in the development of a philosophical school of thought called Pragmatic Epistemology.
Along with Charles Sanders Peirce and John Dewey, William James is considered to be the founder of Pragmatism. The pragmatists believe in the actual effectiveness of ideas and function of a thought should be to describe what already is there. According to Pragmatism, language, knowledge and ideas should be studied for practical usage and problem solving.
James spoke extensively on the subject. The collection of lectures titled under Pragmatism is valued as the most powerful book of American philosophy. He applied pragmatism to the concept of truth and said only those concepts should be considered true which corresponds with real things and are thus of some use.
He further said that the truthfulness of a concept can be gauged by its purposefulness. A belief is proved right by the role it plays in guiding human beings throughout their lives, and the outcomes it gives. This he called the ‘cash value’ of an idea.
Another famous theory of James is the theory of emotion. It is often assumed that the human mind perceives a situation, develops an emotion first, which then results in a bodily response. However, he argues that we first react unconsciously to the situation through physical actions, and then form an emotion corresponding to them.
The most significant of William James’s works include the Essays in Radical Empiricism, Principles of Psychology, and Psychology: The Briefer Course. He died on August 26, 1910. It is through his efforts that the philosophical world gained a new branch, and psychology became what it is now.
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Other material
In the psychology of William James, the empirical self is held to consist of the material self (everything material that can be seen as belonging to the self), the social self (the self as perceived by others), and the spiritual self (the self that is closest to one’s core subjective experience of oneself).
https://dictionary.apa.org › 
empirical self – APA Dictionary of Psychology
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Theory Of Self (Simply Psychology)
William James's Theory of Self postulates that the self comprises two parts: the 'I' and the 'Me.'
The 'I' is the self that thinks, acts, and has experienced (the subjective self), while the 'Me' is the self as an object of knowledge, including the sum of a person's thoughts, feelings, social roles, and recognition from others (the objective self). His theory emphasizes the dynamic and social nature of the self-concept.
The "Me" is a separate individual a person refers to when talking about their personal experiences.
On the other hand, the "I" is part of the that knows who they are and what they have accomplished in life (Pomerleau, 2014).
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For example, in the statement, “I know it was me who ate the cookie,” the “Me” is the empirical self, the one who does the acting, whereas the “I” is the self that is capable of thinking and reflecting (Cooper, 1992).
The "I" is a pure ego – it is what provides continuity between past, present, and future, allowing us to view ourselves to have a consistent, individual identity, one brought about by the stream of consciousness that James first defined (Hunt, 1920).
Although the “I” self cannot be further divided, the “Me” can be further broken down into three sub-categories: a material, social, and spiritual self.
The material self consists of what belongs to a person, such as the body, family, clothes, or money.
The social self marks who you are in a specific social situation. We tend to change our actions, thoughts, emotions, words, and mannerisms based on the current social situation or the people with whom we are interacting. For example, we act differently when at work as opposed to when out with friends, as do we when talking to our boss as opposed to a coworker.
Finally, our spiritual self is who we are at our core, including our personality, values, and conscience. Our spiritual self typically remains relatively stable throughout our lifetime (Green, 1997).

Monday, 4 September 2023

Table of Contents

Table of Contents
Thess blogs come from Ajit Karve, BSc, BTA, a Transformational TA Coach
+917498419787; ajitpkarve@gmail.com

00.00 Introducing Transactional Analysis as a Theory

Part I

01. Introduction - Topics in Section 1

02. TA Theory of Personality


03. Auxiliary Topics

04. TA Stroke Theory


05. TA Theory of Transactions


06. TA Game Theory

07. TA Racket Theory

08. TA Script Theory
09. TA Practice - Self Help Methods for Better Living and for Achieving Goals of TA
11.02 Script Cure -1 


Sunday, 3 September 2023

Phenomena, Organisers and Determinants

02.15 Phenomena, Organisers and Determinants

Before we take up understanding the captioned concepts and their role in TA Theory we need to understand what ego states are. Berne has defined ego states in the Introduction of T.A.P. by describing them in three ways. Phenomenologically they are described as a coherent system of feelings related to a given subject, operationally as a set of coherent behaviour patterns, and pragmatically as a system of feelings which motivate a related set of behaviour patterns. Then quoting Penfield he mentions that two different ego states can occupy consciousness simultaneously as discrete psychological entities distinct from each other. For more read contents at Findings of Penfield. Berne admits that TA is a type of ego psychology [T.A.P. Ch. 1 The Rationale]. Then in T.A.P. Ch.1 3. The Language he writes that exteropsyche, neopsyche and archeopsyche are psychic organs, which manifest themselves phenomenologically as exteropsychic – identificatory, neopsychic – data processing and archeopsychic – regressive ego states. They are coloquially referred to as Parent, Adult and Child respectively.
Moving further, the captioned terms are explained in section 6 The Psychic Apparatus of Ch. 20 titled Theoretical and Technical Considerations of TA. The section aims to explain how Transactional Analysis personality theory is different from Freudian Personality Theory. He writes to say “Freud does not raise any question of systematic phenomenology, and it is here that structural analysis can usefully fill a gap in psychological theory, just as transactional analysis fills a gap in social theory by setting up elementary units (transactions) and larger units (games and scripts) of social action.

Here one needs to read the purpose, method and goal of structural analysis in TA Theory elaborated in Berne’s essay titled Ego States in Psychotherapy. (Intuition and Ego States – Essay 6). There he explains the origins of the formulation of the PAC based TA Theory of Personality citing the case history of Segundo. He also explains why Parent, Adult and Child are not synonymous with Superego, Ego and Id.

It makes understanding easy by covering the captioned terms in the order of determinants, organisers and phenomena.

1. Determinants : Determinants are factors (meaning features, aspects, influences and entities) which establish the programming and determine the quality of the organisers (psychic organs) and the phenomena (ego states). And, as a consequence (they by another route) they  influence any of the organisers (psychic organs) and hence the resultant phenomena (ego states). There are three contributors to the programming of the determinants. They are (a) Internal Programming (b) Probability Programming and (c) External Programming. The sources of Internal Programming are naturally occurring biological forces (indigenous biological forces – biological forces which are originating or occurring naturally). Probability Programming is generated by autonomous data processing (autonomous means based on moral duty instead of on urges, impulses, drives and desires). External programming is generated by incorporated rules and regulations, principles, beliefs, values, etcetera sourced from external sources.

2. Organisers : Organisers are psychic organs. The three types of psychic organs are already described. And,

3. Phenomena : Phenomena are ego states corresponding to the three determinants.

We can now summarise the contents. Sources of stimuli can be internal or external. They activate the psychic system structured by the organisers. The activation of the organisers is structured by the resident programming contributed by the three sources – Internal Programming, Probability Programming and External Programming afforded as constituents of the determinants. The organisers manifest phenomenologically as the Phenomena – ego states. The Phenomena are also directly influenced by the determinants as already explained.

This helped Berne to explain the anomaly displayed by Mr. Decatur, a travelling salesman. The anomaly was a split in the Adult ego state with one segment’s activation being instinctually determined corresponding to the Internal Programming of the controlling factors  and the other segment’s activation being determined by External Programming  of the controlling factors and the two in turn  affecting the effectiveness of Decatur implementing Probability Programming that his professional activity demanded.

This also helps us understand the forces at play within the neopsyche reflecting the Adult’s behaviour.

Berne then uses the explanation so far offered to review some of the ambiguities encountered in structural analysis. An ego state is the phenomenological and behavioral manifestation of the activity of a certain psychic organ - organizer. These same organs have the independent task of effectively organizing whichever determinants are most active at a given moment. This results in two parallel series, with nine simple cases: Child, with internal, probability, or external programing; Adult, with the same possibilities; and Parent, with the same possibilities.

Berne then further explains anomalies encountered in understanding or explaining the experiential phenomena displayed by the Adult. He writes as stated below:

The inference or concept of programing is particularly necessary in attempting to clarify the difficulties encountered in many instances concerning Adult ego states. One example of its usefulness here is in distinguishing between "rational" authorities and "authoritarian" authorities. A rational authority may be anyone from a dictator or monarch like King Solomon to a certain kind of traffic policeman. A common example in modern times is the overseas British or Australian colonial administrator. Their approach to native populations is typically that of a statistical data-processor, but their attitude is paternalistic and their solutions to problems are usually oriented toward the childlike aspects of their charges. This may be characterized as a Parent- programed Adult. The authoritarian authority is the dictator, big or small, as he is popularly pictured: one whose approach is primarily to inflict his will on his subjects, but who maintains an attitude of rational justification, so that his propaganda presents statistical data calculated to justify his tyranny. Since his "real Self" is Parent, "he himself" may believe what he is saying. This is the Adult-programed Parent. (For the sake of completeness, the unpredictable autocratic authority may be added, the Child-programed Roman emperors who tried to realize their archaic fantasies in unrestrained cruelty and abandon.)

On a more universal level, the ethical Adult, "Ethos," may be regarded functionally as the Parent-programed Adult, the denotation being that good mothers behave ethically toward their infants. The feeling Adult, "Pathos," may be understood as a Child-programed Adult, referring to the fact that at a certain age little brother cries when bigger brother is in pain.

Text restated in simple terms by replacing  the terms phenomena, organisers and determinants by the actual entities namely ego states, psychic organs and controlling factors. 

02.15 Ego States, Psychic Organs and Controlling Factors

Before we take up understanding the captioned concepts and their role in TA Theory we need to understand what ego states are. Berne has defined ego states in the Introduction of T.A.P. by describing them in three ways. Phenomenologically they are described as a coherent system of feelings related to a given subject, operationally as a set of coherent behaviour patterns, and pragmatically as a system of feelings which motivate a related set of behaviour patterns. Then quoting Penfield he mentions that two different ego states can occupy consciousness simultaneously as discrete psychological entities distinct from each other. For more read contents at Findings of Penfield. Berne admits that TA is a type of ego psychology [T.A.P. Ch. 1 The Rationale]. Then in T.A.P. Ch.1 3. The Language he writes that exteropsyche, neopsyche and archeopsyche are psychic organs, which manifest themselves phenomenologically as exteropsychic – identificatory, neopsychic – data processing and archeopsychic – regressive ego states. They are coloquially referred to as Parent, Adult and Child respectively.

Moving further, the captioned terms are explained in section 6 The Psychic Apparatus of Ch. 20 titled Theoretical and Technical Considerations of TA. The section aims to explain how Transactional Analysis personality theory is different from Freudian Personality Theory. He writes to say “Freud does not raise any question of systematic phenomenology, and it is here that structural analysis can usefully fill a gap in psychological theory, just as transactional analysis fills a gap in social theory by setting up elementary units (transactions) and larger units (games and scripts) of social action.

Here one needs to read the purpose, method and goal of structural analysis in TA Theory elaborated in Berne’s essay titled Ego States in Psychotherapy. (Intuition and Ego States – Essay 6). There he explains the origins of the formulation of the PAC based TA Theory of Personality citing the case history of Segundo. He also explains why Parent, Adult and Child are not synonymous with Superego, Ego and Id.

It makes understanding easy by covering the captioned terms in the order of controlling factors, psychic organd and ego states.

1. Controlling Factors : The controlling factors are factors (meaning features, aspects, influences and entities) which establish the programming and determine the quality of the psychic organs and the ego states. And, as a consequence (they by another route) they influence any of the psychic organs and hence the resultant ego states. There are three contributors to the programming of the controlling factors. They are (a) Internal Programming (b) Probability Programming and (c) External Programming. The sources of Internal Programming are naturally occurring biological forces (indigenous biological forces – biological forces which are originating or occurring naturally). Probability Programming is generated by autonomous data processing (autonomous means based on moral duty instead of on urges, impulses, drives and desires). External programming is generated by incorporated rules and regulations, principles, beliefs, values, etcetera sourced from external sources.

2. Psychic Organs : There are three types of psychic organs. They are the exteropsyche, the neopsyche and the archeopsyche. And,

3. Ego States : The ego states corresponding to the three psychic organs are Parent - exteropsychic ego states, Adult - neopsychic ego states and Child - archeopsychic ego states.

We can now summarise the contents. Sources of stimuli can be internal or external. They activate the psychic system structured by the psychic organs. The activation of the psychic organs is structured by the resident programming contributed by the elements of the controlling factors – Internal Programming, Probability Programming and External Programming afforded as constituents of the controlling factors. The psychic organs manifest phenomenologically as the ego states. The ego states are also directly influenced by the controlling factors as already explained.

This helped Berne to explain the anomaly displayed by Mr. Decatur, a travelling salesman. The anomaly was a split in the Adult ego state with one segment’s activation being instinctually determined corresponding to the Internal Programming of the Determinant and the other segment’s activation being externally programmed and the two affecting the effectiveness of Decatur implementing Probability Programming that his professional activity demanded.

This also helps us understand the forces at play within the neopsyche reflecting the Adult’s behaviour.

Berne then uses the explanation so far offered to review some of the ambiguities encountered in structural analysis. An ego state is the phenomenological and behavioral manifestation of the activity of a certain psychic organ. These same organs have the independent task of effectively organizing whichever controlling factors are most active at a given moment. This results in two parallel series, with nine simple cases: Child, with internal, probability, or external programing; Adult, with the same possibilities; and Parent, with the same possibilities.

Berne then further explains anomalies encountered in understanding or explaining the experiential phenomena displayed by the Adult. He writes as stated below:

The inference or concept of programing is particularly necessary in attempting to clarify the difficulties encountered in many instances concerning Adult ego states. One example of its usefulness here is in distinguishing between "rational" authorities and "authoritarian" authorities.

A rational authority may be anyone from a dictator or monarch like King Solomon to a certain kind of traffic policeman. A common example in modern times is the overseas British or Australian colonial administrator. Their approach to native populations is typically that of a statistical data-processor, but their attitude is paternalistic and their solutions to problems are usually oriented toward the childlike aspects of their charges. This may be characterized as a Parent- programed Adult. The authoritarian authority is the dictator, big or small, as he is popularly pictured: one whose approach is primarily to inflict his will on his subjects, but who maintains an attitude of rational justification, so that his propaganda presents statistical data calculated to justify his tyranny. Since his "real Self" is Parent, "he himself" may believe what he is saying. This is the Adult-programed Parent. (For the sake of completeness, the unpredictable autocratic authority may be added, the Child-programed Roman emperors who tried to realize their archaic fantasies in unrestrained cruelty and abandon.)

On a more universal level, the ethical Adult, "Ethos," may be regarded functionally as the Parent-programed Adult, the denotation being that good mothers behave ethically toward their infants. The feeling Adult, "Pathos," may be understood as a Child-programed Adult, referring to the fact that at a certain age little brother cries when bigger brother is in pain. And the reality testing Adult, "Logos" programmed by incorporated uninfluenced experiences and evaluations lent by the preconscious. 

Monday, 27 February 2023

Isha Upanishad

Isha Upanishad -  ईषा उपनिषद

ॐ पूर्णमदः पूर्णमिदं पूर्णात् पूर्णमुदच्यते । 
पूर्णस्य पूर्णमादाय पूर्णमेवावशिष्यते॥
पूर्णंम् अद: पूर्णंम् इदं पूर्णात् पूर्णंम् उदच्यते|
पूर्णस्य पूर्ण-मादाय पूर्णंम् एवं वशिष्यते||

ओम्! --  यह विश्व अविभाज्य एक है, पूर्ण है, दोष रहित है, कोख जैसा है। इसका मूल गुण नये को जन्म देना और उसका पोषण करना है।  नाश होना, नष्ट होना, मृत्यु को प्राप्त होना इस प्रक्रिया का अंग है, प्रासंगिक घटना है। इस कारण वश पूर्णता अनादि काल से, अनादि काल तक पूर्ण की पूर्ण रहती है। इस वजह से इस पूर्ण को समझने के लिये मानवता ने ईश्वर, देव, परमात्मा ऐसे शब्दों का उपयोग किया है। इस विचार को ध्यान में रखते हुए अब यह सरल अर्थ : यह पूर्ण है, वह पूर्ण है। उस पूर्ण से इस पूर्ण की उत्पत्ती होने पर वह पूर्ण, शेष पूर्ण रहता है। - ओम्! शांति! शांति! शांति!

Om!  -- This universe is one indivisible, complete, flawless, womb-like whole.  Its basic quality is to give birth to the new and nurture it.  Destruction and death is a part of this process, a related event.  For this reason, the perfection of completeness remains complete – a whole - from time immemorial, to time immemorial.  It is for this reason that words such as Ishwar, Dev, God,  Parmatma are used to understand this Absolute.  Keeping this idea in mind a straight meaning of the invocation is : This is whole, that is whole. This whole having been created from that whole, the whole remains intact, complete..  - Om!  Peace, Peace, Peace. 

Thursday, 2 February 2023

TA Energy Theory - Ch. 3 of TAP

Chapter Three
Personality Function
1. Reaction to Stimuli
Just as the various organs of the brain and of the body react dif- ferently to stimuli, so do the different systems of the personality. The exteropsyche is judgmental in an imitative way, and seeks to enforce sets of borrowed standards. The neopsyche is principally concerned with transforming stimuli into pieces of information, and processing and filing that information on the basis of previous experience. The archaeopsyche tends to react more abruptly, on the basis of pre-logical thinking and poorly differentiated or distorted perceptions. In fact, each of these aspects perceives the environment differently, in accord- ance with its function, and hence is reacting to a different set of stimuli. An over-simplified but illustrative example is the reaction to one of the ever-popular news stories about embezzlers. In a few people, this arouses a Parental, moralistic reaction. In more people it arouses a more matter-of-fact Adult interest as to how the embezzlement was managed. Possibly the most common reaction is the naive, child-like, though usually unexpressed, thought: "That would be interesting to do." In the language of transactional analysis, the fault-finding Parent plays Blemish, the Adult plays Accountant, and the Child wants to play Cops and Robbers.
The three aspects also react on each other. The Parent may become excited (i.e., distressed) by the Child's fantasies, and the Child is particularly sensitive to inhibitory stimuli from the Parent. This rela tionship is usually a replica of the original child-parent relationship which the individual experienced.
2 THE FLOW OF CATHEXIS
Mrs. Tettar, a 22-year-old housewife, was referred for treatment of a severe state of agitation following the birth of her second child. One of her most frequent operations during her therapeutic hours was coercive nagging. For example, she would ask the therapist again and again what to do about her maid leaving, or whether she should go to the hospital. It soon became possible to point out to her that, while on the surface her questions represented an Adult quest for information, at another level they constituted an attempt of her Child to manipulate the therapist in some way. The patient responded by expressing resent- nient against her mother for babying her. She gave examples of how she had begged her mother to do things for her that she could well do for herself. She felt that her mother should not have given in.
As this problem was worked over during the hour, the patient's demeanor gradually changed. She sat up, her face relaxed, her voice became more assured, and instead of whining and nagging, she was sociable, cheerful, and communicative: just like her old self, as she re- marked. But as she was escorted to the door at the end of the hour, she relapsed into her former state of mind and began to whine once more. Then abruptly she pulled herself together, smiled merrily, and said: "There I go again!"
Such shifts in ego state, which can be readily observed in healthy people as well as in patients, may be accounted for by using the con- cept of psychic energy, or cathexis, on the principle that at a given moment that ego state which is cathected in a certain way will have the executive power. In the first instance it will suffice to speak simply of "the flow of cathexis." The data given about Mrs. Tettar, for example, can be explained in this regard by saying that she came in with a highly cathected Child; that cathexis gradually flowed from the Child into the Adult until the Adult took over the executive; that as she de- parted, cathexis was drained back into the Child, and that when she "pulled herself together" cathexis abruptly flowed back into the Adult.
Mrs. Primus's cycles of behavior and attitude can be similarly ac- counted for.
3 EGO BOUNDARIES
When it was said above that cathexis flowed from the Child into the Adult, and vice versa, this concept or metaphor implies that there was some sort of boundary between the two ego states. While this im- plication can be thought of in neurological terms, a physiological veri- fication is not yet possible, so that here we shall confine ourselves to considering the psychological phenomena.
In her pre-psychotic state, and during the remissions which occurred in the course of her therapy, Mrs. Tettar was aware of certain obses- sions, phobias, and compulsions which were ego dystonic. At such times, her obsession with cleanliness, her fear of dirt, and her compul- sion to wash her hands a certain number of times in succession were usually perceived by her as not part of her "real self." In this kind of thinking, her mind was divided into two systems: "real Self" and "not real Self." "Real Self" was capable of reality-testing in regard to dirt and cleanliness; "not real Self" was incapable. "Real Self" knew things about sanitation (particularly since her husband was a public health worker) which an infant would be incapable of appreciating, while "not real Self" was guided by magical thinking in a way characteristic of an infant at a certain specific phase of development. Thus "real Self" was characteristically Adult, and "not real Self" was character- istically Child.
Mrs. Tettar's own view of these two different aspects of her per- sonality implied the existence of a boundary between them, since in her mind certain forms of behavior and feeling pertained to one system, which she perceived as her real self, and other forms pertained to a system which was outside of that. The multiplication of such reports justifies the assumption that each ego state is a kind of entity which is differentiated in some way from the rest of the psychic contents, including other ego states which existed many years ago or a few moments previously, or which are active simultaneously. The most convenient and probably the most accurate way to say this is to talk of each ego state as having a boundary which separates it from other ego states. Hence a set of circles, such as that in Figure 1B, may be taken as a fair way of representing the structure of personality.
4 THE PROBLEM OF THE SELF
When it was said that Mrs. Tettar's hand-washing was ego dys- tonic, this meant specifically Adult-ego dystonic. In her overt psychotic state, however, when her "real Self" was the Child, the hand-washing became ego syntonic: that is, at such times she accepted her own far- fetched rationalizations for this behavior, which was only to be ex- pected, since the rationalizations themselves came from the Child. In her neurotic state they were heard by the Adult, who disagreed, while in her psychotic state they were heard by the same personality who devised them. In other words, her hand-washing was Adult-ego dystonic and Child-ego syntonic, so whether at a given moment she perceived it as dystonic or syntonic depended upon which was her "real Self" at that moment.
The problem now revolves around what determines "real Self." Evidently this does not depend upon executive power, since when she was reluctantly washing her hands or hunting for specks, in her non- psychotic condition, her Child had the executive was still experienced as "real Self." power, but the Adult
Clinical understanding in this area can be obtained by postulating three states of cathexis; bound, unbound, and free. A physical analogy is offered by a monkey on a tree. If he remains inactive, his elevated position gives him only potential energy. If he falls off, this potential energy is transformed into kinetic energy. But because he is a living being, he can jump off, and then a third component, muscular energy, must be taken into account in order to understand how he lands where he does. When he is inactive, the physical energy is bound, so to speak, in his position. When he falls, this energy is unbound, and when he jumps he adds a third component by free choice. The kinetic and muscular energy together might be called the active energy. Bound cathexis then corresponds to potential energy, unbound cathexis to kinetic energy, and free cathexis to muscular energy; and unbound cathexis and free cathexis together may be called active cathexis.
Ego boundaries are conceived as semi-permeable under most con- ditions. They are relatively impermeable to bound and unbound cathexis, while free cathexis can pass with relative ease from one ego state to another.
The psychological situation may then be summarized as follows: (a) That ego state in which free cathexis predominates is perceived as the Self; or, as Federn' puts it, "It is the cathexis itself which is ex- perienced as ego feeling." (b) The executive power is taken over by that state in which the net sum of unbound plus free cathexis (active cathexis) is greatest at a given moment. These two principles can be illustrated by the case of Mrs. Tettar in her three different clinical states.
1. In her healthy state, her "old self," the Child contains only bound cathexis and is therefore latent, while the Adult is charged with free cathexis and is therefore experienced as her "real Self." The Adult also has the executive power, since it contains the greatest sum of active cathexis (unbound plus free).
2. In her neurotic hand-washing state the free cathexis still resides in the Adult, while the Child contains unbound cathexis. This un- bound cathexis predominates quantitatively over the active cathexis of the Adult. The Child therefore has the executive Adult is still experienced as her "real Self." power, while the
3. In her psychotic state, the Child contains unbound cathexis and also the free cathexis which has been drained from the Adult. This leaves the Adult relatively depleted of active cathexis. Therefore the Child both has the executive power and is experienced as the "real Self."
5 SHIFTS IN EGO STATE
Shifts in ego state in such a system depend on three factors: the forces acting on each state; the permeability of the boundaries between ego states; and the cathectic capacity of each ego state. It is the quanti- tative balance between these three which determines the clinical condi- tion of the patient, and also indicates the therapeutic procedures (or the corruptive procedures of exploiters). In Mrs. Tettar's case, the therapy was planned so as to deal with these factors one after the other.
First, the therapist attempted to activate the Adult, as in the case of Mrs. Primus, by emphasizing reality-testing. The neopsyche, as a system was assumed to exist intact; the problem was to increase its active (i.e., unbound plus free) cathexis. The transference and social aspects played their part in this mobilization. Secondly, he attempted to clarify and strengthen the boundary between the Adult and the Child so as to "capture" this increased cathexis of the Adult. Thirdly, he attempted to increase the cathectic capacity of the Child both ab solutely and relatively by the resolution of infantile conflicts, so that the Child would be less apt to become active at inopportune times in an unhealthy way. The actual techniques used are not pertinent to the present discussion, whose purpose is only to illustrate the im- portance of the factors which influence shifts in principles involved are often intuitively recognized by the patients ego state. The themselves: by which particular aspect will be discussed later.
At this point, two distinctions which often cause difficulty should be clarified. The Parent can function either as an active ego state, or as an influence. In Mr. Troy's case, the Parent was both the executive and the "real Self," and functioned as an active ego state. This meant that he behaved like father. On the other hand, when Mrs. Primus pulled down her skirt, her active ego state was that of a compliant Child, while her Parent, in the form of hallucinated voices, functioned only as an influence. She did not behave like father, but rather as father would have liked. Thus whenever the Parent is spoken of, it must be understood whether the active ego state or the Parental influ ence is meant.
It is the Parental influence which determines whether the adapted Child or the natural Child is active at a given moment. The adapted Child is an archaic ego state which is under the Parental influence, while the natural Child is an archaic ego state which is free from or is attempting to free itself from such influence. It is the difference, for example, between an obedient child and a child having a temper tantrum. Again, it should be understood which is meant when the Child is referred to.

Monday, 9 January 2023

Social Action

SOCIAL ACTION

Social action ordinarily means activities people engage in for personal change and growth.

Social Action is not directly defined in TA Theory. However Berne identifies Stroke as a fundamental unit of social action. Therefore all types of engagements that result in mutual recognition, social intercourse, games and scripty behaviours are aspects of social action through the agency of stroke generation. 

Berne describes Social Action in Games People Play as : the influence that each player has on each other is social action. 

Games generate social contact with the object of relieving tension. In this context the following contributors are listed in Clarke's TA Dictionary :

The advantages of social contact revolve around somatic and psychic equilibrium:

1. The relief of tension

2. The avoidance of noxious situations 

3. The procurement of stroking 

4. The maintenance of an established equilibrium may be stated as:

5. Translated into terms of social psychiatry,  they are

6. The primary internal advantage 

7. The primary external advantage

8. The secondary advantages

9. The existential advantage

Key words
Social Action, 
Social Contact, 
Advantages, 

Rene Spitz

Stroke represents an infant's need for touch. Rene Spitz (1987-1974) was an Austrian born, American Psychoanalyst. His area of specialisation was child development. He found that physical, maternal and emotional deprivation in infancy results in severe neurological and emotional damage. He called the condition anaclytic depression. There is also this famous story of Victor. He was a 'feral child' resembling a human. He was assessed to be twelve years old when he was captured in Aveyron forest in Southern France in 1797. Attempts to socialise with him failed several times. French scientists, physicians and psychiatrists concluded that he had been deprived of human physical touch all his life. It resulted in his retarded psychological, emotional and social development.

Key words for this section
Rene Spitz, 
Stroke Deprivation, 
Marasmus, 
Anaclitic Depression, 
Hospitalism