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Transactional Analysis Journal

January 2004 Abstract

Volume 34, Number 1


Psychological Mindedness: A Neglected Developmental Line in Permissions to Think
James R. Allen, Sevim Bennett, and Lauri Kearns
Psychological mindedness is the capacity to self-reflect and to think of oneself and others as motivated by internal states. It is one aspect of thinking, a prerequisite for understanding intrapsychic and interpersonal phenomena and for insight and insight-oriented therapeutic interventions. This article outlines the development and permissions and nurturance psychological mindedness requires. Such a conceptualization allows one to consider deconfusion of the Child in terms of activating more mature ego state networks rather than in terms of insight into some specific content.


Ego States as Living Links between Past and Current Experiences
José Grégoire
This article examines one level of ego state theory: ego states as living links between past experiences and patterns in the here and now. If the theory of ego states is not limited to repetitive ego states, the concepts centered on repetition must be balanced by concepts centered on evolution. The idea of generalized representations of interactions, with its various consequences and links with transactional ideas, is examined as a way of understanding the evolution of ego states. This evolving character of ego states culminates in creativity and change. More generally, an idea such as ego states offers the practitioner a frame from which to choose interventions with less methodological or theoretical biases. Transactional analysis appears to be a particularly well-adapted starting point to answer the challenges of integration between methods and approaches in all fields.


Inadvertent Script Change and Increased Propensity for Violence: The Danger of Interactive Video Games
Maurice E. Vaughan
This article explores the idea that males are genetically predisposed to violence and aggression. It looks at the experience of men in combat and what behavior emerges in such a context, arguing that, in fact, most males are reluctant killers who will avoid killing if at all possible. The effects of military training on young men are described and related to the danger of interactive video games, which have the potential for producing violent script decisions in young males.


The Use of Microteaching in Learning the Redecision Model: A Proposal for an Observation
Grid Raffaele Mastromarino
This article is intended as a contribution to the training of transactional analysts and presents a "microteaching" sequence that stimulates understanding of the redecision therapy model. More specifically, the microteaching sequence is proposed as a means to obtain an observation grid for the various phases and ways that promote redecision in the patient.


The Contract for Change: An Original Model
Christine de Saint-Pierre
This article describes a model called "the contract for change," the goal of which is the restructuring of the client's ego states using redecision. This model facilitates the establishment of an alliance with the client's Child ego state and awareness of the script suffering underlying the client's presenting complaint. The process takes into account repairing the most archaic of the client's inhibited needs (often the need for security first, then trust). The contract for change includes four interdependent factors: objective of change, known script process, ways to help myself, and what I change. The model is illustrated with a case study.


Every Child Is a Group: The Girl of the Snakes
Dolores Munari Poda
When working with a child, the therapist must deal-separately or jointly-with all the parental figures present in the attributions, drivers, and injunctions the child uses in creating and enacting stories and that are an integral part of his or her life. Consequently, the child therapist witnesses the workings of entire family groups and sometimes even becomes their indirect therapist (in the sense of "transformational element" and "therapeia" as attention, caring, and healing). This role is extremely delicate, and although it must not be intrusive or invade the precious intimacy of the patient/therapist relationship, it should nevertheless favor the evolution and potential reorganization of the family as a whole.


Face-to-Face with Caring Confrontation
Valerie Lankford
The author describes some guidelines for and benefits of caring confrontation. This process is particularly useful for people who fear being criticized or confronted and would rather avoid both because they remember such experiences with defeat and pain from childhood. The benefits include facilitating autonomous relationships, enhancing conflict and communication intimacy, replacing accusations with curiosity, developing skills for questioning authority effectively, reducing avoidant behaviors and script-related depression and/or anxiety, and helping people avoid embarrassment


The "Q" Model and the "Q" Model Checklist
Edward Zerin and Marjory Zerin
This article describes the "Q" model diagram, themes, and checklist and demonstrates the use of the "Q" model checklist as a diagnostic, treatment, teaching, and evaluative instrument for individual and couple therapy.


The Ego State Questionnaire-Revised
Donald A. Loffredo, Rick Harrington, Martin K. Munoz, and Laura Ruth Knowles
The purpose of this study was to determine whether or not the Ego State Questionnaire-Revised (ESQ-R) had acceptable construct validity (actually measured the five functional ego states) and acceptable reliability (consistently and dependably measured the five functional ego states) using factor analysis (a statistical method that identifies test items that measure the same thing) and split-half reliability (a correlation between participants' scores on two halves of a single test instrument). The ESQ-R is a 40-item experimenter-constructed instrument that measures the strength of the five functional ego states and consists of the 40 items retained from a factor analysis of 60 items described in this study. Split-half reliability coefficients utilizing Cronbach's alpha for each of the five scales (functional ego states) of the 40-items retained on the ESQ-R ranged from .69 to .83. Split-half reliability for the entire ESQ-R was .80. A second factor analysis on the 40 items retained on the ESQ-R accounted for 43.66% of the item variance. Another confirming factor analysis on the 40-item ESQ-R using a new sample is recommended. The ESQ-R can be used to measure ego states or changes in ego states during therapy, training, or education.


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