1. scientific theories
2. personal narratives
3. multicultural perspectives
4. own personal development
1. universal, human nature
2. particular human culture
3. a singular human life
1. naturalize cultural categories
2. reduce every aspect of who we are to cultural narratives
3. forgetting about cultural and subjective positions from where the author speaks
4. treating all accounts as equally subjective opinions
- positive emotionality
- negative emotionality
- constraint
- actor (dispositional traits)
- agent (characteristic adaptations)
- author (narrative identity)
- self-regulation
- self-esteem
- self-integration
actors observe their behavior + that of others and use observations to define themselves
1. basic emotional systems
2. attachment
3. form of vitality
4. co-regulation
5. marking and mirroring
6. attunement and misattunement
7. mentalizing
8. epistemic trust
- reptilian
- old-mammalian
- neo-mammalian
1. seeking
2. fear
3. care
4. play
5. rage
6. lust
7. panic/grief
1. once activated they remain active for some time
2. they color the world we see
3. they shape movement in the world
4. they are a strong motivation force
patterns of arousal that are associated with sensory experiences + movement
capacity to use, feel and reason from the assumptions of agency in self and others
1. neuroscience: mentalization is an evolutionary prewired capacity
2. developmental: needs environmental inputs to develop
3. transdiagnostic/transtheoretical: common in many psychological problems/disorders
4. recovery: mentalization = associated with successful therapy for many disorders
1. it has specific neural circuits
2. it’s a multidimensional capacity
3. it’s an umbrella concept
1. automatic vs controlled
2. self vs others
3. internal vs external focus
4. cognitive vs affective
own thoughts/feeling become too real
ability to identify knowledge given by others as personally relevant + generalizable to other contexts
ability to benefit from positive influences of environment
capacity to identify + filter info conveyed by others when perceived to be misleading/deceitful...
- channel 1: lowering epistemic hypervigilance
- channel 2: enabling mechanisms of social learning
- channel 3: re-engaging with social world
person only recognizes only real + observable + goal-directed goals and actions that can impede achieving these goals
thoughts and feelings are detached from reality (hyper-mentalizing) + narratives become cognitively/emotionally overwhelming
- identification
- seperation
1. sameness taken too far = uniform group
2. separation taken too far = individualism
1. stability, nurturance, safety and acceptance
2. autonomy, competence, sense of identity
3. freedom to express needs and emotions
4. spontaneity and play
5. realistic limits and self-control
6. fairness
7. self-coherence and meaningful world
1. disconnection + rejection
Ø abandonment insatbaility
Ø mistrust/abuse
Ø defectiveness/shame
Ø emotional deprivation
Ø social isolation/alienation
2. impaired autonomy and achievement
Ø dependency/incompetence
Ø vulnerability to harm and illness
Ø enmeshment/undeveloped self
Ø failure
3. over vigilance and inhibition
Ø negativity/pessims
Ø emotional inhibition
Ø unrelating stadnards
Ø punitiveness
4. other-directedness
Ø subjugation
Ø self-sacrifice
Ø approval-seeking
5. impaired limits
Ø entitlement/grandiosity
Ø insiffucient self-control
6. unfairness injustice
7. lack of coherence
Ø lack of self-coherence
Ø lack of meaningful world
activated schema + way of coping with it
1. dysfunctional child modes EMS
2. dysfunctional parent modes
3. dysfunctional coping modes
4. healthy modes
- surrender (resignation)
- avoidance
- overcompensation (inversion)
- chair dialogues
- imagery work
patient switches chairs representing different modes relevant to specific problem
- imagery rescripting
- diagnostic imaging exercises
Linehan
1. patients with PDs are doing best they can and need to do better/try harder and be more motivated
2. patients want to change
3. patients didn’t cause their problems but need to deal with them
4. lives of those with PD are currently unbearable
5. patients need to learn new behaviors
6. patients cannot fail therapy (therapy may fail)
7. therapist needs support
8. patients should learn new supported learning in all relevant contexts
- mindfulness
- dialectics
- behaviorism
1. improve motivation to change
2. enhance capabilities
3. facilitate generalization
4. enhance therapist’s motivation + capabilities
5. help structuring environment so that it boosts patients/therapist’s capabilities
stage 1: first 3 months
- goal = behavioral control -> stop suicidal behavior
stage 2: 3 months/ 1 year after
- trauma comes out, they hurt a lot inside but don’t show it stage 3: patient experiences problems in living
- goal = ordinary happiness + unhappiness
stage 4: patient feels incomplete
- goal = freedom
1. emotional abuse
2. psychical abuse
3. sexual abuse
4. emotional neglect
5. physical neglect
every syndrome disorder comes from personality disturbance
personality disorders don’t exist
treat syndrome disorders first and consider PD when the first doesn’t work/there are complications