Introducing Cognitive Analytic Therapy. Anthony Ryle
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СКАЧАТЬ are reconstructions of the often jumbled and perplexing stories told by patients. They summarize key formative experiences and events in the past and suggest, in a non‐blaming way, how the negative patterns learned from early experiences are being repeated, or how alternative patterns developed in order to avoid these early ones have themselves become restrictive or damaging.

      Working on the basis of the PSORM, the patterns identified as traps, dilemmas, and snags (various RRPs) will be linked to the individual's repertoire of RRs. In some cases, deriving the dilemmas, traps, and snags from the history and the discussion of responses to the Psychotherapy File can be a helpful way to start the reformulation process. Perhaps more often an immediate reflection on, and possibly initial rough mapping of, the role patterns evident in the patient's account of early experiences and current relationships, including “in the room” feelings and enactments, may be helpful. This is akin to the approach described by Potter (2017) as “map and talk”. However, ideally the two approaches are mutually complementary.

      An idea of hierarchy was implicit in the model, in that the very general patterns described in reformulation were seen to be manifested in a variety of detailed actions and roles in everyday life and including in therapy. (The patterns themselves are, of course, generalizations arrived at during reformulation from the consideration of these various detailed examples.) Also implicit was the assumption that procedures were mobilized appropriately in terms of the situation and according to the individual's aims, through the largely unconscious operation of meta‐procedures which also served to link together and harmonize the array of available procedures.

      Recognizing and describing the RR and RRP repertoire provides a new basis for the patient's self‐reflection and is of particular value in helping therapists to avoid reciprocating (colluding with) the patient's damaging or unhelpful role procedures. In contrast to most short‐term therapies, CAT does not select a limited focus but seeks rather to identify and describe these general, high‐level procedural patterns and their underlying relational origins (RRs). Such “strategic” patterns will have been formed by, and will be manifest in, a range of detailed “tactical” behaviors. People are often only dimly aware of these general patterns, which are developed in early childhood. But they are not “dynamically repressed” (that is, their inaccessibility does not have the function of avoiding painful or forbidden memories and desires), and their description and recognition can allow rapid change over a wide spectrum of situations. An essential CAT therapist skill during reformulation is to be good at seeing what overall patterns are suggested by detailed events or repetitions. Discussing with a patient whether a particular episode is an example of a more general pattern nearly always elicits parallel examples which may confirm or modify the pattern.

      Initial Phase