Introducing Cognitive Analytic Therapy. Anthony Ryle
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СКАЧАТЬ internalized circles in Figure 3.1b) operate internally (“Self–Self”) as well as in interpersonal, “Self–other” relationships. In the healthy Self, these RRs and RRPs co‐exist and complement each other in a seamless and integrated fashion. This also results in the unique, subjective sense of continuous and integrated existence and of agency (Knox, 2010) that most of us take for granted, but which is so strikingly and distressingly disrupted in individuals suffering from severe personality‐type disorders and, more radically, in acute psychotic disorders. This subjective sense of Self is accompanied by a life‐long need to experience and enjoy a sense of individual and collective “pride” and purpose (Apter and Williams, 2018; Bruner, 1990; Reddy, 2008; Stern, 2000, 2010; Trevarthen, 1993, 2001 2017) and of personal and social meaning embodied in narrative. This view of the importance of the narrative self, which we share with others (Bruner, 2003; Crits‐Christoph, 1998; Holmes, 1998; Meares, 1998, 2005; Schafer, 1992; Spence, 1982; White & Epston, 1990), is explicitly addressed and acknowledged in CAT through reformulation and the relational work of therapy. Ultimately, the process of development of Self in relation to others results in an emergent capacity for higher level processes such as self‐reflection, empathic imagination, relationality, creativity, and executive function, and, importantly for some, a sense of spirituality (Kerr et al., 2015; Samuels, 1985; Symington, 1999). A further exploration of the relation of CAT theory and therapy to more overtly spiritual approaches, such as mindfulness and Buddhism, including consideration of states such as “no‐self” (anatman), are offered by Low (2000) and McCormick (2017).

Schematic illustrations of (a) CAT-based sketch of normal development of the Self through healthy early infant-caregiver interactions. Schematic illustrations of (b) the subsequent internalisation as formative reciprocal roles within the growing child.

      The Self in CAT is understood to be a bio‐psycho‐social entity that emerges through a synthetic or dialectical, semiotically‐mediated developmental process involving all of these dimensions. It is understood to be characterized by a sense of agency, coherence, and continuity, of embodiment, of subjective and reflective awareness, identity, and for some by a sense of spirituality. The structure and function of Self is understood to include and integrate such functions as perception, affect, memory, thinking, self‐reflection, empathic imagination, relationality, creativity, and executive function. It is understood to comprise both subjective and experiential as well as observable functional aspects. The Self is also characterized by a tendency both to organize and be organized by experience. It emerges developmentally from a genotypic Self characterized by various innate predispositions, notably to intersubjectivity and relationality, so enabling and needing engagement and interaction with others from the beginning of life. The mature, phenotypic Self is considered to be fundamentally constituted by internalized, sign‐mediated, interpersonal experience and by dialogic voices associated with it (reciprocal roles) and to be characterized by a repertoire of emergent adaptive, “coping,” or “responsive” patterns of action (reciprocal role procedures). Although profoundly rooted in and influenced by early developmental experience, the Self is understood to be capable of a degree of choice and free will. The Self is dependent on others and on social location for its well‐being both during early development and throughout life.