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Theories of Personality: Harry Stack Sullivan: Interpersonal Theory

Overview

  • People develop their personality within a social context

  • Without other people, humans would have no personality

  • Development rests on the individual’s ability to establish intimacy with another person

  • Anxiety can interfere with satisfying interpersonal relations

  • Healthy development entails experiencing intimacy and lust toward another same person

Background

  • Born February 21, 1892

  • Oldest existing son of poor Irish Catholic parents

  • Lonely childhood existence

  • Poor relationship with father

  • Close friendship with Clarence Bellinger

  • Academically gifted

  • Poor academic performance in freshman year at Cornell

  • Suffered schizophrenic breakdown

  • Enrolled for medicine, receive degree 2 years after graduation

  • Worked with William Alanson White

  • Private practice in New York

  • Zodiac group

  • His therapy was neither psychoanalytic nor non-Freudian

  • Died of cerebral hemorrhage on January 14, 1949

  • Rumors of homosexuality

Personality

  • Personality is an energy system

  • Tension: potentiality for action

  • Energy Transformations: action themselves

Tension

  • Anxiety, premonitions, drowsiness, hunger, sexual excitement

  • Not always on a conscious level

  • Partial distortions of reality

  • 2 Types

    • Needs

      • Tensions brought about by a biological imbalance between the person and environment

      • Episodic

      • Biological component and interpersonal relations

        • Zonal Needs: arises from a specific body part

        • General Needs: overall well being of a person

        • Tenderness is a basic interpersonal need

    • Anxiety

      • Disjunctive, diffuse, and vague, call forth no consistent action for relief

      • Transferred through empathy

      • Chief disruptive force blocking the development of healthy interpersonal relations

        • Prevents people from learning from mistakes

        • Persisting pursuance of childish wish for security

        • Ensures people will not learn from experience

        • Its presence is worse than its absence

      • Stems from complex interpersonal relations

      • Vaguely represented in awareness

      • No positive value

      • Blocks satisfaction of needs

Energy Transformations

  • Tensions transformed into either overt/covert actions

  • Behaviors that satisfy our needs and reduce anxiety

  • May be observable/hidden from other people (emotions, thoughts)

  • Evolves into dynamisms

Dynamisms

  • traits/habitual patterns

  • Major Classes

    • Related to specific zones of the body

      • Mouth, anus, genitals

    • Those related to tensions

    • Disjunctive (malevolence)

    • Isolating (lust)

    • Conjunctive (intimacy and self-system)

  • Malevolence

    • Disjunctive dynamism between evil and hatred

    • Feeling of living among one’s enemies

    • 2-3 years, when child is rebuffed, ignored, or punished

    • Adoption of malevolent attitude for protection

    • Timidity, mischievousness, cruelty, antisocial behavior

  • Lust

    • Assumes an isolating tendency

    • Auto-erotic behavior

    • Hinders an intimate relationship

    • Increases anxiety and decreases self-worth

  • Intimacy

    • Emerges in the chumship

    • Close interpersonal relationship between 2 people of equal status

    • Equal partnership

    • Integrating dynamism that draws out loving reactions from people

    • Decreases loneliness and anxiety

    • Rewarding experiences most healthy people desire

  • Self-System

    • Most complex and inclusive of all dynamisms

    • Consistent pattern of behavior that maintains people’s interpersonal security by protecting them from anxiety

    • Principal stumbling block to favorable changes in personality

    • Security operations

  • Security Operations

    • Reduces feelings of anxiety/insecurity

    • 2 Kinds

      • Dissociation

        • Includes impulses, desires, and needs that a person refuses to allow into awareness (dreams)

        • Repression

      • Selective Inattention

        • Refusal to see things that one does not wish to see (conscious)

Personifications

  • People’s images of themselves or others

  • Begins in infancy and continues throughout development

    • Bad mother - good mother

    • Me

    • Eidetic personifications

  • Bad Mother - Good Mother

    • Similar to Klein’s Good Breast and Bad Breast

  • Representations of self and other

  • Mental images that we acquire during development to help us understand ourselves and the world

    • A cognitive approach to understand personality

  • Personifications help maintain emotional equilibrium and reduce anxiety

  • Separation of good and bad

  • Me

    • Bad Me, Good Me, Not Me

    • Building blocks of self-personification

    • Bad Me

      • Grows from experiences of punishment and disapproval

      • Represents those aspects of the self that are considered negative and hidden from others and possibly the self

      • Anxiety results from recognition of the bad me

      • Ex. recalling an embarrassing moment

      • Ex. guilt about a past action

    • Good Me

      • Results from experiences with reward and approval

        • Experiences associated with tenderness and intimacy

      • Everything we like about ourselves

      • The part of us we share with others and prefer to focus on because it produces no anxiety

    • Not Me

      • Anxiety provoking experiences that invoke security operations may become dissociated from self to form the not-me

        • Security operations = Sullivan’s concept of defense mechanisms

      • Experiences that are denied

      • Experiences that are kept out of awareness and repressed

        • Acknowledging not-me experiences creates high anxiety or negative emotion

Level of Cognition

  • Refers to ways of perceiving, imagining, and conceiving

  • Prototaxic: undifferentiated experiences which are highly personal

  • Parataxic: communicated to others in a distorted fashion

  • Syntaxic: consensually validated and symbolically communicated

Stages of Development

  1. Infancy (0-2 years old)

    • Significant Other: mother

    • Interpersonal Process: tenderness

    • Learnings: good/bad

  2. Childhood (2-6 years old)

    • Significant Other: parents

    • Interpersonal Process: imaginary playmates

    • Learnings: syntaxic language

  3. Juvenile Era (6-8.5 years old)

    • Significant Other: playmates

    • Interpersonal Process: living with peers

    • Learnings: competition, compromise, cooperation

  4. Preadolescence (8-13 years old)

    • Significant Other: single chum

    • Interpersonal Process: intimacy

    • Learnings: affection and respect

  5. Early Adolescence (13-15 years old)

    • Significant Other: several chums

    • Interpersonal Process: intimacy and lust

    • Learnings: balance, security operations

  6. Late Adolescence (15 years old and above)

    • Significant Other: lover

    • Interpersonal Process: fusion of intimacy and lust

    • Learnings: discovery of self and world

Psychological Disorders

  • All psychological disorders have an interpersonal origin and must be understood with reference to social environment

  • Deficiencies found in psychiatric patients are found in every person to a lesser degree

  • Psychological difficulties are not unique, but come from same interpersonal difficulties we all face

  • 2 broad classes of schizophrenia: organic and situational

Psychotherapy

  • Therapist is a participant observer who established an interpersonal relationship with the patient and provides opportunity for syntaxic communication

  • Sullivan therapists attempt to help patients develop foresight, discover difficulties in interpersonal relations, and restore their ability to participate in consensually validated experiences

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Theories of Personality: Harry Stack Sullivan: Interpersonal Theory

Overview

  • People develop their personality within a social context

  • Without other people, humans would have no personality

  • Development rests on the individual’s ability to establish intimacy with another person

  • Anxiety can interfere with satisfying interpersonal relations

  • Healthy development entails experiencing intimacy and lust toward another same person

Background

  • Born February 21, 1892

  • Oldest existing son of poor Irish Catholic parents

  • Lonely childhood existence

  • Poor relationship with father

  • Close friendship with Clarence Bellinger

  • Academically gifted

  • Poor academic performance in freshman year at Cornell

  • Suffered schizophrenic breakdown

  • Enrolled for medicine, receive degree 2 years after graduation

  • Worked with William Alanson White

  • Private practice in New York

  • Zodiac group

  • His therapy was neither psychoanalytic nor non-Freudian

  • Died of cerebral hemorrhage on January 14, 1949

  • Rumors of homosexuality

Personality

  • Personality is an energy system

  • Tension: potentiality for action

  • Energy Transformations: action themselves

Tension

  • Anxiety, premonitions, drowsiness, hunger, sexual excitement

  • Not always on a conscious level

  • Partial distortions of reality

  • 2 Types

    • Needs

      • Tensions brought about by a biological imbalance between the person and environment

      • Episodic

      • Biological component and interpersonal relations

        • Zonal Needs: arises from a specific body part

        • General Needs: overall well being of a person

        • Tenderness is a basic interpersonal need

    • Anxiety

      • Disjunctive, diffuse, and vague, call forth no consistent action for relief

      • Transferred through empathy

      • Chief disruptive force blocking the development of healthy interpersonal relations

        • Prevents people from learning from mistakes

        • Persisting pursuance of childish wish for security

        • Ensures people will not learn from experience

        • Its presence is worse than its absence

      • Stems from complex interpersonal relations

      • Vaguely represented in awareness

      • No positive value

      • Blocks satisfaction of needs

Energy Transformations

  • Tensions transformed into either overt/covert actions

  • Behaviors that satisfy our needs and reduce anxiety

  • May be observable/hidden from other people (emotions, thoughts)

  • Evolves into dynamisms

Dynamisms

  • traits/habitual patterns

  • Major Classes

    • Related to specific zones of the body

      • Mouth, anus, genitals

    • Those related to tensions

    • Disjunctive (malevolence)

    • Isolating (lust)

    • Conjunctive (intimacy and self-system)

  • Malevolence

    • Disjunctive dynamism between evil and hatred

    • Feeling of living among one’s enemies

    • 2-3 years, when child is rebuffed, ignored, or punished

    • Adoption of malevolent attitude for protection

    • Timidity, mischievousness, cruelty, antisocial behavior

  • Lust

    • Assumes an isolating tendency

    • Auto-erotic behavior

    • Hinders an intimate relationship

    • Increases anxiety and decreases self-worth

  • Intimacy

    • Emerges in the chumship

    • Close interpersonal relationship between 2 people of equal status

    • Equal partnership

    • Integrating dynamism that draws out loving reactions from people

    • Decreases loneliness and anxiety

    • Rewarding experiences most healthy people desire

  • Self-System

    • Most complex and inclusive of all dynamisms

    • Consistent pattern of behavior that maintains people’s interpersonal security by protecting them from anxiety

    • Principal stumbling block to favorable changes in personality

    • Security operations

  • Security Operations

    • Reduces feelings of anxiety/insecurity

    • 2 Kinds

      • Dissociation

        • Includes impulses, desires, and needs that a person refuses to allow into awareness (dreams)

        • Repression

      • Selective Inattention

        • Refusal to see things that one does not wish to see (conscious)

Personifications

  • People’s images of themselves or others

  • Begins in infancy and continues throughout development

    • Bad mother - good mother

    • Me

    • Eidetic personifications

  • Bad Mother - Good Mother

    • Similar to Klein’s Good Breast and Bad Breast

  • Representations of self and other

  • Mental images that we acquire during development to help us understand ourselves and the world

    • A cognitive approach to understand personality

  • Personifications help maintain emotional equilibrium and reduce anxiety

  • Separation of good and bad

  • Me

    • Bad Me, Good Me, Not Me

    • Building blocks of self-personification

    • Bad Me

      • Grows from experiences of punishment and disapproval

      • Represents those aspects of the self that are considered negative and hidden from others and possibly the self

      • Anxiety results from recognition of the bad me

      • Ex. recalling an embarrassing moment

      • Ex. guilt about a past action

    • Good Me

      • Results from experiences with reward and approval

        • Experiences associated with tenderness and intimacy

      • Everything we like about ourselves

      • The part of us we share with others and prefer to focus on because it produces no anxiety

    • Not Me

      • Anxiety provoking experiences that invoke security operations may become dissociated from self to form the not-me

        • Security operations = Sullivan’s concept of defense mechanisms

      • Experiences that are denied

      • Experiences that are kept out of awareness and repressed

        • Acknowledging not-me experiences creates high anxiety or negative emotion

Level of Cognition

  • Refers to ways of perceiving, imagining, and conceiving

  • Prototaxic: undifferentiated experiences which are highly personal

  • Parataxic: communicated to others in a distorted fashion

  • Syntaxic: consensually validated and symbolically communicated

Stages of Development

  1. Infancy (0-2 years old)

    • Significant Other: mother

    • Interpersonal Process: tenderness

    • Learnings: good/bad

  2. Childhood (2-6 years old)

    • Significant Other: parents

    • Interpersonal Process: imaginary playmates

    • Learnings: syntaxic language

  3. Juvenile Era (6-8.5 years old)

    • Significant Other: playmates

    • Interpersonal Process: living with peers

    • Learnings: competition, compromise, cooperation

  4. Preadolescence (8-13 years old)

    • Significant Other: single chum

    • Interpersonal Process: intimacy

    • Learnings: affection and respect

  5. Early Adolescence (13-15 years old)

    • Significant Other: several chums

    • Interpersonal Process: intimacy and lust

    • Learnings: balance, security operations

  6. Late Adolescence (15 years old and above)

    • Significant Other: lover

    • Interpersonal Process: fusion of intimacy and lust

    • Learnings: discovery of self and world

Psychological Disorders

  • All psychological disorders have an interpersonal origin and must be understood with reference to social environment

  • Deficiencies found in psychiatric patients are found in every person to a lesser degree

  • Psychological difficulties are not unique, but come from same interpersonal difficulties we all face

  • 2 broad classes of schizophrenia: organic and situational

Psychotherapy

  • Therapist is a participant observer who established an interpersonal relationship with the patient and provides opportunity for syntaxic communication

  • Sullivan therapists attempt to help patients develop foresight, discover difficulties in interpersonal relations, and restore their ability to participate in consensually validated experiences