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The Process of Constructing the Self and Its Relation to Psychotherapy
di Patricia M. Crittenden
pag. 10 di 19
Thus, the first 4-6 years of life are a period of increasing refinement of strategy to
developmental context as maturation makes new distinctions perceptible and new response
patterns possible. With their maturing capacities, children construct contextually-adapted
strategies for regulating the protective function of caregivers. This progressively increases the
specificity of children’s adaptation to unique aspects of their developmental contexts.
The school years: variability and integration or rigidity and distortion. Once language
becomes possible and motor competence permits children to explore widely from their
caregivers, children begin to establish additional attachment relationships, for example, with
grandmothers and daycare providers. Entry to the wider context of schools and social
organizations provides children with substitute attachment figures and exposes them to others’
strategies and the occasions for using those strategies. This facilitates the construction of new
strategies, each suited to certain circumstances or relationships. Children begin to integrate these
multiple strategies into a self that is internally coherent while, nevertheless, varying strategically
from one occasion to another and from one relationship to another.
In addition, school-aged children are expected to explain their behavior, especially when they
misbehave. Doing so requires children to become aware of and examine their multiple
dispositional representations and to understand which motivated their behavior in any given
instance. Some children discover, however, that honesty is not acceptable. These children learn
to construct adult-pleasing, but false, explanations for their behavior. This is false cognition and
it forms the basis for organizing a new strategy: the punitive/seductive C5-6 strategy. Children
using this strategy integrate the ability to deceive others regarding their intentions into a new
form of coercion in which deception is used to blackmail or seduce others into relationships. This
strategy typifies various forms of coercive relationship from bully victim pairs, to gang activity,
to couple violence.
Adolescence and adulthood: sexuality and integration. Following the second major period of
neurological maturational, puberty, adolescents begin to integrate emerging reproductive
strategies into their attachment strategies for selecting and regulating relationships. In addition,
the transition from an egocentric, protection-seeking form of relationship to a reciprocal
exchange of perspective-taking, protection, and comfort develops in couple relationships. With
the birth of children, the self is transformed yet again into a protective attachment figure for an
attached child. Functioning successfully as a parental attachment figure requires substantial
awareness of one’s own motivations, competence at regulating one’s own behavior, and
flexibility of strategy (Crittenden, Lang, Partridge, & Claussen, 2000).