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The Process of Constructing the Self and Its Relation to Psychotherapy
di Patricia M. Crittenden
pag. 11 di 19
By adulthood, humans
become able to choose which aspects of self to display, to reflect about themselves and their
behavior from multiple perspectives, and to imagine and prepare for possible, but not-yetexperienced,
circumstances (cf. moviola technique; Guidano, 1991).
Although linguistic representations become increasingly complex and important for the
organization of behavior, they do not replace the earlier sensory-based representations. Indeed,
procedural and imaged representations elicit behavior more rapidly under threatening conditions
throughout the life-span. For example, a recurrence of the smells, sounds, or sights associated
with past danger can immediately elicit self-protective responses that operate outside of
conscious awareness. Because speed is most critical when one feels threatened, less conscious,
sensory-based representations may be of greater importance to individuals who have experienced
actual threat or who frequently feel themselves to be threatened than to less threatened
individuals. For the psychotherapist, this implies the importance of attending to non-verbal
functioning and of transforming it into verbally accessible forms of self that are available for
self-reflective consideration (Fonagy & Target, 1997).
Once humans have the maturational potential for conscious, sophisticated, and self-aware
thought, an intentional course of self change becomes possible for the first time. The paradox,
however, is that language is the most easily distorted and falsified form of communication
whereas linguistically structured self reflection is the most accessible means of identifying and
correcting distortions. Assessment of the non-conscious aspects of linguistic communications
(such as the discourse analysis of the Adult Attachment Interview) can alert the informed listener
to distorted linguistic processes and provide a means to bypass the persuasive distortions of
language (Crittenden, 1999, 2000).