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The Process of Constructing the Self and Its Relation to Psychotherapy
di Patricia M. Crittenden
pag. 3 di 19
But, in their ZPD, the interaction takes on reciprocal qualities that promote exchange
between parent and child in ways that create new possibilities for both.
In the ZPD, attachment figures perceive the signals of the child, interrupt their own behavior
and modify it to meet the needs of the child, and maintain a reciprocal interaction that molds to
the child, fitting the child’s need, while concurrently forcing the child to make adjustments that
propel development forward. Like two malleable pieces of clay, each ready for working, the
attachment figure presents one surface of the clay of self to the child. That surface should mold
comfortably to the child while still requiring the child to adjust and mold to the parent. Coming
out of this reciprocal experience, both selves are changed. Through this process of shaping and
reshaping, selves emerge and function in the immediate context of now before being modified
again.
In this dynamic interaction, each is creating a newly emergent self that is better adapted to
immediate conditions and to the future development of the other. This increases the range of
adaptability of each. That parents assist in the creation of the child’s self is obvious. That
interaction with children promotes change in parents may be less obvious - unless one has had a
child. The experience is profoundly self-modifying, changing forever how one sees oneself, how
one reacts to others, and the range of interpersonal skills that one develops. This occurs in the
interpersonal dance of protecting, comforting, and challenging a child and is on-going and
continuous across the life-span.
An advantage of conceptualizing the self as an ever-emergent process is that it emphasizes
the continuing adaptation of self-organization to life’s ever-changing challenges.