Read The Psychology Book Online
Authors: Unknown
actualization is the desire for self-
will be perpetually restless and
Motivation
fulfillment, and self-transcendence
unsatisfied. Each of us must
1954
Motivation and
is the need to move beyond the self,
discover our potential, and seek out
Personality
and connect to something higher
experiences that will allow us to
1962
Toward a Psychology
than ourselves—such as God—or
fulfil it—“What a man can be,
of Being
to help others realize their potential.
he must be,” proclaims Maslow. ■
140
SUFFERING CEASES
TO BE SUFFERING
AT THE MOMENT
IT FINDS A MEANING
VIKTOR FRANKL (1905–1997)
IN CONTEXT
APPROACH
V
iennese psychiatrist Viktor painful and possibly devastating
Frankl had already begun
situations and to move forward;
to specialize in suicide
these are the capacity for decision,
prevention and the treatment of
and freedom of attitude. Frankl
Logotherapy
depression when, in 1942, he and
stresses that we are not at the
BEFORE
his wife, brother, and parents were
mercy of our environment or events,
taken to a concentration camp. He
because we dictate how we allow
600–500 BCE
In India,
spent three years there and endured
them to shape us. Even suffering
Gautama Buddha teaches that
many horrors and losses before
can be seen differently, depending
suffering is caused by desire,
emerging as the only survivor of the
on our interpretation of events.
and can be alleviated by
group. In his book
Man’s Search for
Frankl cites the case of one of
releasing desire.
Meaning (
1946), written after these
his patients who suffered because
458 BCE
Ancient Greek
experiences, Frankl explains that
he missed his dead wife. Frankl
dramatist Aeschylus explores
humans have two psychological
asked how it would have been if
the idea that “wisdom comes
strengths that allow us to bear
the patient had died first, and he
alone through suffering.”
replied that his wife would have
found it very difficult. Frankl pointed
AFTER
out that the patient has spared her
1950s
French existentialist
this grief, but must now suffer the
philosophers, such as Jean-
grief himself. In giving meaning to
Paul Sartre, say our lives do not
the suffering it becomes endurable;
have a God-given purpose; we
A man who has nothing else
“suffering ceases to be suffering at
must find it for ourselves.
in this world may still
the moment it finds a meaning.”
know bliss.
Meaning is something we
2003
Martin Seligman says
Viktor Frankl
“discover rather than invent,”
a “full life” encompasses
according to Frankl, and we must
pleasure, engagement (flow),
find it for ourselves. We find it
and meaning.
through living, and specifically
2007
US psychologist
through love, creating things, and
Dan Gilbert explains that
the way we choose to see things. ■
people are unhappy because
of the way they think
See also:
Rollo May 141 ■ Boris Cyrulnik 152–53 ■
Martin Seligman 200–01
about happiness.
PSYCHOTHERAPY 141
ONE DOES NOT
BECOME FULLY
HUMAN PAINLESSLY
ROLLO MAY (1909–1994)
IN CONTEXT
APPROACH
I
n the mid-19th century,
enjoy our familiar environments,
philosophers such as Martin
and favor experiences that keep
Heidegger, Frederick Nietzsche,
the mental and physical senses
and Søren Kierkegaard challenged
in a state of balance and ease.
Existential psychotherapy
social dogma and demanded that
This tendency, however, leads
BEFORE
people expand their ways of
us to judge and label experiences
thinking to incorporate a fuller
as “good” or “bad,” depending
1841
Søren Kierkegaard
understanding of human experience,
only on the levels of pleasure or
claims that people misinterpret
in a movement now known as
discomfort they may bring. May
Christian ideology and misuse
existentialism. The notions of free
says that in doing so, we do
science to falsely defend
will, personal responsibility, and how
ourselves a disservice, since we
against the anxiety inherent
we interpret our experience were
are fighting against processes that
in existence.
all of interest to the existentialists,
lead to immense growth and
1942
Swiss physician Ludwig
who wanted to ask what it means,
development if we can accept
Binswanger combines
fundamentally, for a human to exist.
them as a natural part of life.
existential philosophy with
Psychologist Rollo May’s
The
May proposes an approach to
psychotherapy in his
Basic
Meaning of Anxiety
(1950) brought
life that echoes Buddhist thought,
Forms and the Realization of
this human-centered philosophical
where we accept all forms of
Human “Being-in-the-World.
”
approach into psychology for the first
experience equally, rather than
time, and May is often referred to as
shunning or denying those we
1942
Carl Rogers, a pioneer
the father of existential psychology.
judge to be uncomfortable or
of humanistic psychology,
unpleasant. We also need to accept
publishes
Counseling and
An existential approach
our “negative” feelings, rather than
Psychotherapy
.
May viewed life as a spectrum
avoid or repress them. Suffering
of human experience, including
and sadness are not pathological
AFTER
suffering as a normal part of life,
issues to be “fixed,” he says; they
1980
Irvin Yalom discusses in
not as a sign of pathology. It is
are natural and essential parts of
Existential Psychotherapy
the
self-evident that as human beings,
living a human life, and are also
four ultimate concerns of life:
we tend to seek experiences that
important because they lead
death, freedom, existential
allow us to be comfortable. We
to psychological growth. ■
isolation, and meaninglessness.
See also:
Søren Kierkegaard 26–27 ■ Alfred Adler 100-01 ■ Carl Rogers 130–37 ■
Abraham Maslow 138–39 ■ Viktor Frankl 140 ■ Boris Cyrulnik 140
IN CONTEXT
APPROACH
Rational Emotive
RATIONAL BELIEFS
Behavior Therapy
BEFORE
CREATE HEALTHY
1927
Alfred Adler says that a
person’s behavior springs from
his or her ideas.
EMOTIONAL
1940s
The role of perception
in creating reality is
popularized by the Gestalt
CONSEQUENCES
Therapy movement.
1950
Karen Horney suggests
ALBERT ELLIS (1913–2007)
we escape from the “tyranny
of the shoulds.”
AFTER
1960s
Aaron Beck says that
depression is a result of
unrealistic negative views
about the world.
1980
American psychiatrist
David Burns gives labels to
cognitive distortions such as:
Jumping to Conclusions,
All or Nothing Thinking,
Always Being Right, Over
Generalizing, and
Catastrophizing.
E
pictetus, an ancient Greek
philosopher, proclaimed in
80 CE, that “men are
disturbed not by events, but by the
views which they take of them.”
This principle is the foundation of
Rational Emotive Behavior Therapy
(REBT), devised by Dr. Albert Ellis
in 1955, which asserts that
experiences do not cause any
specific emotional reaction; instead
it is the individual’s belief system
that produces the reaction.
Practicing as a psychoanalyst in
the 1940s and 50s, Ellis began to
realize that while many of his
patients gained an insight into
PSYCHOTHERAPY 143
See also:
Alfred Adler 100–101 ■ Karen Horney 110 ■ Erich Fromm 124–29 ■ Carl Rogers 130–137 ■ Aaron Beck 174–177 ■
Martin Seligman 200–201
When
negative
things happen,
we can…
…react “automatically” and
irrationally
…
…take time to
consider a response
…
…which reinforces habitual ways
…and think about new, rational ways
of thinking that may be
to respond that may be
useful
unhelpful
and
not beneficial
to us.
and
beneficial
to us.
We become even more convinced that
We realize that our negative opinions
our poor opinions of ourselves
are unjustified and the world holds