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HARRY

STACK
SULLIVAN

BRETANA
CASINO
CORDENILLO

INTERPERSONAL THEORY
his theory signifies the importance
of current life events and social
experiences in shaping the
personality of ones self

Tension
Dynamism
Personifications
Level of cognition
Developmental stages.

TENSION
Sullivan conceptualized personality as an
energy system, with energy existing either as
tension (potentiality for action) or as energy
transformations (the actions themselves).

TENSION
Needs

Needs can relate either to the general well-being of


a person or to specific zones, such as the mouth or
genitals

Anxiety

anxiety is disjunctive and


calls for no consistent
actions for its relief

DYNAMISMS
typical pattern of behavior.

DYNAMISMS

Malevolence

living among one's enemies.

close personal
relationship
Intimacy two
between
people of
equal status
is called
intimacy

DYNAMISMS

Lust

satisfied in the absence of an intimate


interpersonal relationship

pattern of
behaviors
that protects
us against
Self-System and
anxiety
maintains
our
interpersonal
security

PERSONIFICATIONS
Sullivan believed that people acquire certain
images of self and others throughout the
developmental stages, and he referred to
these subjective perceptions as
personifications

Bad-Mother, Good-Mother
The bad-mother personification grows out of infants'
experiences with a nipple that does not satisfy their
hunger needs. All infants experience the bad-mother
personification, even though their real mothers may be
loving and nurturing. Later, infants acquire a good-mother
personification as they become mature enough to
recognize the tender and cooperative behavior of
their mothering one. Still later, these two personifications
combine to form a complex and contrasting image of the real
mother.

Me Personifications
(1) the bad-me, which grows from
experiences of punishment and disapproval
(2) the good-me, which results from
experiences with reward and approval
(3) the not-me, which allows a person to
dissociate or selectively inattend the
experiences related to anxiety.

Eidetic Personifications
One of Sullivan's most interesting observations
was that people often create imaginary
traits that they project onto others. Included
in these eidetic personifications are the imaginary
playmates that preschool-aged children often
have. These imaginary friends enable children to
have a safe, secure relationship with another
person, even though that person is imaginary.

LEVELS OF COGNITION
A. Prototaxic Level
Experiences that are impossible to put into words or to
communicate to others are called prototaxic. Newborn infants
experience images mostly on a prototaxic level, but adults, too,
frequently have preverbal experiences that are momentary and
incapable of being communicated.

B. Parataxic Level
Experiences that are prelogical and nearly impossible to
accurately communicate to others are called parataxic.
Included in these are erroneous assumptions about cause and
effect, which Sullivan termed parataxic distortions.

LEVELS OF COGNITION
C. Syntaxic Level
Experiences that can be accurately communicated to
others are called syntaxic. Children become capable of
syntaxic language at about 12 to 18 months of age when
words begin to have the same meaning for them that they do
for others.

STAGES OF DEVELOPMENT
STAGE

CHARACTERISTIC

Infancy (Birth-18 months)

Gratification of needs

Childhood (18 mo-6 yrs)

Delayed gratification

Juvenile era(6-9 yrs)

Formation of peer group

Preadolescence (9-12 yrs)

Developing
relationships
same gender
Identity

Early Adolescence (12-14 yrs)


Late Adolescence (14-21 yrs)

Forming
lasting,
relationships

within

intimate

IMPLICATIONS
This theory is implicated in taking care of a
psychiatric patient by studying the past
relationships that the patient and the type of
social community he or she was exposed to
before being admitted in a hospital. By doing this
the nurse will also have a clearer picture and will
be able to explain how the patient ended up in
the mental state he or she is currently in.

IMPORTANCE
- Provides the theoretical basis for interpersonal
psychotherapy for depression and
schizophrenia. When patients are depressed,
they likely to isolate themselves and avoid
social contact even with those who are trying to
help them. Since loss of contact with others
contributes to depression, we as nurses should
persist in attempts to talk with these patients,
by asking them questions, and actively
listening when they attempt to express their

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