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I'm OK – You're OK

I'm OK – You're OK is a 1967[1][2][3] self-help book by psychiatrist Thomas Anthony Harris. It is a practical guide to transactional analysis as a method for solving problems in life.

I'm OK – You're OK
AuthorThomas Anthony Harris
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreSelf-help
PublisherHarper & Row
Publication date
1967
Media typePrint (Hardcover)
Pages320
ISBN978-0060724276

The book made the New York Times Best Seller list in 1972 and remained there for almost two years. It is estimated by the publisher to have sold over 15 million copies to date[4] and to have been translated into over a dozen languages.[5]

Content

In the preface, Harris praises the then-new procedure of transactional analysis (TA, or as Harris often refers to it, P-A-C) as a major innovation addressing the slow process and limited results that he and other psychiatric practitioners believed was characteristic of conventional psychiatry.

Harris' context for the book

Rather than working with abstract concepts of consciousness, Harris suggests that the pioneering work of brain surgeon Wilder Penfield in uncovering the neurological basis of memory could offer complementary insights grounded in observable reality. Specifically, Harris emphasizes reports of Penfield's experiments stimulating small areas of the brains of conscious patients undergoing brain surgery (the brain does not have any pain receptors, so this can be done in relative comfort for the patient). Though the patients were conscious that they were on an operating table, the stimulation also caused them to recall specific past events in vivid detail—not just facts of the event, but as a vivid "reliving" of "what the patient saw and heard and felt and understood" when the memory was created. Based on these experiments, Harris postulates that the brain records past experiences like a tape recorder, in such a manner that it is possible subsequently to relive past experiences with all their original emotional intensity.

Harris continues by linking his interpretation of Penfield's experiments to the work of Eric Berne, whose model of psychotherapy is based on the idea that emotionally intense memories from childhood are ever-present in adults. Their influence can be understood by carefully analysing the verbal and non-verbal interchanges ('transactions') between people, hence Berne's name for his model: Transactional Analysis. Harris sees great merit in the ability of TA to define basic units through which human behaviour can be analysed—the 'strokes' that are given and received in a 'transaction' between two or more people—and a standardised language for describing those strokes. This readily understood standardisation, and the association Harris develops between TA and Penfield's neuroscience, gives TA a degree of credibility not possessed by earlier abstract models such as that developed by Freud[citation needed].

The Parent, Adult, Child (P-A-C) model

After describing the context for his belief of the significance of TA, Harris describes TA, starting from the observation that a person's psychological state seems to change in response to different situations. The question is, from what and to what does it change? Harris answers this through a simplified introduction to TA, explaining Berne's proposal that there are three states into which a person can switch: the Parent, the Adult and the Child.

Harris describes the mental state called the Parent by analogy, as a collection of "tape recordings" of external influences that a child observed adults doing and saying. The recording is a long list of rules and admonitions about the way the world is that the child was expected to believe unquestioningly. Many of these rules (for example: "Never run out in front of traffic") are relatively basic, often relating to immediate physical need or danger; others (E.g. "...you can never trust a cop", "...busy hands are happy hands") are more complex and concern more subtle or nuanced regions. Nevertheless, Harris asserts that both the former and the latter are 'recorded' in the child's memory in the same manner, as 'Parent' dictations, rather than actually understood concepts or philosophical precepts.

In parallel with those Parent recordings, the Child is a simultaneous recording of internal events—how life felt as a child. Harris equates these with the vivid recordings that Wilder Penfield was able to cause his patients to re-live by stimulating their brains. Harris proposes that, as adults, when we feel discouraged, it is as if we are re-living those Child memories yet the stimulus for re-living them may no longer be relevant or helpful in our lives.

According to Harris, humans start developing a third mental state, the Adult, about the time children start to walk and begin to achieve some measure of control over their environment. Instead of learning ideas directly from parents into the Parent, or experiencing simple emotion as the Child, children begin to be able to explore and examine the world and form their own opinions. They test the assertions of the Parent and Child and either update them or learn to suppress them. Thus the Adult inside us all develops over time, but it is very fragile and can be readily overwhelmed by stressful situations. Its strength is also tested through conflict between the simplistic ideas of the Parent and reality. Sometimes, Harris asserts, it is safer for a person to believe a lie than to acknowledge the evidence in front of them. This is called Contamination of the Adult.

Four life positions

The phrase I'm OK, You're OK is one of four "life positions" that each of us may take. The four positions are:

  1. I'm Not OK, You're OK
  2. I'm Not OK, You're Not OK
  3. I'm OK, You're Not OK
  4. I'm OK, You're OK

The most common position is I'm Not OK, You're OK. As children we see that adults are large, strong and competent and that we are little, weak and often make mistakes, so we conclude I'm Not OK, You're OK. Children who are abused may conclude I'm Not OK, You're Not OK or I'm OK, You're Not OK, but these are much less common. The emphasis of the book is helping people understand how their life position affects their communications (transactions) and relationships with practical examples.

I'm OK, You're OK continues by providing practical advice to begin decoding the physical and verbal clues required to analyze transactions. For example, Harris suggests signs that a person is in a Parent ego state can include the use of evaluative words that imply judgment based on an automatic, axiomatic and archaic value system: words like 'stupid, naughty, ridiculous, disgusting, should or ought' (though the latter can also be used in the Adult ego state).

Harris introduces a diagrammatic representation of two classes of communication between individuals: complementary transactions, which can continue indefinitely, and crossed transactions, which cause a cessation of communication (and frequently an argument). Harris suggests that crossed transactions are problematic because they "hook" the Child ego state of one of the participants, resulting in negative feelings. Harris suggests that awareness of this possibility, through TA, can give people a choice about how they react when confronted with an interpersonal situation which makes them feel uncomfortable. Harris provides practical suggestions regarding how to stay in the Adult ego state, despite the provocation.

Having described a generalized model of the ego states inside human beings, and the transactions between them, Harris then describes how individuals differ. He argues that insights can be gained by examining the degree to which an individual's Adult ego state is contaminated by the other ego states. He summarizes contamination of the Adult by the Parent as "prejudice" and contamination of the Adult by the Child as "delusion". A healthy individual is able to separate these states. Yet, Harris argues, a functioning person does need all three ego states to be present in their psyche in order for them to be complete. Someone who excludes (i.e. blocks out) their Child completely cannot play and enjoy life; while someone who excludes their Parent ego state can be a danger to society (they may become a manipulative psychopath who does not feel shame, remorse, embarrassment or guilt).

Harris also identifies from his medical practice examples of individuals with blocked out Adult ego states, who were psychotic, terrified and varied between the Parent ego state's archaic admonitions about the world and the raw emotional state of the Child, making them non-treatable by therapy. For such cases, Harris endorses drug treatments, or electro-convulsive therapy, as a way to temporarily disrupt the disturbing ego states, allowing the "recommissioning" of the Adult ego state by therapy. Harris reports a similar approach to treating bipolar disorder.

The second half of the book begins by briefly describing the six ways that TA practitioners recognize individuals use to structure time, to make life seem meaningful. Harris continues by offering practical case studies showing applications of TA to marriage and the raising of both children and adolescents. This section of I'm OK, You're OK concludes as Harris describes when TA can be relevant to an individual's life, and how and by whom it might be delivered. He promotes the idea that TA is not just a method for specialists, but can be shared and used by many people.

Having described such a structured method of dealing with the challenges of human psychology, the final two chapters of the book discuss the question of improving morality and society. In particular, he asks, if people are not to succumb to domination by the Parent ego state, how can individuals enlightened through TA know how they should live their lives? Starting from his axiomatic statement I'm OK, You're OK, he acknowledges that accepting it at face value raises the same philosophical dilemmas as the problem of evil does for believers in a just, omnipotent God. Harris continues to explore aspects of Christianity with reference to TA, together with more generalized questions about the nature of religion.

The final chapter of I'm OK, You're OK refers to social issues contemporary at the time of writing, including the Cold War, Vietnam war and the contemporary controversial research of individuals' response to authority conducted by psychologist Stanley Milgram. Harris applies TA to these issues and concludes his book with the hope that nations will soon gain the maturity to engage in Adult to Adult dialogue, rather than conducting diplomacy in the collective archaic ego states of Parent or Child, which he sees as causing war and disharmony.

Editions

The book was published first during 1969 in the United States by Harper & Row, then republished as I'm OK- You're OK (ISBN 0-380-00772-X). In the United Kingdom it was published first during 1970 by Jonathan Cape with the title The Book of Choice. It is still in print, published by Harpercollins.

Criticism

The work of Wilder Penfield concerning human memory, which appeared to Harris to give TA special credibility because it implied a direct association with neuroscience, has not proved readily repeatable.[6] However, recent data (King-Casas, B., Sharp, C., Lomax-Bream, L., Lohrenz, T., Fonagy, P., and Montague, P. R. (2008). The rupture and repair of cooperation in borderline personality disorder. Science 321, 806–810. doi: 10.1126/science.1155236902) show the mechanism by which OK vs not OK judgements of value are made in the insula, moment to moment, so Harris' notion is supported.

Harris's assertion that a child does not mature with the life position I'm OK - You're OK without therapy has been criticised as positioning TA as a quasi-religious soteriology.[7]

Harris' assertion that all children start out with an I'm not OK, You're OK life position was contested by his friend Eric Berne, the originator of TA, who believed that the natural state of a child was feeling I'm OK, You're OK.[citation needed]

As several decades have elapsed since Harris published I'm OK, You're OK, some of the cultural references which were relevant at the time of the book's publication are now less accessible to contemporary readers not familiar with the period.

Influence on popular culture

The name of the book has since become used commonly, often as a dismissive categorization of all popular psychology philosophies as being overly accepting. The phrase I'm OK, You're OK is a common cliché in Anglophone culture, at least among an older generation more accustomed to hearing the phrase. Examples of the influence elsewhere are:

  • Wendy Kaminer wrote a critique of the self-help business during 1992, named I'm Dysfunctional, You're Dysfunctional.
  • In the popular television show ALF, season four, episode five ALF takes on the topic of TA with direct reference to OKness, and even says to Willie, "I'm OK, You're OK".
  • In the comedy Airplane II: The Sequel, the case carried by the bomber also contains a copy of "I'm Alright, You're Alright".
  • It is also referenced in a Kannada movie called Beladingala Baale. The main character explains this to his friend's wife when she asks him why her husband is open and different—A person grows in four stages: first he thinks I'm ok, the world is not ok; second he feels he's not ok, the world is not ok; third he thinks he's not ok, the world is ok; in the end at the fourth stage he realizes that I'm ok, the world is also ok and she should bring her husband to this fourth stage.
  • In an episode of The Simpsons, the character Dr. Marvin Monroe refers to his self-help book I'm OK, You're Sick and Twisted.

See also

References

  1. ^ Library of Congress Copyright Office (1971). Catalog of Copyright Entries. Third Series: 1968: January-June. Catalog of Copyright Entries. Author. p. 495.
  2. ^ Morrow, M.C. (2016). Sin in the Sixties. Catholic University of America Press. p. 62. ISBN 978-0-8132-2898-3.
  3. ^ John C. Norcross Ph.D., Linda F. Campbell Ph.D., John M. Grohol PsyD, John W. Santrock Ph.D., Florin Selagea M.S., Robert Sommer (2013). Self-Help That Works: Resources to Improve Emotional Health and Strengthen Relationships. Oxford University Press. p. 390. ISBN 978-0-19-933364-6.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Harris, Thomas. I'm OK, You're OK. Harper 2004.
  5. ^ Berne, Eric (2013). "Thomas A. Harris M.D. Author of I'm OK - You're OK".
  6. ^ Milner, B. Wilder Penfield: his legacy to neurology. Memory mechanisms. Can Med Assoc J. 1977 June 18; 116(12): 1374–1376.
  7. ^ Hemminger, Hansjörg. Grundwissen Religionspsychologie. Ein Handbuch für Studium und Praxis. Herder 2003, pp. 59f.

External links

jason, falkner, album, album, neutrality, style, writing, this, article, questioned, please, remove, this, message, until, conditions, june, 2015, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, 1967, self, help, book, psychiatrist, thomas, anthony, harris, prac. For the Jason Falkner album see I m OK You re OK album The neutrality of the style of writing in this article is questioned Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met June 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message I m OK You re OK is a 1967 1 2 3 self help book by psychiatrist Thomas Anthony Harris It is a practical guide to transactional analysis as a method for solving problems in life I m OK You re OKAuthorThomas Anthony HarrisCountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishGenreSelf helpPublisherHarper amp RowPublication date1967Media typePrint Hardcover Pages320ISBN978 0060724276The book made the New York Times Best Seller list in 1972 and remained there for almost two years It is estimated by the publisher to have sold over 15 million copies to date 4 and to have been translated into over a dozen languages 5 Contents 1 Content 1 1 Harris context for the book 1 2 The Parent Adult Child P A C model 1 3 Four life positions 2 Editions 3 Criticism 4 Influence on popular culture 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksContent EditIn the preface Harris praises the then new procedure of transactional analysis TA or as Harris often refers to it P A C as a major innovation addressing the slow process and limited results that he and other psychiatric practitioners believed was characteristic of conventional psychiatry Harris context for the book Edit Rather than working with abstract concepts of consciousness Harris suggests that the pioneering work of brain surgeon Wilder Penfield in uncovering the neurological basis of memory could offer complementary insights grounded in observable reality Specifically Harris emphasizes reports of Penfield s experiments stimulating small areas of the brains of conscious patients undergoing brain surgery the brain does not have any pain receptors so this can be done in relative comfort for the patient Though the patients were conscious that they were on an operating table the stimulation also caused them to recall specific past events in vivid detail not just facts of the event but as a vivid reliving of what the patient saw and heard and felt and understood when the memory was created Based on these experiments Harris postulates that the brain records past experiences like a tape recorder in such a manner that it is possible subsequently to relive past experiences with all their original emotional intensity Harris continues by linking his interpretation of Penfield s experiments to the work of Eric Berne whose model of psychotherapy is based on the idea that emotionally intense memories from childhood are ever present in adults Their influence can be understood by carefully analysing the verbal and non verbal interchanges transactions between people hence Berne s name for his model Transactional Analysis Harris sees great merit in the ability of TA to define basic units through which human behaviour can be analysed the strokes that are given and received in a transaction between two or more people and a standardised language for describing those strokes This readily understood standardisation and the association Harris develops between TA and Penfield s neuroscience gives TA a degree of credibility not possessed by earlier abstract models such as that developed by Freud citation needed The Parent Adult Child P A C model Edit See also Transactional analysis The ego state or Parent Adult Child PAC models After describing the context for his belief of the significance of TA Harris describes TA starting from the observation that a person s psychological state seems to change in response to different situations The question is from what and to what does it change Harris answers this through a simplified introduction to TA explaining Berne s proposal that there are three states into which a person can switch the Parent the Adult and the Child Harris describes the mental state called the Parent by analogy as a collection of tape recordings of external influences that a child observed adults doing and saying The recording is a long list of rules and admonitions about the way the world is that the child was expected to believe unquestioningly Many of these rules for example Never run out in front of traffic are relatively basic often relating to immediate physical need or danger others E g you can never trust a cop busy hands are happy hands are more complex and concern more subtle or nuanced regions Nevertheless Harris asserts that both the former and the latter are recorded in the child s memory in the same manner as Parent dictations rather than actually understood concepts or philosophical precepts In parallel with those Parent recordings the Child is a simultaneous recording of internal events how life felt as a child Harris equates these with the vivid recordings that Wilder Penfield was able to cause his patients to re live by stimulating their brains Harris proposes that as adults when we feel discouraged it is as if we are re living those Child memories yet the stimulus for re living them may no longer be relevant or helpful in our lives According to Harris humans start developing a third mental state the Adult about the time children start to walk and begin to achieve some measure of control over their environment Instead of learning ideas directly from parents into the Parent or experiencing simple emotion as the Child children begin to be able to explore and examine the world and form their own opinions They test the assertions of the Parent and Child and either update them or learn to suppress them Thus the Adult inside us all develops over time but it is very fragile and can be readily overwhelmed by stressful situations Its strength is also tested through conflict between the simplistic ideas of the Parent and reality Sometimes Harris asserts it is safer for a person to believe a lie than to acknowledge the evidence in front of them This is called Contamination of the Adult Four life positions Edit The phrase I m OK You re OK is one of four life positions that each of us may take The four positions are I m Not OK You re OK I m Not OK You re Not OK I m OK You re Not OK I m OK You re OKThe most common position is I m Not OK You re OK As children we see that adults are large strong and competent and that we are little weak and often make mistakes so we conclude I m Not OK You re OK Children who are abused may conclude I m Not OK You re Not OK or I m OK You re Not OK but these are much less common The emphasis of the book is helping people understand how their life position affects their communications transactions and relationships with practical examples I m OK You re OK continues by providing practical advice to begin decoding the physical and verbal clues required to analyze transactions For example Harris suggests signs that a person is in a Parent ego state can include the use of evaluative words that imply judgment based on an automatic axiomatic and archaic value system words like stupid naughty ridiculous disgusting should or ought though the latter can also be used in the Adult ego state Harris introduces a diagrammatic representation of two classes of communication between individuals complementary transactions which can continue indefinitely and crossed transactions which cause a cessation of communication and frequently an argument Harris suggests that crossed transactions are problematic because they hook the Child ego state of one of the participants resulting in negative feelings Harris suggests that awareness of this possibility through TA can give people a choice about how they react when confronted with an interpersonal situation which makes them feel uncomfortable Harris provides practical suggestions regarding how to stay in the Adult ego state despite the provocation Having described a generalized model of the ego states inside human beings and the transactions between them Harris then describes how individuals differ He argues that insights can be gained by examining the degree to which an individual s Adult ego state is contaminated by the other ego states He summarizes contamination of the Adult by the Parent as prejudice and contamination of the Adult by the Child as delusion A healthy individual is able to separate these states Yet Harris argues a functioning person does need all three ego states to be present in their psyche in order for them to be complete Someone who excludes i e blocks out their Child completely cannot play and enjoy life while someone who excludes their Parent ego state can be a danger to society they may become a manipulative psychopath who does not feel shame remorse embarrassment or guilt Harris also identifies from his medical practice examples of individuals with blocked out Adult ego states who were psychotic terrified and varied between the Parent ego state s archaic admonitions about the world and the raw emotional state of the Child making them non treatable by therapy For such cases Harris endorses drug treatments or electro convulsive therapy as a way to temporarily disrupt the disturbing ego states allowing the recommissioning of the Adult ego state by therapy Harris reports a similar approach to treating bipolar disorder The second half of the book begins by briefly describing the six ways that TA practitioners recognize individuals use to structure time to make life seem meaningful Harris continues by offering practical case studies showing applications of TA to marriage and the raising of both children and adolescents This section of I m OK You re OK concludes as Harris describes when TA can be relevant to an individual s life and how and by whom it might be delivered He promotes the idea that TA is not just a method for specialists but can be shared and used by many people Having described such a structured method of dealing with the challenges of human psychology the final two chapters of the book discuss the question of improving morality and society In particular he asks if people are not to succumb to domination by the Parent ego state how can individuals enlightened through TA know how they should live their lives Starting from his axiomatic statement I m OK You re OK he acknowledges that accepting it at face value raises the same philosophical dilemmas as the problem of evil does for believers in a just omnipotent God Harris continues to explore aspects of Christianity with reference to TA together with more generalized questions about the nature of religion The final chapter of I m OK You re OK refers to social issues contemporary at the time of writing including the Cold War Vietnam war and the contemporary controversial research of individuals response to authority conducted by psychologist Stanley Milgram Harris applies TA to these issues and concludes his book with the hope that nations will soon gain the maturity to engage in Adult to Adult dialogue rather than conducting diplomacy in the collective archaic ego states of Parent or Child which he sees as causing war and disharmony Editions EditThe book was published first during 1969 in the United States by Harper amp Row then republished as I m OK You re OK ISBN 0 380 00772 X In the United Kingdom it was published first during 1970 by Jonathan Cape with the title The Book of Choice It is still in print published by Harpercollins Criticism EditThe work of Wilder Penfield concerning human memory which appeared to Harris to give TA special credibility because it implied a direct association with neuroscience has not proved readily repeatable 6 However recent data King Casas B Sharp C Lomax Bream L Lohrenz T Fonagy P and Montague P R 2008 The rupture and repair of cooperation in borderline personality disorder Science 321 806 810 doi 10 1126 science 1155236902 show the mechanism by which OK vs not OK judgements of value are made in the insula moment to moment so Harris notion is supported Harris s assertion that a child does not mature with the life position I m OK You re OK without therapy has been criticised as positioning TA as a quasi religious soteriology 7 Harris assertion that all children start out with an I m not OK You re OK life position was contested by his friend Eric Berne the originator of TA who believed that the natural state of a child was feeling I m OK You re OK citation needed As several decades have elapsed since Harris published I m OK You re OK some of the cultural references which were relevant at the time of the book s publication are now less accessible to contemporary readers not familiar with the period Influence on popular culture EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The name of the book has since become used commonly often as a dismissive categorization of all popular psychology philosophies as being overly accepting The phrase I m OK You re OK is a common cliche in Anglophone culture at least among an older generation more accustomed to hearing the phrase Examples of the influence elsewhere are Wendy Kaminer wrote a critique of the self help business during 1992 named I m Dysfunctional You re Dysfunctional In the popular television show ALF season four episode five ALF takes on the topic of TA with direct reference to OKness and even says to Willie I m OK You re OK In the comedy Airplane II The Sequel the case carried by the bomber also contains a copy of I m Alright You re Alright It is also referenced in a Kannada movie called Beladingala Baale The main character explains this to his friend s wife when she asks him why her husband is open and different A person grows in four stages first he thinks I m ok the world is not ok second he feels he s not ok the world is not ok third he thinks he s not ok the world is ok in the end at the fourth stage he realizes that I m ok the world is also ok and she should bring her husband to this fourth stage In an episode of The Simpsons the character Dr Marvin Monroe refers to his self help book I m OK You re Sick and Twisted See also EditGames People PlayReferences Edit Library of Congress Copyright Office 1971 Catalog of Copyright Entries Third Series 1968 January June Catalog of Copyright Entries Author p 495 Morrow M C 2016 Sin in the Sixties Catholic University of America Press p 62 ISBN 978 0 8132 2898 3 John C Norcross Ph D Linda F Campbell Ph D John M Grohol PsyD John W Santrock Ph D Florin Selagea M S Robert Sommer 2013 Self Help That Works Resources to Improve Emotional Health and Strengthen Relationships Oxford University Press p 390 ISBN 978 0 19 933364 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Harris Thomas I m OK You re OK Harper 2004 Berne Eric 2013 Thomas A Harris M D Author of I m OK You re OK Milner B Wilder Penfield his legacy to neurology Memory mechanisms Can Med Assoc J 1977 June 18 116 12 1374 1376 Hemminger Hansjorg Grundwissen Religionspsychologie Ein Handbuch fur Studium und Praxis Herder 2003 pp 59f External links Edithttp www ericberne com Dr Eric Berne http www drthomasharris com im ok youre ok book thomas harris Information on Dr Thomas A Harris and I m OK You re OK Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title I 27m OK You 27re OK amp oldid 1133930055, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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