CHOICE THEORY: A
New Explanation Of How We Control Our Lives
Wm. Glasser
Basic Needs:
1.
To survive and reproduce (old brain) – breathing, digesting, sweating,
regulating blood pressure, immune system
2.
To belong, love, share and co-operate (new brain - i.e.
cortex)
3.
For power - can conflict with #2 (marriage), but loss of power can
result in loss of #2
4.
For freedom
5.
For fun - may be a basic genetic instruction because it is the way in
which we learn, at any age
Pictures in our
Heads:
·
An "album" of need satisfiers e.g. preferred foods, love
object, alcohol, job (power), - not the same as memory.
·
Old people don't update their 'photos', dwelling more on past satisfiers
when they were more effective.
·
‘Photos’ of a mate may be updated if a new, more satisfying mate is
obtained.
·
Anorexics have an ideal model photo which drives them to become ever
thinner.
·
Alcoholics see booze as satisfying any and all needs - very difficult to
remove this 'photo' - AA can ‘move’ it back in the album, day at a time, but
not out. If they fail to attend and be
active in AA, they will slip back.
·
Homosexuals have pictures in their albums of sexual satisfaction with
same sex - very difficult to remove.
·
Sex Deviates - pedophiles - have a picture that they only want sex with
children - society requires that they either lead sexually frustrated lives or
go to prison.
·
It is difficult to change our own pictures - even more difficult to
persuade others to change theirs - requires negotiation and compromise.
·
People living together won't have the same pictures.
·
Siblings must have pleasurable shared pictures which can form a base for
liking each other's company.
Depression, misery, etc. is
generated internally: a chosen response
to external stimuli. If instead we DO
(i.e. ACT) something, we feel better than if we sink into depression and misery
or anxiety. Other responses are anger
and forms of illness. The reason that we choose these techniques is to get
others to help us, or to control them.
Reorganization:
A random stream
of minimal but sometimes well-organized new behaviours that come to our
consciousness and are available for us to try if 1) we pay attention to them
and 2) it appears that they may help us regain control of our lives. We may continue to depress if our creative
systems cannot come up with an effective alternative to our present misery. It is this constant reorganization that creates
a stream of new ways to do, think and feel that makes each of us a unique
personality. Reorganization is an
ancient survival technique - to
continuously create-: to stop creating (in a species) is to lose the capacity
to compete and survive. The system
itself is not value based - has no knowledge of right from wrong, good/bad,
smart/dumb - its only purpose is to create new ideas/coping behaviours (LIKE
BRAINSTORMING). The system cannot have
bias, or otherwise gems could be lost. It is essential to develop a 'listening' attitude to the creative
'voice'. This reorganization
creativity comes from the
unconscious level, however
we ourselves are
responsible for implementing ideas.
Psychosomatic
Illness: "Activate the Fighting System"
Coronary artery disease,
rheumatoid arthritis, eczema, ileitis, colitis, peptic ulcers,
migraines, some back aches,
multiple sclerosis; where the
immune system is being driven by the old brain to
come up with
re-organizational processes beyond the body's capability. "The system eats itself up". Voodoo rites an example. On the other hand are "miracle cures" where the system
heals the body by itself (cancer).
1. Opiates -
Codeine, Percoden. Morphine, and Heroin - mimic the natural opiate secretions
of the brain.
2. Marijuana and
LSD - makes the world appear easier and more pleasurable to deal with. LSD provides new sensory experiences, but
can lead to hallucinations. Society
frowns on marijuana because chronic users have little motivation to pursue the cultural work ethic.
3. Alcohol gives a powerful sense of control - users,
while actually losing control as consumption increases, act as if they believe
that whatever they do will increase the control they falsely believe they have. Unique action - no other drug acts to
increase a SENSE of control that is actually being lost. (It probably causes the brain to secrete
natural pleasure drug used as a control reward). The alcoholic believes that whatever he does
is effective, including violence, and his confidence falsely increases.
4. Caffeine.
Nicotine and Cocaine - also Methedrine, Dexedrine and Benazedrine - energize
the behavioural system and may for a short time actually provide
increased control (as opposed to alcohol's false control) e.g. Nethedrine –
used by the Germans in their blitzkrieg of WWII, or the Andean Indians chewing
coca leaf. Cocaine increasingly
‘drives’ the behavioural system, and the re-organizational component becomes increasingly
frantic/crazy.
5. Common
barbiturates, Valium, Quaaludes - mainly prescribed to help tense patients
relax; also to sedate the behavioural system.
Valium sedates but also has a pleasure component similar to heroin.
Many drugs inhibit the old
brain from secreting natural pleasure drugs, and it may take years for balance
to be restored.
Criticism:
If we want to keep control
over our lives, we must not only learn to avoid criticizing others,
but equally stop criticizing ourselves.
· “Let's both look
at what we are both doing in this situation to see where it is working and
where it is not."
· Praise is a good
motivator if it is spontaneous and variable to performance.
·
Reward and punishment are not as good motivators because they inject the
idea of external control (e.g. they threaten or interfere with the subject's
own control system).
· Japanese
control-theory management involves a lot of communication and feedback and
out-performs traditional stimulus - response techniques.
Taking Control:
·
Don't stubbornly hold out for “pictures” that can't be satisfied, using
depression, anxiety or psycho-somatic illness and driving our reconstructive
creativity to distraction.
· For
relationships to grow experiences must be planned on a regular basis. Also fall back on proven shared satisfiers.
· Off the chemical
intervention/support.
· Action
techniques are preferable to falling back on depression or anxiety and
misery. “The better choice is always a doing
behaviour”.
Children:
“Try as hard as possible to
teach, show and help your children to gain effective control of THEIR lives.” Never do anything to or for a child that
will cause a child to lose control. All
their “irresponsible” behaviours are their attempts to gain control of their
lives. If they blame their parents for
loss, even more control is lost.”
· Take our
pictures of what we want children to become, out of our heads - replace them
with short-term pictures (help around home, caring for possessions, friendly, being
able to talk to us when we differ).
Discipline rather than punish.
· Tendency with
grown children is for parents to continue to do too much to and for
their children, since it is increasingly difficult to do things with
them. In turn, the children view what
is done for them as an attempt to control them - they then withdraw and stay
away. The parents then may depress to
instill guilt on the child, and thereby control it.
“To keep on good terms with
adult children, continue to be warm and loving, but do as little as possible for
them and to them, as much with them as you both enjoy, and
respect them enough to be willing to leave them alone if this is what they
want.”
Positive
Addiction – running, meditation
Runners not only gain a
great deal of physical strength and health, but significantly increase their
mental strength through gaining access to the constant creativity that is
inside all of us.
Great people play close
attention to their innate creativity and give careful
consideration to what it offers. Adds
a sma1l but important dimension to their lives. A meditating runner does not concern self with times, shoes,
diet, body-to-fat ratios or even talk about his private running, his source of
meditation. (In Zen this is called
satori.)
Glasser’s Concept
of ‘Total Behavior’ – Human behavior is an inseparable unity of
·
acting
·
thinking
·
feeling
·
physiology
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