OK CORRAL Monograph
OK CORRAL Monograph
OK CORRAL Monograph
OK Corral:
Grid for Whats Happening
by
Franklin H. Ernst Jr., M.D.
OK Corral:
Grid for Whats Happening
by
Franklin H. Ernst Jr., M.D.
Copyright 2008
Permission is hereby granted to any person, magazine, newspaper, other periodical, or media to
reprint this monograph in any single issue of the periodical in question, so long as two conditions
are met: (1) the monograph is printed word for word, including diagrams, figures, and footnotes,
and (2) the following reference is given at the bottom of the first page on which the reprinted
article begins: This article is taken from Transactional Analysis in the OK Corral: Grid for
Whats Happening by Franklin H. Ernst Jr., M.D.; published by Franklin Harry Ernst III,
AddressoSet Publications, P.O. Box 3009, Vallejo, California 94590.
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OK Corral:
Grid for Whats Happening
by
Franklin H. Ernst, Jr., M.D.
Man is repeatedly evaluating himself as to the value of himself to himself and also to
his companion; as to the value of his companionship for himself and for his companion. These
are in the often silent:
1. "How are you (How am I with you)?"
2. "What am I going to do with you?"
3. "How is this (situation with you) going to turn out?"
4. "How am I going to get out of this (situation with you)?"
5. "( I wonder) what (do) you think of me (now)?"
6. What are you thinking of doing to me (now)?
"What am I going do with you?" can be understood as coming from one of the four
categories of dynamic social operations1 (Figure No.1). In fact, each of these six questions is
resolved by discerning the outcome of the particular encounter with the identified other
person. It has been found there are four major classes of outcomes which result from social
encounters.2 The four classes of outcome are called Get-On-With (GOW), Get-Rid-Of (GRO),
Get-Away-From (GAF), Get-Nowhere-With (GNW). 3
a. The Get-On-With (GOW) outcome of a social encounter occurs when the personal
experience of the particular person closes with an I-Am-OK and You-Are-OK.
b. The Get-Rid-Of (GRO) outcome of a social encounter occurs when the personal
experience of the particular person closes with an I-Am-OK and You-Are-Not-OK.
c. The Get-Away-From (GAF) outcome of a social encounter occurs when the personal
experience of the particular person closes with I-Am-Not-OK and You-Are-OK.
d. The Get-Nowhere-With (GNW) outcome occurs when the personal experience of the
particular person closes with I-Am-Not-OK and You-Are-Not-OK.
Ernst, F.H. Jr., M.D.: "Social Operations," The Encounterer, 1:15, 9-20-1969, Golden Gate Foundation for
Group Treatment, Vallejo, California.
2
Players of the game of Skeptic usually jump on this statement and will invent other classes of outcomes.
3
Related papers by Franklin H. Ernst Jr., M.D.: (a) Getting Well With Transactional Analysis: Get-On-With,
Getting Well, and Get (to be) Winners, (b) OK Corral: Grid for Whats Happening / Eric Berne Memorial
Scientific Award Acceptance Speech, Boston, Mass., 1981, (c) Handbook of Listening / Transactional
Analysis of the Listening Activity, Second Edition.
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YOU ARE OK
I AM
NOT OK
I AM
OK
The horizontal arrow point on the right represents I am going ahead. The arrow
point on the left represents I am not going ahead. The vertical line: You are OK (e.g. I look
up to you) and You are not OK (e.g. I look down on you).
In day to day life, a person has a series of stroking encounters, one after another with a
variety of persons.5,6 Some of the encounters are a simple greeting, a single transaction such
as "Hi! Hi!" Other encounters (with their transactions) may involve a multitude of words
exchanged between the involved persons. Some encounters (transactions) are ritualized,
others are pastimes while hanging out with each other. Some are games. Some are activities.
And some encounters are the occasional quality of intimacy. Brief or extended, at the
conclusion of each encounter, no matter how many transactions between the parties, the
outcome will fall into one of the four quadrants of the OK Corral.
Transactional Analysis in the OK Corral, Grid for Whats Happening and personal experiences are
combined.
5
Berne, Eric, M.D.: Games People Play, Grove Press, New York, NY, 1964, pg. 38.
6
Berne, Eric, M.D.: Transactional Analysis in Psychotherapy, Grove Press, New York, NY, 1961.
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Persons familiar with this method of classifying the outcomes of their social
encounters described by the OK Corral: Grid for Whats Happening report that each
individual uses these four categories of social outcome at least once each day.7,8
For example:
A Get-Nowhere-With (GNW) social operation example:
Bob: "Hey, Al, will you sign this paper for me? I got to hurry up and get it down to the
boss."
A reasoned (temporary style) GNW outcome resolution by Al could be: "Oh, hey,
Bob. Let me think on it a little while first. I won't be able to do it right now." Al is saying
"I-am-not-OK, yet ( I am not ready to do it ) -and-you-are-not-OK-with-me-either (on
this). I want a few minutes to look it over first. I will probably see it your way, but first let
me look it over." This is a temporary Get-Nowhere-With (GNW) act of postponing. Al
did not let Bob get anywhere with him for the time being. (Conversely, it is also seen that
Bob got-nowhere-with Al, either.) Al was not ready to make a decision on this, not ready
to get somewhere with Bob. "I am not OK to handle it now and you are not OK with me
yet either, as far as settling this one way or another now."
A Get-Away-From (GAF) social (movement) operation example:
Al: "Hi Bob! Good to see you!"
Bob: "Yeah, good to see you too! I want to talk to you a minute, if you have it."
Al: "Sorry, Bob. My supervisor has called a meeting down the hall that I have to get to
now. Maybe later in the day, though, we can do it. Okay? (while physically
leaving)." In this encounter, Al is operationally concluding the event by gettingaway-from Bob. He is not, would not be OK if he tarried with Bob. (We also note
that from Bob's view he is, in effect, getting-rid-of Al.)
A Get-Rid-Of (GRO) social operation example:
Al: "Well, let's see. I think that covers all the points we had to go over for this staff
conference today. Good to have met with you. See you next week. Good-bye for
now.
A Get-On-With (GOW) social operation example:
Al: "Well, Bob, the papers here look like they are all in order and clear. I'll sign here
and you can sign right over here! OK?"
Bob: "OK! Thanks! We can get this new distribution system working now!"
Ernst, F.H. Jr., M.D.: Handbook of Listening, Transactional Analysis of the Listening Activity, Second
Edition, AddressoSet Publications, 2008.
8
Ernst, F.H. Jr., M.D.: Social Operations, The Encounterer, 1:15, Golden Gate Foundation for Group
Treatment, Vallejo, California, 9-20-1969.
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Berne, Eric, M.D.: Transactional Analysis in Psychotherapy, Social Psychiatry Seminars, Transactional
Analysis Bulletins 1960 thru 1970.
10
Ernst, F.H. Jr., M.D.: Getting Well With Transactional Analysis: Get-on-With, Getting Well, and Get (to be)
Winners, AddressoSet Publications, 2008.
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11
Ernst, F.H. Jr., M.D.: Handbook of Listening, Transactional Analysis of the Listening Activity, Second
Edition, AddressoSet Publications, Vallejo, California, 2008.
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Ernst, F.H. Jr., M.D.: Use of Transactional Analysis in Prison Therapy Groups, The Journal of Social
Therapy, Vol. 8, No.3, 1962.
13
Ernst, F.H. Jr., M.D.: Psychiatric Treatment of the California Felon, The American Journal Psychiatry, Vol.
120, No. 10, April 1964.
14
Note: Opportunities for Get-On-With (GOW) become available all the time, individually and mutually. They
are opportunities to give and get OKs. GOWs lead to mutual trust, reliability, and consistency.
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away-from (GAF) the situation at hand. The teller with his statement to the nail biter to "stop
biting your fingernails is effectively announcing "I am OK and You are Not OK."
In contrast, the act of getting-well-of a symptom is done in order to get-on-with
(GOW) other goals in life. 15,16 Getting well does not mean to never, ever, have the
behavior/symptom again, as with fingernail biting. It does mean the identified person will
bite his fingernails less frequently and be able to control when not to bite his nails. It is done
in order to bring about more frequent openings for other behavioral options, i.e. getting his
fingers and hands and words into other activities more often and getting "burned" in social
acts less often. To get well here means to be using one's ability to pick up fine gradations
and variations, rather than biting off one's fingernails and words.
Getting well of a game and being a winner does not infer the super-man, the
indomitable, undefeatable, and everlasting. It does, however, mean to be very good at
something, to be very much better than most other people at some tasks and skills.
The OK Corral: Grid for Whats Happening is a method for making it possible to
organize social events: Get-On-With, Get-Nowhere-With, Get-Away-From, Get-Rid-Of.
THE FROG PRINCE
One couple recognized that their games (of Games People Play) were regularly ending
with reciprocated Get-Away-From (GAF) and Get-Rid-Of (GRO) payoffs. Allegorically, this
Frog Prince, Simon, was repetitively going down to the bottom of the pool and retrieving
Sues ball for her. When he gave the ball to her he would also provocatively act gruff, play
Pounce ("bwwrrraaawwwaaawwk" like a Frog should). This would frighten Sue again into
running away from him. One night after fleeing from home, she thought to herself:
"How am I going to get away from him? I was furious at him for scaring me
again. How was I going to get-away-from Simon so that he would never, ever, ever
again find me, to scare me. Then I began to think (say) to myself: Hey, wait a minute!
What am I doing here? This looks familiar. This is what I have been doing all along.
This isn't what I want to do. If I get away from him then that's the get-away-from
outcome and I don't want to do that. What am I supposed to be wanting to do? Then
I figured to myself: What I want to do is get-on-with him. Oh, gee! Shucks! Heck!
So I thought to myself: This is my fighter Child. I give up. What I want to do is to get
on with Simon, not get away from him. So I went home."
The Get-Away-From, etc. terminology itself was a tool.
15
Ernst, F.H. Jr., M.D.: Get-On-With, Getting Well, and Get Winners: Position for Getting Well With
Transactional Analysis, AddressoSet Publications, Vallejo, California 1971, 2004.
16
Ernst, F.H. Jr., M.D.: The OK Corral: Grid for Get-On-With, Transactional Analysis Journal 1:4, pgs 231240, October 1971, [pgs 33-42], Franklin H. Ernst Jr., M.D. guest editor.
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YOU-ARE-OK
GAF
I-AMNOT-OK
GET-AWAY-FROM
PRINCESS:
I Am Not OK and You Are OK
GET-ON-WITH
GOW
GET-NOWHERE-WITH
GET-RID-OF
GRO
YOU-ARE-NOT-OK
Once Sue decided to let her husband be OK he became a King in her thinking about
him, AND she grew up, became a Queen in her own life.
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SOCIAL OPERATIONS
You Are OK
I Am
Not-OK
Social Operation: Get-Nowhere-With
(GNW) Reciprocated by GetNowhere-With (GNW) by the
other party.
This class of events concludes with
strokes of I-am-not-OK and Youare-not-OK either! To take a rain
check, postpone, a Mexican
standoff.
Summary of OK Corral:
Grid for Whats Happening
Figure No. 3
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Example of Get-On-With
John, in group, was familiar with sorting his Parent, Adult, and Child. He was rather
skillful at recognizing the inception of his own games and also at spotting and determining
how he would handle the beginnings of the games of those close to him. He now enjoyed
autonomy for himself and the pleasure of the related autonomy exhibited by his intimates. He
reported his Child-self still feeling occasional moments of "emptiness" when he had
repudiated his own Parent with excessive vigor. John was increasingly successful in
organizing his objectives into systems of priorities, i.e. what was most important to do today,
what was 2nd, 3rd, 5th, l0th; he was doing better at ordering his priorities for the next week and
month and he could conceptualize longer range goals, those extending over the next 5-15
years.
One day, in his group he reported an event of readying himself to take a 10-minute
walk around the block to get my mind clear and get my thinking going again. As he was
doing this his wife Claudine came bustling up to accost him: "Are you objecting to my
leaving the clothes around the hamper or are you objecting to the hamper not being in the
clothes closet?" Reflecting a second that he hadn't been objecting to anything for at least two
hours and that he did want to finish his income tax report that day, he responded: "Golly,
Deen, looks like I'm supposed to be objecting one way or another. OK, if, for now, I don't?"
Claudine let him be for another minute or two. "During the next few moments before he left
she tried three more times to start up some action with me, but I knew that if I picked up any
of these invitations to play with her it would be at least an hour, maybe more, before I got
back to the report and that had to get into the mail by tomorrow. So I told her what I was
going to do (take a walk) and why. I saw that both of us wanted some recognition from each
other, a few words, a few minutes would do. She knew the report was due tomorrow. When I
started out the door I didn't say good-bye because I had already asked her to come with me
and she had not accepted nor declined. I walked the first 14 steps outside the door slowly
knowing she could see me and would come after me. She did, asking Do you want to be
alone or do you want me to come with you? I told her she's the best for me and to come on.
Then she asked with the tiniest smile, did I want her to bitch at me or be quiet. I told her I
wanted some words from her while we walked. She asked where she fit into my life that day
and I told her again, she was third. Claudine already knew I had the report to get out and also
I had to figure out how to pay the IRS what was due. So as we were walking she bitched
some about how all my reports came before her. I kidded her back, grabbed her hand, telling
her there's nothing like promoting herself to fifth place when she's already got third for the
day and working herself up to first. In fact, I did not say so but I thought, she knows that right
now she is first with me and I knew I was first with her at that moment, but that this moment
was going to end and go on to another, so that our taxes could get paid and the report filed on
time. At the end of our walk around the block, I touched her for a brief second, caught her
eye to see she was still pouting some and without waiting, I went back to the den and the
work, feeling refreshed. And she let me get the job done."
John reported that Claudine didn't like to see how much they were taxed, nor the
taxing of their time for the reports to be done. He figured that by not collecting brown
stamps from her on this and holding down the number she collected from him he could "Spin
a little gold with her later."
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By ranking the priority value of the private and public objectives, it becomes possible
to get-on-with those items that have been selected. A therapist may form multiple-goal agreements with a patient but these are more reliably and effectively treated when explicitly ranked
in the treatment contract.
Separating and ranking interwoven goals assists a person to get-on-with life. "I can't
get along with my wife, we fight too much, and I want to find out why," is best handled by
"Which is more important, to stop fighting or why you fight?" This brings the person around
to a program that is approximated by "First get well of fighting with your wife (measured e.g.
by reducing the number of fights to three per week and in the longer term by reducing the
separations and silences after the fights to being no more than 60 minutes). Maybe after that
we can find out why you fight!"
In general the encounters a person has with a spouse, parent, sibling or "playmate"
will have a higher personal value (intimacy value) than an encounter with a casual office,
school or grocery store acquaintance. Nevertheless, each encounter that a person has with
another person in a day, upon its conclusion, can be assigned by the person to one of the four
quadrants of "The OK Corral" (See Figure 3.); i.e. a Get-On-With, or a Get-Rid-Of, or a GetNowhere-With, or a Get-Away-From.
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YOU ARE OK
Get-Away-From
Pass time
I AM
NOT-OK
GAF
Get-Nowhere-With
Mark time
Waste time
Dead time
GNW
GOW
GRO
Get-On-With
Use time
Spend time
Make time
Get-Rid-Of
Kill time
I AM
OK
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Varieties of the
WARM FACE Experience(s)
in the OK Corral
You
Are OK
Blushing, Embarrassed
Feel Foolish
Self-conscious
I Am
Not-OK
Get-Away-From
Get-On-With
Get-Nowhere-With
Get-Rid-Of
You Are
Not OK
I Am
OK
A Burn, A show up
Red-in-the-face
Hot-under-the-collar
17
Ernst, F.H. Jr., M.D.: excerpts from The Encounterer, the news service of the Golden Gate Foundation for
Group Treatment Inc., Vallejo, California, 1960s.
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I Am OK
AND
You Are
OK
With Me
Also
I Am OK
AND
You Are
OK
With Me,
Too
18
Ernst, F.H. Jr., M.D.: "Winners Defined," The Encounterer, 1:8, 4-20-1969, Golden Gate Foundation for Group
Treatment, Vallejo, California.
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Social Operation:
Get-Away-From
Get-On-With
Personal Experience:
I am not-OK AND You are OK
Personal Experience:
I am OK AND You are OK
GAF
I AM
NOT-OK
GNW
Social Operation:
Get-Nowhere-With
I AM
OK
GRO
Social Operation:
Get-Rid-Of
Personal Experience:
I am not-OK AND You are not-OK
Personal Experience:
I am OK AND You are not-OK
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Transactional Analysis in the OK CORRAL: Grid for Whats Happening. This is the diagram for
classifying the outcomes of the events in your life:
Get-On-With, Get-Away-From, Get-Nowhere-With, or Get-Rid-Of
YOU CAN CHOOSE how you want a situation to come out BEFORE the end of it. Not all
events can end in a get-on-with. To have a get-on-with for some events, you can choose to have
other events come out in one of the other three ways. You cannot get-on-with everybody and
everything. Healthy people use each one of the four ways at least once a day.
One persons get-on-with is also the other persons get-on-with.
One persons get-away-from is the other persons get-rid-of AND vice versa.
One persons get-nowhere-with is the other persons get-nowhere-with.
The arrow points on the four sides of the grid show there are four kinds of strokes a person can
give: I Am OK, I AM Not-OK, You Are OK, You Are Not-OK. One person strokes the
other, gives words (gestures and/or touches) to move (stimulate) the other, AND MORE: to move
the other person to the extent that first person gets words given back, to complete one transaction.
Whatever else, while transactions are continuing, the parties are negotiating the answer to the
psychological-business questions of What are we going to do with each other? and How is this
going to come out? For the persons involved, the ending will come out in one of the four corners of
their respective OK Corrals when they have arrived at a psychological-level form of (mutual)
agreement about each person being OK or Not-OK.
I Am OK is drawn to the right. For example: I am going ahead.
I Am Not-OK points to the left. For example: I am going backward.
You Are OK points up. For example: I look up to you; think well of you; admire you.
You are Not-OK points down. For example: I look down on you; think poorly of you; give
you a put down.
When used for named people, insert the first persons name at the ends of the horizontal axis and
the other persons name at the ends of the vertical axis.
People form alliances, friendships. The I Am OK (or Not-OK) becomes a We after I and
You have negotiated to become a We; You recruit Me or I recruit You, either way. The
We are now dealing with others. The others can be a You (singular or plural), He, She,
Named Person, They or Named Group. Then the We are listed on either end of the horizontal
axis instead of I and the other party on either end of the vertical axis.
You Are OK Strokes: for example Either way (you take it), you are OK with me! Its on
me! Treat is on me!
I Am OK Strokes: for example Either way (you take it) I AM OK! Its on you, if you will
be OK with me or not!
I Am Not-OK Strokes: for example Its because of me! Its my fault!
You Are Not-OK Strokes: for example (the jeers, put downs and psychological rackets) Its
because of you! (Its ALL MY FAULT means It is your fault!)
All four kinds of strokes are useful.
Transactions of games are built on combinations of the four kinds of strokes: they will usually
include more than one stroking (dynamic) arrow in the transactions given and received.
SOCIAL PROCESS is the long range trend of a persons or a groups life.
In closing: the strokes a person exchanges during his/her encounters with others (encounter by
encounter) have consequences.
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