The term mind games refers to three main categories:[citation needed]
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'The struggle for prestige...in the imaginary'[3] formed for Jacques Lacan one of the major fields of human interaction. Such 'competiveness...a lot of rivalry about'[4] is perhaps most prevalent in Type A personalities, so that for example the wary salesman will know that 'selling to the highly driven person means facing some of the most challenging mind games you'll ever encounter..arrogance, impatience, or condescension'.[5]
However, in all office politics 'envy, rivalry, power conflicts...discord and intrigues, are a matter of course';[6] and the 'passive aggressive...[who] took secret revenge, often quite unconsciously'[7] may well be quite as dangerous a game-player as the 'driven...[who] might pull a few overly aggressive mind tricks'.[8]
'Women use the term mind games to refer to the ways their partners undermine their confidence in their own perceptions'.[9] Thus 'Jill may act upon Jack in many ways...He may invalidate her experience...invalidate not only the significance, modality, and content, but her very capacity to remember at all, and make her feel guilty for doing so into the bargain'.[10] Such abusive mind games may extend to 'discounting (denial of the victim's reality), diverting...trivializing, undermining, threatening...and - most important - anger'.[11]
It is clear however that 'verbal coercion is truly an equal-opportunity behavior'[12] - open to each or both sexes. 'This may be done unintentionally as a by-product of each person's self-deception...It is impossible for me to maintain a false picture of myself unless I falsify your picture of yourself and of me'.[13] With straight talk at one end of a scale, 'at the other end of a theoretical scale, conversations can be characterized by the presence of numerous disclaimed, unavowed, contradictory, and paradoxical implications, or "insinuendoes"'.[14]
A great deal of such competitive mind games would seem to fall into the category of Berne's game, "Now I've Got You, You Son of a Bitch", with its motto, 'I've been watching you, hoping you'd make a slip': in therapy, the protagonist might have 'recalled that ever since early childhood he had looked for similar injustices, received them with delight and exploited them with the same vigour'.[15] NIGYSOB is however only one in a (far from exhaustive) set of around thirty-five games explicated in Berne's bestseller on the subject.
'Games are so predominant and deep-rooted in society that they tend to become institutionalized, that is, played according to rules that everybody knows about and more or less agrees to' - as with the game of "Alcoholic" and its associated 'organizations like Alcoholics Anonymous...there is also a formal organization known as Alanon for wives and families of alcoholics'.[16]
Psychological games vary widely in degrees of pleasantness. Berne himself may have been speaking from personal experience when he recommended that, when faced at parties with 'an attempt to exploit professional knowledge' in a game of "Why Don't You - Yes But", 'the best policy under those circumstances is to flee from the opening move and look for a stimulating game of first-degree "Rapo"'[17] - flirtation.
Berne recognised however that 'since by definition games are based on ulterior transactions, they must all have some element of exploitation'.[18] The therapeutic ideal he offered was to stop playing games altogether: 'try not playing long enough so that your favourite players will realize you have stopped and they may stop too....If things go well, you'll get your reward in good pay-offs instead of bad ones'.[19]
There is also the category of the self-empowering 'mind game: mental exercises...in the context of therapy: mind games, socio and psycho dramas, fantasy workshops and the like'.[20] These (like the Lennon song "Mind Games") might ultimately be seen as a New Age outgrowth of Yoga, as 'a technique of self-development...consist[ing] of physical and mental disciplines'.[21]
Mind games are a largely conscious struggle for psychological one-upmanship
Mind Games or Mind Game may also refer to:
Mind Games is the 11th studio album by British blues harmonica player Paul Lamb and his band The King Snakes. This album sees him and his band recording a collection of home-penned numbers and a few blues standards.
Ian William West (born 3 August 1951) is an Australian politician and former Australian Labor Party member of the New South Wales Legislative Council, serving from 2000 until his retirement in 2011.
Ian West was born on 3 August 1951 to parents Bill and Rita, one of three siblings. Raised in the Western Suburbs of Sydney, he attended Bass High School. Ian West attended University of Technology Sydney to study law. He obtained a distinction in Advanced Industrial Law, but ultimately did not complete his degree.
He joined the Chester Hill branch of the Australian Labor Party in 1968. He became an organizer for the NSW Federated Miscellaneous Workers' Union in 1976. He was elected NSW Assistant Secretary of the Liquor Hospitality and Miscellaneous Workers' Union in 1981 and held that role until 2000. In 1991 he became a member of the New South Wales Administrative Committee, and remained a member until 2001.
Ian West was touted for nomination to the New South Wales Legislative Council in 1998 when he faced a party pre-selection battle for the vacancy caused by the departure of Ann Symonds. Ian West was not successful at that pre-selection.
The Conservative Party of Canada ran a full slate of 308 candidates in the 2006 Canadian federal election. Some of these candidates have separate biography pages; relevant information about other candidates may be found here.
The candidates are listed by province and riding name.
Fabian Manning won in this riding he received 19,132 votes. Defeating Liberal Candidate Bill Morrow's 14,318 votes.
Aaron Hynes lost to Scott Simms of the Liberal Party of Canada. Hynes received 15,376 votes to Simms' 19,866.
Cyril Pelley, Jr. lost to incumbent Gerry Byrne of the Liberal Party of Canada. Pelley received 10,137 votes to Byrne's 17,820.
Goudie lost to Todd Russell of the Liberal Party of Canada, receiving 4,528 votes to Russell's 5,768.
We're playing those mind games together
Pushing the barriers planting seeds
Playing the mind guerrilla
Chanting the Mantra peace on earth
We all been playing those mind games forever
Some kinda druid dudes lifting the veil
Doing the mind guerrilla
Some call it magic the search for the grail
Love is the answer and you know that for sure
Love is a flower you got to let it grow
So keep on playing those mind games together
Faith in the future out of the now
You just can't beat on those mind guerrillas
Absolute elsewhere in the stones of your mind
Yeah we're playing those mind games together
Projecting our images in space and in time
Yes is the answer and you know that for sure
Yes is surrender you got to let it go
So keep on playing those mind games together
Doing the ritual dance in the sun
Millions of mind guerrillas
Putting their soul power to the karmic wheel
Keep on playing those mind games together
Raising the spirit of peace and love
(I want you to make love, not war