Script Analysis: Script Analysis Is The Method of Uncovering The 'Early Decisions, Made Unconsciously, As To How Life
Script Analysis: Script Analysis Is The Method of Uncovering The 'Early Decisions, Made Unconsciously, As To How Life
Script analysis is the method of uncovering the 'early decisions, made unconsciously, as to how life
shall be lived'.[1] It is one of the five clusters in transactional analysis, involving 'a progression from
structural analysis, through transactional and game analysis, to script analysis'.[2] Berne focused on
individual and group psychotherapy but today, transactional analysis and script analysis is
considered in organisational settings, educational settings and coaching settings.
The purpose of script analysis is to aid the client (individual or organizational)
to achieve autonomy by recognising the script's influence on values, decisions,
behaviors and thereby allowing them to decide against the script.[3] Berne
describes someone who is autonomous as being 'script free'[4] and as a "real
person".[5] For organizations, autonomy is responding to the here and now
reality, without discounting the past, the present or the possibilities for the
future.
Script analysis at the individual level considers that 'from the early transactions
between mother, father and child, a life plan evolves. This is called the
script...or unconscious life plan'.[6] Script analysts work on the assumption that
a person's behavior is partly programmed by the script, 'the life plan set down
in early life. Fortunately, scripts can be changed, since they are not inborn, but
learned'.[7] Many of these same people developing a life plan, start businesses
or work into leadership positions in organisations. Owners and CEO's bring with
them their life script and have tremendous influence on the fate of the
organisation.
Contents
[hide]
1History
2Winners and losers
3Psychology of human destiny
4Later developments
5Criticism
6See also
7References
8External links
History[edit]
Eric Berne introduced the concept of the script in 'the first complete
presentation, and still the fundamental work on transactional
analysis...Transactional Analysis in Psychotherapy[1961]',[8] since when
'definitive studies of the origins and analysis of scripts are being conducted by
a number of Transactional Analysts'.[9]
In that work, Berne described 'a true long-term script, with all three aspects of
protocol, script proper, and adaptation'.[10] For Berne, 'the household drama
which is played out to an unsatisfactory conclusion in the first years of life is
called the protocol...an archaic version of the Oedipus drama'.[11] Thereafter
'the script proper...is a unconscious derivative of the protocol', which in later
life, as 'compromised in accordance with the available realities...is technically
called the adaptation '.[12]
Berne himself noted that 'of all those who preceded transactional
analysis, Alfred Adler comes the closest to talking like a script analyst,' with his
concept of '"the life plan...which determines his life-line"'. [13]
Linking the script to the repetition compulsion, Berne concluded that 'script analysis
is then the answer to the problem of human destiny, and tells us (alas!) that
our fates are predetermined for the most part, and that free will in this respect
is for most people an illusion'.[21]
Later developments[edit]
'Many authors, after Berne's death, put forward the idea that scripts concern a
general attitude to construct and organize reality...this "open" frame of
reference'[22] linking script analysis to narrative psychology.
In such a perspective, 'the main purpose of script analysis is to elicit the
multiple meanings inherent in a person's life script'.[23]
Fanita English argued that the idea of scripts was associated perhaps too much
with the idea of pathologies, whereas it is an episcript (a concept that she
proposed) which is harmful. Eric Berne makes brief reference to it, calling it an
overscript. English said that, "it is possible for a 'donor' to 'episcript' a
'vulnerable recipient' into taking on a harmful life task, such as murder or
suicide. ... A tragic demonstration of the culmination of an episcript was offered
on 9/11, when perfectly intelligent, educated young men attacked the World
Trade Center Towers in New York at the cost of their own lives after having
carefully planned to do so because they had been episcripted by Osama bin
Laden".[24]
Criticism[edit]
Fanita English considered that 'Berne tried too hard to turn script analysis into a
science...devised far too technical a system for script analysis'.[25]
Others have remarked that 'script analysis...is overly psychoanalytic in attitude
and overly reductionist'.[26]
See also[edit]
Thomas Anthony Harris
Claude Steiner
References[edit]
1. Jump up^ Thomas A. Harris, I'm OK - You're OK (1969) p. 68
2. Jump up^ Richard Nelson-Jones, Theory and Practice of Counselling and Therapy (2006) p. 161
5. Jump up^ What Do You Say After You Say Hello, pg. 350
6. Jump up^ John M. Dusay, "Transactional Analysis", in Eric Berne, A Layman's Guide to Psychiatry and
Psychoanalysis (1976) p. 310 and p. 325
10. Jump up^ Eric Berne, Transactional Analysis in Psychotherapy (1961) p. 117
13. Jump up^ Eric Berne, What Do You Say After You Say Hello? (1974) p. 58
14. Jump up^ Eric Berne, Sex in Human Loving (1070) p. 145
16. Jump up^ Richard G. Abell, Own Your Own Life (1977) p. 99
24. Jump up^ English, F. (2010). "Personal Encounters with a Flawed Genius: Eric Berne". Transactional
Analysis Journal. doi:10.1177/036215371004000305.
25. Jump up^ Fanita English, in Richard G. Erskine, Life Scripts (2010) p. 225
External links[edit]
"The Life Script"