Orientation on ‘Visions of the Good’: A Narrative Analysis of Life Stories of Patients with Personality Disorders
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Results
2.1. Respect for the Other
2.1.1. Respect for Others in the Pre-Treatment Stories
2.1.2. Respect for Others in the Post-Treatment Stories
2.2. Recognition for the Self
2.2.1. Recognition for the Self in the Pre-Treatment Stories
2.2.2. Recognition for the Self in the Post-Treatment Stories
2.3. Sources of a Full Life
2.3.1. Sources of a Full Life in the Pre-Treatment Stories
2.3.2. Sources of a Full Life in the Post-Treatment Stories
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. Participants
3.2. Materials
3.3. Method of Analysis
4. Conclusions
- In the second story, parents stand less for the ‘good’ and others are more important.
- In the second story there is more recognition and appreciation for the vulnerable side of the respondents, where the ‘good’ does not work.
- More descriptions of feeling vulnerable, guilty, ashamed (lack of finding ‘the good’ within oneself) are found in the second story.
- In the second story, several visions of the ‘good’, which in the first story can be seen as sources of meaningful life, are no longer mentioned (animals, philosophy, gaming).
- In the second story, several respondents conclude with poetic statements in which they indicate that they have achieved ‘good’ through therapy.
- We see a dynamic between the map and being located on the map and the reachability of the ‘visions of the good’ on the map.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | Heels in the sand is a dutch saying for being reluctant. |
2 | Zwaluw & Enk (a part of GGz Centraal). |
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The Other | ‘Respect for the Other’ Respondents | Others Show the Lack of the Good Respondents |
---|---|---|
Father | r6, r9, r14 | r25, r31, r20, r15 |
Mother | r5, r6, r8, r10, r14, r21 | |
Brothers, sisters | r15, r16, r3, r14, r10, r22, r31, r33 | r29, r8, r10 |
Family | r3, r19 | |
Grandfather | r31 | |
Aunt & uncle | r33 | |
Romantic relationship | r6, r8, r9 | r22, r8 |
Class at school | r29, r16, r25 | r6, r22 |
Teacher | r15 | |
Little or no ‘other’ | r9, r22, r17 |
Others | Increase of ‘Respect’ | Decrease of ‘Respect’ |
---|---|---|
Parents | r5 & 29 | r6, r14, r15, r21, r31 |
Others | r8, r10, r15, r19, r20, r22 | r9, r17, r15 |
Sources of Recognition for the Self in the First Life Story | Respondents |
---|---|
Parents | r21, r10, r5, r6 |
Sports | r3, r5, r6, r21, r22, r33 |
School | r6, r17, r29, r21, r22 |
Work | r5, r15 |
Online | r10, r19 |
Being caring or responsible | r14, r19, r20, r22 |
Theirselves | r25, r29 |
(Losing) weight | r14, r19, r29, r33 |
Sources of ‘Fulness’ | Respondents | |
---|---|---|
1 | A romantic relationship | r6, r25, r10, r14 |
2 | Social contacts | r14, r20, r21, r17 |
3 | Faith | r14, r22, r25 |
4 | Nieces/nephews | r14, r22 |
5 | A home | r5, r16, r19, r20, r29 |
6 | Performing in sports and school | r5, r6, r21 |
7 | Tranquility | r3, r16, r21, r29, r31 |
8 | Hobbies | r29, r10, r19, r31, r33, r3 |
9 | (Contact with) animals | r8, r10, r19, r31, r33 |
Striving for the ‘Good’ beyond the Horizon | Respondents |
---|---|
Getting better | r15, r29, r25, r3, r5 |
Becoming someone else | r3 |
Becoming myself | r31 |
Working on myself | r10, r15 |
Finding answers within myself | r5 |
Not to survive but to live | r5, r8 |
Happiness | r3, r5, r9, r15 |
Livegoal/philosophy | r15, r22, r29 |
Sources | Respondents | Shift | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | A romantic relationship | r6, r10, r14, r25 | Decrease |
2 | Social contacts | r14, r17, r20, r21 | Increase |
3 | Faith | r14, r22, r25 | Increase |
4 | Nieces/nephews | r14, r22 | Same |
5 | A home | r5, r16, r19, r20, r29 | Decrease |
6 | Performing in sports and school | r5, r6, r21 | Decrease |
7 | Tranquility | r3, r16, r21, r29, r31 | Decrease |
8 | Hobby’s | r29, r10, r19, r31, r33, r3 | Decrease |
9 | (Contact with) animals | r8, r10, r19, r31, r33 | Decrease |
The Good beyond the Horizon | Respondent 1st Life Story | 2nd Life Story |
---|---|---|
Therapy | r3, r5, r25 | Positively described: r3, r5, r6, r9, r19, r20 |
Getting bettter | r3, r5, r15, r25, r29, | No longer mentioned |
Becoming someone else | r3 | ‘succeeded’ (r3) |
Becoming oneself | r31 | ‘i did it’ (r31) |
Working on myself | r10, r15 | No longer mentioned |
Finding answers within myself | r5 | ‘succeeded’ (r5) |
Not to survive but to live | r5, r8 | ‘i’m no longer just surviving’ (r5) |
Happiness | r3, r5, r9, r15 | ‘on my way to happiness’ (r5) ‘made it’ r9 |
Livegoal/philosophy | r15, r22, r29 | less strongly mentioned |
NR. | NR. | Sex | Age | Education | Diagnosis DSM-IV |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 3 | F | 18–20 | Higher professional, NF | Borderline PD, depression |
2 | 5 | M | 28–30 | Higher professional, first year finished | Obsessive compulsive PD, depression recurrent |
3 | 6 | M | 22–24 | Higher professional, NF | Narcissistic, dysthymia somatoform disorder, depression, |
4 | 7 | M | 22–24 | Secondary professional | Borderline PS, substance dependence in early remission, recurrent major depressive disorder in partial remission |
5 | 8 | F | 28–30 | Higher professional | PD NOSand dysthymia |
6 | 9 | F | 26–28 | Higher professional | Borderline PD |
7 | 10 | M | 22–24 | Pre-university | Avoidant PD, depression recurrent in partial remission |
8 | 14 | F | 22–24 | Bachelor university | PD NOS, dysthymia, eating disorder |
9 | 15 | F | 22–24 | High school | Borderline PD, alcohol abuse, ADHD |
10 | 16 | F | 18–20 | Secondary vocational, Secondary vocational, not finished | Borderline and avoidant PD, ADD and recurrent depression |
11 | 17 | F | 18–20 | University, not finished | PD NOS |
12 | 19 | F | 22–24 | Secondary vocational | Avoidant, Obsessive-compulsive and Borderline PD, Undifferentiated Somatofom Disorder, eating disorder |
13 | 20 | F | 24–26 | High school | Avoidant PD, pain disorder |
14 | 21 | M | 24–26 | Higher professional, not finished | Avoidant PD |
15 | 22 | F | 28–30 | Secondary vocational | PD NOS |
16 | 25 | M | 20–22 | Secondary vocational | Borderline PD and PD NOS, alcohol abuse, Major Depressive Disorder, Moderate. |
17 | 29 | F | 18–20 | Secondary vocational | Avoidant PD and dysthymia and post traumatic stress disorder |
18 | 31 | F | 24–26 | Bachelor university | PS NOS and ADD |
19 | 33 | F | 18–20 | High school not finished | PD NOS |
Taylor (1989) | Hermans and Hermans-Jansen (1995) | The ‘Good’ | |
---|---|---|---|
1. | Respect for the other, the other seen as autonomous and worthy of respect | O-motives: connectedness, surrendering (longing for) contact with others, care, love, closeness, appreciation | The other shows the ‘good’ to the respondent or is the ‘good’ for the respondent |
2. | Recognition for the self, Appreciation, self-worth | S-motives: self-affirmation, autonomous, pride, strength, success, self-confidence, capability | The ‘good’ is integrated in the self |
3. | Visions of a full life: fullness, depth, worth, richness | The ‘good’ is that which makes life worth living | |
+ | Orientation, integration of the ‘good’ | joy, happiness, and inner calm | The ‘good’ is within reach |
- | Disorientation, loss of the ‘good’ | sorrow, misfortune, and disappointment | The ‘good’ is out of reach |
Aspect of the ‘Good’ | Lifestory 1 | Lifestory 2 | Shift | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Respect for the other | The ‘good’ | Described as within reach | Described as out of reach | The ‘good’ | Described as within reach | Described as out of reach | Did the description of the ‘good’ change? More or less described or weaker or stronger? |
Recognition for the self | The ‘good’ | Described as within reach | Described as out of reach | The ‘good’ | Described as within reach | Described as out of reach | Did the description of the ‘good’ change? More or less described or weaker or stronger? |
Visions of a full life | The ‘good’ | Described as within reach | Described as out of reach | The ‘good’ | Described as within reach | Described as out of reach | Did the description of the ‘good’ change? More or less described or weaker or stronger? |
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de Kubber, S.P.; Steen, A.; Schuhmann, C.; Braam, A.W. Orientation on ‘Visions of the Good’: A Narrative Analysis of Life Stories of Patients with Personality Disorders. Religions 2022, 13, 902. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100902
de Kubber SP, Steen A, Schuhmann C, Braam AW. Orientation on ‘Visions of the Good’: A Narrative Analysis of Life Stories of Patients with Personality Disorders. Religions. 2022; 13(10):902. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100902
Chicago/Turabian Stylede Kubber, Sylvie P., Angelien Steen, Carmen Schuhmann, and Arjan W. Braam. 2022. "Orientation on ‘Visions of the Good’: A Narrative Analysis of Life Stories of Patients with Personality Disorders" Religions 13, no. 10: 902. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100902
APA Stylede Kubber, S. P., Steen, A., Schuhmann, C., & Braam, A. W. (2022). Orientation on ‘Visions of the Good’: A Narrative Analysis of Life Stories of Patients with Personality Disorders. Religions, 13(10), 902. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel13100902