Transactional Analysis delineates three observable ego-states (Parent, Adult, and Child) as the basis for the content and quality of interpersonal communication. "Happy childhood" notwithstanding,... This description may be from another edition of this product.
As good as it was when first published...even more meaningful after 30 years. As valid now as it was then.
Very stimulating and enlightening book!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
I would recommend this book to anyone who wants to understand his or her behaviour in situations.The "A-Ha" feeling you get when you start reading it comes when you understand why so-and-so makes you feel small or angry and why certain situations make you start playing some game.It discusses the basic terminologies and vocabulary needed and then goes on to discuss in different social contexts and developmental contexts the application of Transaction Analysis.This is not just a vague psychology book like Freud. It is extremely practical and insightful.
It works
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
This is a must read for people who want to understand themselves and other people better. I agree that the idea of child-adult-parent may not reflect the exact way how our brains work but it provides an easy-understandable terminilogy to describe and think about our behaviour. The most interesting thing in any reading is not just getting some information but thinking about what you read and this book opens you a new way to do it. It really works for me, thanks to Thomas Harris and Eric Berne.
We're OK
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
An outstanding self-help book discussing human behavior based on transactional analysis, in an easy to understand language while still technical.
The truth about how our minds work
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
I read this book when I was eleven years old, and somehow, I was just old enough to understand it. While Freud uses smoke and mirror terms like "id", "ego" and "super ego", Harris uses simple terms like "child", "adult" and "parent", meaning roughly the same thing but being more accessible. He starts the book off with a chapter on experiments that were performed, involving electrical stimulation to certain areas of exposed brains during surgery. These experiments yielded some of the first and most important discoveries ever made into how our minds work. Then he uses the findings to explain the rest. This is good stuff, beautifully done. Having read this book almost thirty years ago, I can promise you, you'll never forget this one.
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