SOCIAL DEPTH PSYCHOLOGY II
Adam Blatner, M.D.
October 21, 2012 (Check out on "Papers" above other
papers on sociometry, tele, our social being-ness, and others.
This is another webpage supplement to a workshop
that will offer experiential exercises designed to sensitize
participants to the feelings and issues generated in relationships
and groups that have to do with choosing others, being chosen, and
exercising preferences.
The invitational brochure says, “Creating group cohesion and
mutual support is essential to effective group facilitation and
knowing something about the psychology of rapport is a valuable
aspect of a leader's competence. This mainly experiential workshop
will help you learn several group techniques from sociometry that
can instantly bring clarity to a variety of questions you or
the group may have, and you will become more alert to the issues
and dynamics already happening in your groups. These exercises can
easily develop into further group work. We look forward to a fun
and useful workshop!"
Social Depth Psychology (abbreviated as SDP) looks at how very
deep the feelings are that are associated with choosing and being
chosen, feeling unchosen by those whom you chose, wanting to not
hurt other people’s feelings, and the like. This is the general
field that was opened up by Jacob L. Moreno’s method in
sociometry, developed in the 1930s, actually before he invented
psychodrama!
SDP represents an arena that operates between individual depth
psychology and social psychology. I don’t think that either
theories and methods in individual psychology and psychotherapy,
nor social psychology, adequately deals with these phenomena. For
the most part, group therapies touch on it but also often
mis-diagnose these interactions, interpreting them in terms of
transferences rather than real interactions.
SDP has to do with how people feel about real interactions—not
transferences— that occur among people. These interactions are
based on rapport. (Moreno called these types of interactions
“tele.” We can be attracted to people, indifferent, or feel
repelled by them. What’s all that about? That realm is what I call
SDP. There are many papers on sociometry and tele on my website,
and many references, also. I suggest that you begin to read them.
(Sociometry is an imprecise term, referring to both the method and
the field examined. At first it wasn’t clear what was being
examined. The method picks up preferences and other patterns, but
there’s much in this realm that’s missed. An analogy might be the
way the microscope did much to open up the field of microbiology,
but that field turned out to be far broader and more complex than
what could be elucidated (literally) by the microscope itself.
Viruses, for instance, had to be assessed indirectly, in terms of
evidence of antibodies that were evoked by an infection. SDP is
similarly much broader than what can be demonstrated by
sociometry. It’s thus a new, open field and one begins wherever
one can.)
About the Session
This session will offer you some experiential exercises that
I hope will sensitize you to an important dimension of psychology
that I call “social depth psychology,” which is based on Moreno’s
ideas based on his sociometric methods. I think knowing something
about this is important for those who want to develop their skills
in drama therapy or related fields.
Basically, most schools of individual-oriented psychology and
psychotherapy don’t pay enough attention to the many variations
and nuances of social psychology—especially those dynamics that
deal with the phenomena of rapport, why we feel more attracted to
this one, or slightly repelled by that person. Hint: It’s not
always projection or transference. Those are crude concepts that
deserve refinement.
Sociology, on the other hand is too gross, also, and doesn’t
address how sensitive we are to slight shifts in status or whether
we’re being given enough respect, and many other phenomena. This
stuff rattles around deep, so it’s a depth psychology.
Object relations theory in psychoanalysis is close, but doesn’t
deal with variations in context. I want to connect with A in some
roles but not in others. Likewise, B is preferable in certain
roles over A, although the opposite is true when it comes to
certain other roles. In other words, as with so many other fields,
there is a complexity that needs to be addressed and we have some
tools that can begin to do that.
So it’s in-between social psychology and certain aspects of depth
psychology—social depth psychology—how we feel deep down about how
we sense we’re liked, rejected, esteemed, connected, and how we
want to connect in turn, and all that.
Developmentally it’s big: There’s a major disconnect between the
narcissistic and normal desire to be loved by everyone—perfectly
okay for a 5 year old—and another part of the psyche is yet able
to notice that the kid prefers this relative or playmate over that
one. This disconnect continues and enlarges when we’re 8 - 15—we
are hurt deeply by cues that we’re not always liked or preferred
not only by those we’d prefer, but often by anyone. Yet our own
discriminations become even finer—it turns out that an increasing
percentage of the total population is not particularly
preferred—not that they’ve done anything wrong—they’re just
not in our field of interest or value. So SDP is wide open for
your thoughts.
Indeed, I beg you to check out my website and comment or
question. I’ll mention you if I use your ideas. What’s with
this field? I’m clear there is much room for expansion. Also, it
overlaps with scores of related fields, from marketing to
conference planning to how to be a better host for a party.
About the Exercises
The first group of exercises deal with what others call
near-sociometry—not dealing with preferences so much as just
making what’s implicit in the group a bit more explicit. Here are
a couple of techniques.
First is the spectrogram—which involves the
warming-up process of getting you out of your chair and mixing
with others, making eye contact, hearing your own voice in
interaction with others, speaking up, being tempted to not speak
up. The spectrogram recognizes that folks’ preferences and other
variables are relative, not just either or, and in many ways we
fall somewhere in the middle, more than some, less than others.
Step-In Sociometry
The second technique is a different warm-up: Am I the only weirdo
in the group? I used to x and still do y, but I don’t know
if anyone else does. How to find out. All those who x step in and
you can see which of the others has shared that experience.
Choosing and Being Chosen
Now some beginning sociometry exercises. The game is to resist the
strong temptation to just turn to the person next to you—that, by
the way is called propinquity—the gravitational social pull of
simple proximity. Resist that and allow yourself to notice someone
across the room who in any way intrigues you. Notice a couple.
When I say go, go make contact, pair up, leave the center of the
room so others can find each other. Talk about why you chose
each other.
I’m warming you up to this funny dynamic: choice. People are
always choosing each other. Which people or groups do we walk up
to at a gathering event or party? How do we welcome or snub others
when they approach us? What’s that largely unconscious dynamic
about?
What we’re talking about with SDP is becoming a bit more
explicitly aware, more sensitive, to what was for most people a
rather intuitive choice process and actually bring consciousness
to experimenting with it.
Let’s do this exercise again, make a circle, and we’ll choose
someone else—only this time, add a variation: If you tended to go
forward and choose, hang back just a little and see who chooses
you; if you hung back, push yourself to be a bit more forward and
take the initiative. Talk for five minutes about what that was
like.
Opportunities to Learn by Repeated Choosing
The next point is to know that we choose people based on scores of
subtle cues, a few obvious ones, sometimes cues you’ve learned to
notice and others don’t, etc. There’s a real hunger to make
connections and see how it works out, especially if it’s set up so
there’s not a lot of risk, loss of energy, time, money,
commitment, etc. It’s fun to be in a structured setting when all
that is taken care of by the group leader. Sociometry as a method
can be a bit like speed dating.
But the problem with choice is that you may be chosen for criteria
that are irrelevant to you, or the criteria that are relevant are
not clearly known to others. In other words, self-disclosure.
Marketing what’s truly relevant to you: Do others know what that
is? Do you know what that is?
So in this sense, sociometry is a shuffling and
redistribution and a chance to find out in a relatively safe
exploratory process.
There are two types of choice making. One is based on common
interest—and it’s called a socio-telic preference. Tele is
Moreno’s word for rapport, and socio-telic criteria are those that
you want to find someone who shares a political attitude, a social
concern, a religious commitment— and as they say,
sometimes these click and sometimes, well, politics makes strange
bedfellows.
The second, other type of rapport is called psyche-tele. You may
or may not have some things in common, but mainly , or in
addition, you just feel good with them for personal reasons. As
Sancho Panza, Don Quixote’s side-kick in the Broadway Musical, Man
from La Mancha, sings about his choice to hang out with this
weirdo, “I like him. I really like him.” And there are
connections that have this mysterious and not easily explained
feeling-connection.
Sometimes we like people with whom we have little in common. More
often we have some things in common and the psyche-telic
connection then adds yet another level to the rapport. Or on the
other hand, we might make a connection based on a common interest
but it turns out we rub each other wrong. Funny, but oh, well.
You can’t design psyche-telic connections—they happen or they
don’t. But you can increase the chances of their happening by
increasing the freedom to seek, explore, mix, compare, and find
intuitively, increasing the overall interpersonal freedom to make
informal connections. This could happen a lot more than it does.
One way to help this happen more is to get in touch with what YOU
want to be chosen for. And this has to do with your own
preferences and how overtly you disclose these interests.
That will be the next exercise.
We’ll start with a warming-up of what are you interested in? Let’s
just name some topics for the whiteboard: I’ll start and you chime
in:
Applications of drama in therapy one-to-one.
Working with couples, Or conjoint work with families.
Applications in business, police or crisis
work, with political refugees or traumatized people
How drama can be integreated with spiritual
development? Etc.
Why Hasn’t This Arena Been Investigated Before?
Several reasons: First, the field grows from all directions, and
many people who have come up with theories of personal or
individual psychology tend to explain phenomena in terms of their
own hypotheses. Others who are more sociological just bypass the
individual psychological dynamics of jealousy, envy, and confusion
that are part of SDP. Instead of trying to explain a phenomenon in
terms of other systems, SDP inquires about the interactive
processes themselves.
Of course there are overlaps in psychology—and indeed every
dimension, political, economic, fashion, world-view, and so forth
tends to be either pushed to the side as if it’s not significant
(i.e., “marginalized), or pushed to the center as if it’s the
“real” cause of things. We’re not elevating SDP, but rather just
noting that some dynamics operate in the interpersonal field.
Inter-subjectivity in psychoanalysis is close, but do they deal
with the phenomena that involves real common interests or not, or
real areas of intelligence or simplicity, or culture, or things
that aren’t distortions, but still people don’t allow themselves
to think clearly about them.
Repression and Avoidance of Consciousness.
SDP involves interpersonal connectedness, or the dynamics of
rapport, and these are extraordinary sensitive dynamics. Folks get
deeply hurt, more so because they don’t know how to think about
feeling reactions. Pair this with a culture that has hardly opened
to reflective consciousness—thinking about how we think, so few
really want to know what seems likely to only make them feel bad.
But it’s like swimming. If you know the skill, deep water is fun;
if you don’t have the skill, it is very dangerous.
SDP looks at the phenomena that come up when you anticipate the
possibility of your own feelings being hurt, or your unwillingness
to stir up problems for others. This is more valid for a
non-psychologically-minded and fairly stable culture. It’s less
valid for a culture in transition in many ways and one in which
learning to be more mentally flexible and psychologically-minded
is adaptive.
Psychological-minded-ness is simply an ability to look at the
workings of your own mind, even if only crudely. It’s partly a
willingness to try. It involves knowing that you fool yourself,
and an active interest in correcting those mistakes. It’s
analogous to people finally getting anti-virus programs built into
their computers—something only recently becoming standard. Folks
know there are viruses... programs that are deceptive and that
sabotage your system. What we are not so alert to—it’s not yet
widely taught—that the mind is vulnerable to a host of illusions
and that these may be played upon by advertisers, politicians,
peers, and others to manipulate you. When you know it’s there, you
can watch out.
SDP is another refinement of psychological-awareness: It reminds
you that you can get fooled and manipulated by wanting to be liked
(by everyone), not wanting to hurt anyone’s feelings, and the
like.
Summary
We can’t yet summarize, really, because what’s really going on is
that we’re opening up a field that hasn’t been opened in this way.
Moreno did it a bit with sociometry, but my intuition is that this
all is much bigger than what he was able to say—and he said a lot.
Moreno tended to be grandiose, so he intuited many things that
could come from this opening. I suspect that half of his ideas
were wrong, but I’m not sure which half. So in a way, this is not
meant to be definitive, but rather evocative. Come consider these
issues with me, think about them, and let’s see where it goes.
For responses, email me
at adam@blatner.com
Return
to
top