Abstract

This article uses three clinical vignettes to propose a revised model of the unconscious, arising from “template theory,” which views the individual as possessing multiple “relational templates,” observable patterns of relatedness encoded during development and manifesting themselves in automatic relational behavior. A relational template contains two roles, and either role can be occupied, a phenomenon described as “role exchangeability.” The grouping of template role, with its corresponding affects and memories is defined as a “relational state.” Each relational state has its level of awareness and unawareness, which changes when “state shifting” is initiated by an “activator.” Fluctuating change in the level of unawareness is identified as the “variable unconscious.” Controlled movement between relational states can be directed by the overriding function of an individual's reflective abilities, derived from their “reflective state,” and enhanced by analytic interpretation (which converts procedural phenomena into symbolic thought.)

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