This makes sense to me, but only as a private practice. People that speak of themselves in the third person in public seem to me to lack "intellectual humility".
It's seem like the idea might help in objectifying things that are challenging. It releases you from identifying with the emotion or experience as something that is you or that is part of you.
Absolutely. It was a technique taught to me by my therapist. To inhabit the third person - a "separate observer" - can bring clarity to what is otherwise a blur of feeling.
3 comments:
This makes sense to me, but only as a private practice. People that speak of themselves in the third person in public seem to me to lack "intellectual humility".
It's seem like the idea might help in objectifying things that are challenging. It releases you from identifying with the emotion or experience as something that is you or that is part of you.
Absolutely. It was a technique taught to me by my therapist. To inhabit the third person - a "separate observer" - can bring clarity to what is otherwise a blur of feeling.
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