The Encounterer

     ListeningActivity.com           01/28/12

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THE ENCOUNTERER

                   An Information Service of the Golden Gate Foundation for Group Treatment, Inc.

 

 

 

Archives of  The Encounterer

(listed below)

 

          "The Encounterer" was the newsletter of the Golden Gate Foundation For Group Treatment, Inc.  It was written and edited by Franklin H. Ernst Jr., M.D.

          Many of Dr. Ernst's contributions to Transactional Analysis were introduced and developed in "The Encounterer." These included carrying forward Dr. Berne's earliest thoughts about OKness (I'm OK and You're OK, I'm OK and You are not-OK, I'm not-OK and You are OK, I'm not-OK and You are not-OK). See also the "Transactional Analysis Bulletin", not listed here. Berne's initial quest was to define the decision, commitment, and position that a small person made and commits his life to proving is reasonable. Dr. Ernst carried this thinking forward and kept the work of Tom A. Harris M.D. in mind ( See "I'm OK, You're OK" by Dr. Harris). Dr. Ernst showed that the idea of OKness is much more than a fixed life position. A person's OKness or not-OKness is in every day events and their dynamic movements, eg. get-on-with, get-away-from, get-nowhere-with, and get-away-from. These terms describe dynamic movements in life with the expenditure of energy that occurs between individuals during their social encounters.

          Another contribution by Dr. Ernst, initially presented in The Encounterer, was the theory of specific finite and describable moves within the fabric of social games. Specific moves in the colloquial are "Hook", "Angle", "Con", "Gimmick", and "Payoff". In more formal language (1) the "Hook" is the Tentative Angular Transaction, (2) the "Angle" is the Committed Angular Transaction, (3) the "Con" is the Tentative Duplex Transaction, (4) the "Gimmick" is the Committed Duplex Transaction, (5) and the concluding move is the Denouement, The Payoff.

         Dr Ernst has told the story of an event that occurred during the time of his association with Dr. Berne. "Berne told us and showed us of having received a private written warning from Sam Slavson. Berne read it to some of us after the conclusion of a teaching seminar." Berne also wrote (and copied here from the Transactional Analysis Bulletin 2:5, Jan. 1963, pg 45) it reads in part: "... The fact that we are beginning to get in people's way and that one eminent gentleman even proposes to 'eradicate' us as 'weeds that blemish his creation' ... S.R. Slavson, Acta psychother. 10:62-73, 1962."  As some of us have witnessed Sam Slavson's promised destruction, most of our seminars were destroyed. Some have remembered Slavson treat patients. Currently this writer does not know of any Transactional Seminars that continue in existence. Every single one of the hundreds of TA seminars previously in existence have seemingly had troubles "of their own making" and have fallen apart, ostensibly due to character problems of those holding these seminars together and leading them. This writer knew Sam Slavson fairly well and this writer knew Eric Berne M.D. quite well. Sam arrived in the USA from Romania in 1922. He founded The American Group Psychotherapy Association. It continues today. Its current "treatment standards" as read by the writer look pretty tough to meet for a "new treater."

           

            As a service of the non-profit Golden Gate Foundation for Group Treatment, Inc. the single sheet news service was started, THE ENCOUNTERER.  A total of thirty-nine (39) issues of The Encounterer were published. The original images are presented here to show how they looked in the beginning and new images have been created in order to make for easier reading.

 

 

               Original Photocopy Images (PDF)          New Images (PDF)                 Combined Newsletters (PDF)

             

                     Volume 1, No. 1                           Volume 1, No. 1                     Volume 1, No.'s 1-20

                     Volume 1, No. 2                           Volume 1, No. 2                     Volume 2, No.'s 21-39

                     Volume 1, No. 3                           Volume 1, No. 3

                     Volume 1, No. 4                           Volume 1, No. 4

                     Volume 1, No. 5                           Volume 1, No. 5

                     Volume 1, No. 6                           Volume 1, No. 6

                     Volume 1, No. 7                           Volume 1, No. 7

                     Volume 1, No. 8                           Volume 1, No. 8

                     Volume 1, No. 9                           Volume 1, No. 9

                     Volume 1, No. 10                         Volume 1, No. 10

                     Volume 1, No. 11                         Volume 1, No. 11

                     Volume 1, No. 12                         Volume 1, No. 12

                     Volume 1, No. 13                         Volume 1, No. 13

                     Volume 1, No. 14                         Volume 1, No. 14

                     Volume 1, No. 15                         Volume 1, No. 15

                     Volume 1, No. 16                         Volume 1, No. 16

                     Volume 1, No. 17                         Volume 1, No. 17

                     Volume 1, No. 18                         Volume 1, No. 18

                     Volume 1, No. 19                         Volume 1, No. 19

                     Volume 1, No. 20                         Volume 1, No. 20

                     Volume 2, No. 21                         Volume 2, No. 21

                     Volume 2, No. 22                         Volume 2, No. 22

                     Volume 2, No. 23                         Volume 2, No. 23

                     Volume 2, No. 24                         Volume 2, No. 24

                     Volume 2, No. 25                         Volume 2, No. 25

                     Volume 2, No. 26                         Volume 2, No. 26

                     Volume 2, No. 27                         Volume 2, No. 27

                     Volume 2, No. 28                         Volume 2, No. 28

                     Volume 2, No. 29                         Volume 2, No. 29

                     Volume 2, No. 30                         Volume 2, No. 30

                     Volume 2, No. 31                         Volume 2, No. 31

                     Volume 2, No. 32                         Volume 2, No. 32

                     Volume 2, No. 33                         Volume 2, No. 33

                     Volume 2, No. 34                         Volume 2, No. 34

                     Volume 2, No. 35                         Volume 2, No. 35

                     Volume 2, No. 36                         Volume 2, No. 36

                     Volume 2, No. 37                         Volume 2, No. 37

                     Volume 2, No. 38                         Volume 2, No. 38

                     Volume 2, No. 39                         Volume 2, No. 39

 

 

The Encounterer

 

Copyright  2012

Copying for non-commercial purposes is authorized.

Permission to use, to copy granted when source credited.

     Permission is hereby granted to any person, magazine, newspaper, other periodical, or media to reprint any monograph or art work on this web site in any single issue of the periodical in question, so long as two conditions are met: (1) the monograph or art work is printed word for word, including diagrams, figures, and footnotes, and (2) the following reference is given at the bottom of the first page on which the reprinted article begins:  "This article (name of title, author's name) is published by Franklin "Harry" Ernst III, Addresso'Set Publications, P.O. Box 3009, Vallejo, California  94590, USA,

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