Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1664042> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 32 of
32
with 100 triples per page.
- Q1664042 subject Q6381219.
- Q1664042 subject Q7604558.
- Q1664042 subject Q8569052.
- Q1664042 abstract "In popular psychology and analytical psychology, inner child is our childlike aspect. It includes all that we learned and experienced as children, before puberty. The inner child denotes a semi-independent entity subordinate to the waking conscious mind.The inner child is the best known lower third of a comprehensive model of the human psyche called the Three Selves.The term has manifold therapeutic applications in counseling and holistic health settings primarily. The first comprehensive method of reparenting the Inner Child in therapy was originated by Art Therapist, Dr. Lucia Capacchione, in 1976 and documented in her book, Recovery of Your Inner Child (1991). Using art therapy and journaling techniques, her method includes a Nurturing Parent and Protective Parent within (Inner Family Work) to care for ones physical, emotional, creative and spiritual needs (her definition of the Inner Child). It also acknowledges a Critical Parent Within and provides tools for managing it. John Bradshaw, a U.S. educator, pop psychology and self-help movement leader, famously used "inner child" to point to unresolved childhood experiences and the lingering dysfunctional effects of childhood dysfunction. In this way "inner child" refers to all of the sum of mental-emotional memories stored in the sub-conscious from conception thru pre-puberty.The Twelve-step program recovery movement considers healing the inner child to be one of the essential stages in recovery from addiction, abuse, trauma, or post-traumatic stress disorder. In the 1970s, the inner child concept emerged alongside the clinical concept of codependency (first called Adult Children of Alcoholics Syndrome.). These topics remain very active today?".
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q1349261.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q1699390.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q1752500.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q182413.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q1874033.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q202387.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q21109.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q2135807.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q2308579.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q245169.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q245179.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q392963.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q41532.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q4445031.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q5083501.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q5253511.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q600571.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q6047656.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q623513.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q6381219.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q6498453.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q654426.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q7604558.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q785653.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q8569052.
- Q1664042 wikiPageWikiLink Q882773.
- Q1664042 comment "In popular psychology and analytical psychology, inner child is our childlike aspect. It includes all that we learned and experienced as children, before puberty. The inner child denotes a semi-independent entity subordinate to the waking conscious mind.The inner child is the best known lower third of a comprehensive model of the human psyche called the Three Selves.The term has manifold therapeutic applications in counseling and holistic health settings primarily.".
- Q1664042 label "Inner child".