Russia has a special style of communication, and much of it seems strange to a European. Barely familiar people freely exchange stories from their personal lives, do not hesitate to comment, they can offend — or they can unexpectedly help. Does this mean that the boundaries of our personality are more mobile or more blurred — and how should this affect the work of a psychotherapist?
Russia has a special style of communication, and much of it seems strange to a European. Barely familiar people freely exchange stories from their personal lives, do not hesitate to comment, they can offend — or they can unexpectedly help. Does this mean that the boundaries of our personality are more mobile or more blurred — and how should this affect the work of a psychotherapist? Should we change models based on European experience, or, on the contrary, insist on their literal application, “Europeanizing” our clients? These issues are the subject of a study by the Jungian analyst Vsevolod Kalinenko.
COGITO-CENTER, 233 p.