Medved Maria I, Brockmeier Jens
Department of Psychology, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.
Qual Health Res. 2008 Apr;18(4):469-79. doi: 10.1177/1049732308315731.
In serious illness or disability, individuals commonly say that their sense of self has dramatically changed. One might expect that the experience of a radically altered sense of self would be even more profound in individuals after neurotrauma because it is the brain itself that suddenly, and often literally, becomes "strange." The aim of this study was to investigate how people left with autobiographical memory impairments--impairments that also affect the capacity to organize complex linguistic productions such as autobiographical narratives--experience themselves and, specifically, their sense of self. Seven adults who had primarily anterograde memory impairments for 1 year were interviewed. Regardless of the profound changes in their everyday functioning and lives, the stories the participants told evoke a surprising sense of a continuous self. Employing several narrative and discursive techniques, they emphasized sameness and an unbroken connection between their pre- and post-morbid lives. We believe that most individuals felt they did not have to recover their former sense of self because they subjectively seemed to have never lost it.
在身患重病或残疾时,人们通常会表示自己的自我认知发生了巨大变化。人们可能会认为,对于经历神经创伤后的个体而言,自我认知发生彻底改变的体验会更加深刻,因为正是大脑本身突然且往往是实实在在地变得“陌生”了。本研究的目的是调查那些存在自传体记忆障碍的人——这些障碍也会影响组织复杂语言表达(如自传体叙事)的能力——如何体验自我,特别是他们的自我认知。对7名主要存在顺行性记忆障碍达1年之久的成年人进行了访谈。尽管他们的日常功能和生活发生了深刻变化,但参与者讲述的故事却唤起了一种令人惊讶的连续自我感。通过运用多种叙事和话语技巧,他们强调了患病前和患病后的生活之间的相同之处以及不间断的联系。我们认为,大多数个体觉得他们不必恢复以前的自我认知,因为从主观上看,他们似乎从未失去过它。