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022_000116/0000

Using Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA) to Assess Recovery Processes. Qualitative analysis of experience and identity

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Szilvia Kassai
Tudományterület
Clinical psychology / Klinikai pszichológia (12749), Addiction sciences / Addikciótudományok (12754), Mental health / Mentális egészség (12169)
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RendSzerTan
Tudományos besorolás
monográfia
022_000116/0070
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022_000116/0070

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5. USING INTERPRETATIVE PHENOMENOLOGICAL ANALYSIS ® 69 5.3.1. The role of the voice The role of the voice is to make the voice hearer pay attention to an inner crisis or to other problems that are suppressed but participants did not interpret it in this way when they first began to have voice hearing experiences. The narratives about the role of the voice included a change through time in how the voice was defined initially and how it was defined at the moment of the interview. At the beginning, some had an impression that »hearing voices is normal. I found it normal because I knew a lot of people are hearing voices” (Csaba). Some participants recognised that this was something different: »lhese are thoughts that differ from the average, something that excels from the others and something not ordinary” (Ivan). The voice, in almost all cases, was rough, negative, critical, direct, and in one case the voice gave positive feedback about the person being ill: »lhe voice was always convincing me, that this is not a disease” (Veronika). The role of the voice was reassessed over time. In contrast to the initial (mainly negative) experiences, the voice had a supportive and helper role in the present time. These changes have been largely attributed to the crucial role of the voice hearer method. In these narratives, the voice is described as positive, supportive and assisting. This encourages the person to move on, ,,to get a new direction” (Ivan), ,,to a functioning state” (Veronika). To confront and solve the problems behind the voices requires a hearer to accept and control the voice itself. 5.3.2. The relationship between the voice and the ‘I’ As voice hearers learn how to handle the voices, the relationship between the voice and the T changes. As a result, a parallel, peaceful symbiosis develops. Narrators personalise the voices. According to the literature and previous IPA studies on the experience of voice hearing (Chin et al., 2009; Paulik, 2012; Rosen et al., 2015), this personalisation offers an opportunity to analyse the relationship between the voice and the T as an inter-personal relationship. Therefore, the analysis focused on how participants related to their voices, how they made sense of this relationship, and if the relationship changed over

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