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25 Sentences With "enmeshment"

How to use enmeshment in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "enmeshment" and check conjugation/comparative form for "enmeshment". Mastering all the usages of "enmeshment" from sentence examples published by news publications.

At the Smart Museum, the question of causality is subordinated to a deeper analysis of interdisciplinary enmeshment.
Yet from an early age she had instilled in her son a powerful sense of enmeshment; they were one.
Since the 1970s, the United States and a rising China pursued economic enmeshment and a measure of diplomatic collaboration.
In 20193, she launched Oprah's Book Club representing an even deeper enmeshment of her show, and brand, with commerce.
The form of the book enacts that very enmeshment — the fragments that hook into each other, rhyme and repeat.
However, we continue to express serious concerns about Ring's fundamental problems of surveillance and enmeshment with law enforcement that threaten the larger community.
Bernie Sanders's campaign—because it highlighted her enmeshment with Wall Street, her brain-dead interventionism and her rapacious money-grubbing since she left the State Department—was the problem.
We enter into a giant enmeshment of the entire space, loopings and loopings of coiling steel, forming circle after circle, continuous, wall to wall, floor to ceiling, an entire entrapment.
Disentangling two lives requires a different kind of enmeshment in a legal and financial system that wants to suck them, or at least their banks accounts, dry along the way — a system focused on someone "winning" the divorce.
Within the context of mother-adolescent relationships, a study that examines 5th, 8th, and 11th graders has found greater levels of co-rumination among mother and daughter than mother and son relationships. In addition, mother-adolescent co- rumination was related to positive relationship quality, but also to enmeshment which was unique to co-rumination. These enmeshment as well as internalizing relations were strongest when co-ruminating was focused on the mother's problems. Other relationships have also been studied.
SASB describes human relationships as fitting along two axes: "love- hate," and "enmeshment-differentiation," with the additional dimension of "interpersonal focus." Benjamin, Lorna Smith. Interpersonal Diagnosis and Treatment of Personality Disorders. The Guilford Press, 1996.
In Families and How to Survive Them, Robin Skynner MD explains methods for how family therapists can effectively help family members to develop clearer values and boundaries by when treating them, drawing lines, and treating different generations in different compartments – something especially pertinent in families where unhealthy enmeshment overrides normal personal values. However, the establishment of personal values and boundaries in such instances may produce a negative fall-out, if the pathological state of enmeshment had been a central attraction or element of the relationship. This is especially true if the establishment of healthy boundaries results in unilateral limit setting which did not occur previously. It is important to distinguish between unilateral limits and collaborative solutions in these settings.
185-7 and, if family pressures increase, may end up becoming the identified patient or family scapegoat.Goldberg, p. 239 Enmeshment was also used by John Bradshaw to describe a state of cross-generational bonding within a family, whereby a child (normally of the opposite sex) becomes a surrogate spouse for their mother or father.John Bradshaw, Reclaiming Virtue (2009) p.
His mother opened her own shop sometime after the war, something that few women would do at the time in Vienna. Else's relationship with her son can be described as “narcissistic enmeshment”. Kohut was not put into school until the fifth grade. Before that he was taught by several tutors, a line of “Fräuleins and mademoiselles”.
Enmeshment is a concept in psychology and psychotherapy introduced by Salvador Minuchin (1921-2017) to describe families where personal boundaries are diffused, sub-systems undifferentiated, and over-concern for others leads to a loss of autonomous development.H. & L. Goldberg, Family Therapy: An Overview (2008) p. 244 and p. 467 Enmeshed in parental needs, trapped in a discrepant role function,Virginia Satir, Peoplemaking (1983) p.
During this stage, individuals are more willing to risk face threats to establish a balance necessary for the relationship. The enmeshment stage occurs when a relational identity emerges with established common cultural features. During this stage, the couple becomes more comfortable with their collective identity and the relationship in general. In the renegotiation stage, couples work through identity issues and draw on their past relational history while doing so.
Plastics such as high-density polyethylene (HDPE), low-density polyethylene (LDPE), and polypropylene (PP) produce dimethyl sulfide odors. These types of plastics are commonly found in plastic bags, food storage containers, and bottle caps. It can take up to 14 days for microplastics to pass through an animal (as compared to a normal digestion period of 2 days), but enmeshment of the particles in animals' gills can prevent elimination entirely. When microplastic-laden animals are consumed by predators, the microplastics are then incorporated into the bodies of higher trophic-level feeders.
According to Minuchin, a family is functional or dysfunctional based upon its ability to adapt to various stressors (extra-familial, idiosyncratic, developmental), which, in turn, rests upon the clarity and appropriateness of its subsystem boundaries. Boundaries are characterized along a continuum from enmeshment through semi- diffuse permeability to rigidity. Additionally, family subsystems are characterized by a hierarchy of power, typically with the parental subsystem "on top" vis-à-vis the offspring subsystem. Structural family therapy is underpinned by a clearly articulated model of family functioning, and has been developed and used most consistently in services for children and families.
In 1997 he investigated how the myth of the clean Wehrmacht was created through the official policies of the West German government led by Konrad Adenauer. His book was called Vergangenheitspolitik: Die Anfänge der Bundesrepublik und die NS-Vergangenheit, or, in English, Adenauer's Germany and the Nazi Past: The Politics of Amnesty and Integration. Frei wrote that the widespread demand for the freedom of Nazi war criminals in the aftermath of World War II was an indirect admission of the entire German society's enmeshment in Nazism. He added the war crimes trials were a painful reminder of the nature of the Third Reich that many ordinary people had identified with.
The experience of samadhi as understood in mystical epistemology would not be utterly new but, paradoxically, constitute a person's discovery of a pre-existing, abiding identity to cosmic awareness. The non-dualist finds a complete unity within a subjective sovereignty: ultimately absorption in a numinous presence, the absolute; its is a meditative perception of an all-encompassing "we" without any "they". The Samkhya dualist, however, understands that in transcendent meditation he will perceive himself as an isolated purusa, purified from enmeshment in an 'objective' prakrti. The mystic experience itself as found in Hindu literature Zaehner presents, as well as its theological filter of explanation.
Critical pedagogy of place is a curricular approach to education that combines critical pedagogy and place-based education. It started as an attitude and approach to place-based and land-based education (both largely considered under the umbrella of environmental education) that criticized place-based education's invisible endorsement of colonial narratives and domineering relationships with the land. The scholars critiquing place-based education mainly focused on re-centering Indigenous (and other marginalized) voices in the curriculum. In the early 1990s, C.A. Bowers advocated for a critical pedagogy of place that acknowledged our enmeshment in cultural and ecological systems, and the resulting need for this to figure in the school curriculum.
Poston's model divided the biracial and multiracial identity development process into five distinct stages: # Personal Identity: young children's sense of self and personal identity is not linked to a racial or ethnic group. # Choice of Group Characterization: an individual chooses a multicultural identity that includes both parents’ heritage groups or one parent's racial heritage. This stage is based on personal factors (such as physical appearance and cultural knowledge) and environmental factors (such as perceived group status and social support. # Enmeshment/Denial: confusion and guilt over not being able to identify with all aspects of one's heritage can lead to feelings of "anger, shame, and self-hatred".
Although Donna Haraway intended her concept of the cyborg to be a feminist critique, she acknowledges that other scholars and popular media have taken her concept and applied it to different contexts. Haraway is aware and receptive of the different uses of her concept of the cyborg, but admits "very few people are taking what I consider all of its parts". Wired Magazine overlooked the feminist theory of the cyborg and instead used it to make a more literal commentary about the enmeshment of humans and technology. Despite this, Haraway also recognizes that new feminist scholars "embrace and use the cyborg of the manifesto to do what they want for their own purposes".
German historian Norbert Frei wrote that the widespread demand for freedom for the war criminals was an indirect admission of the whole society's enmeshment in National Socialism. He added the war crimes trials were a painful reminder of the nature of the regime with which many ordinary people had identified. In this context, there was an overwhelming demand for the rehabilitation of the Wehrmacht. in part because the Wehrmacht could trace its descent back to the Prussian Army and before that to the army founded in 1640 by Frederich Wilhelm, the "Great Elector" of Brandenburg, making it an institution deeply rooted in German history, which presented problems for those who wanted to portray the Nazi era as a "freakish aberration" from the course of German history.
Like the "optimal mental health" blueprint, this blueprint requires that members of the relationship express affect to one another in order to identify progress. These blueprints can also describe natural and implicit goals. For example, Donald Nathanson uses the "affect" to create a narrative for one of his patients: > I suspect that the reason he refuses to watch movies is the sturdy fear of > enmeshment in the affect depicted on the screen; the affect mutualization > for which most of us frequent the movie theater is only another source of > discomfort for him. ... His refusal to risk the range of positive and > negative affect associated with sexuality robs any possible relationship of > one of its best opportunities to work on the first two rules of either the > Kelly or the Tomkins blueprint.

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