Mary Tabor: Enigma and Mystery
Eduardo Grecco, Luis Jimenez and Lluis Juan Bautista.
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Claudia Stern
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Tell me a tree, a house and a person and I'll talk to you
People draw what they feel within themselves, instead of - or besides- what they see. The use of projective drawings can be a very fruitful source of information and personality comprehension, and give important clues to prepare a formula with floral essences that, otherwise, we could take time to discover.
The aim of this book is to allow those who are interested in training to learn to simply require and interpret these tests, to be able, through their rich symbolism, to make a faster and more effective diagnosis of what happens with the consultant.
The advantage of the graphic test is that they are easy to apply and interpret, providing a lot of information to the therapist about the patient who has difficulty transmitting what happens to him, or what he really doesn't know he knows.
We can appreciate how the person is shown in drawing: insecure, blameful, anxious, distrustful, arrogant, hostile, negative, tense, relaxed, jocssed, self-conscious, cautious, impulsive. This preliminary behavior also gives quite clear and rich information about how the person usually moves in other circumstances of life.
Let us note that the man began drawing and painting before writing, and the first languages were ideographic. Right now anyone who can't write is able to draw. The children who begin to make scribbles at the age of three/four now form, at that early age, nascent drawings that are being consolidated and perfected before learning the lyrics.
For this reason the analysis of the drawings in the knowledge of man is of paramount importance.
Specific References
Eduardo Grecco, Luis Jimenez and Lluis Juan Bautista.