This year, CPN celebrated the research of Larry
M. Leitner, Ph.D. by presenting him with the George A. Kelly
Award for Scholarly Contribution to Constructivist Psychology.
Larry accepted the award at the banquet of the CPN conference
held at the University of Victoria this June.
Reflecting upon Larry’s work for this article, I
inevitably recalled my first interaction with him. I was
researching clinical graduate programs and had grown
disheartened by the lack of variety in theoretical orientations
reflected in training programs. However, I came across Larry’s
work and decided to telephone him to discuss the possibility of
applying to work with him. I dialed his number and asked for
Dr. Leitner. “Larry Leitner is dead. May I help you?” said the
voice on the other end of the telephone. I scrambled for a
response and mumbled something about extending my condolences
and my desire to discuss the graduate program. It took me
another few moments to realize that I was in fact speaking with
Larry. It took me less time to realize that I should apply to
the program to work with him.
Larry’s scholarship has focused on the very
question of what it means to be alive. His articulation of
Personal Construct Psychology, Experiential Personal Construct
Psychology (EPCP), explores the relational and existential
aspects of ROLE relating. EPCP holds that deep, intimate
relationships bring richness, meaning and vitality to our
lives. Our negotiation of the choice “between the richness yet
potential terror of engaging in versus the safety yet emptiness
of avoiding ROLE relationships” (Leitner & Faidley, 1995, p.
293) serves as the basis for EPCP’s understanding of persons and
human pain. Larry’s research has used this framework to
describe the therapeutic process, offering a powerful
conceptualization of the power of the psychotherapeutic
relationship. Larry has also extended this framework to include
both a conceptual and therapeutic framework for those so injured
that they have been labeled with the most damaging diagnoses.
EPCP has also articulated one of the few alternatives to the
DSM. This brief survey is a mere sampling of the ways EPCP has
made an impact on constructivist research and scholarship. I
can safely say that I am not the only one to be thankful that
Larry Leitner and EPCP are very much alive!
References
Leitner, L.M. & Faidley, A.J. (1995). The awful,
aweful nature of ROLE relationships. In R.A. Neimeyer & G.J.
Neimeyer (Eds.), Advances in personal construct psychology
(Vol. III), pp. 291-314. Greenwich, CT: JAI Press.