Beyond the Fragmented Self: Theory and Practice of Deconstructive Inquiry

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Abstract

Most psychotherapies assume a stable “observer-self” whose task is to mend a fragmented psyche. Deconstructive Inquiry (DI) challenges that premise, arguing that the observer is not a faculty to cultivate but a moment-to-moment construction that generates the very fragmentation it then tries to repair. Drawing on phenomenology and neuroscience, DI proposes that distress arises when thought reflexively partitions awareness into an illusory “observer” and an “observed” world. Rather than analysing or regulating mental content, DI guides clients to notice the precise instant a boundary forms; under direct attention the split dissolves. Clinical vignettes on performance anxiety, identity confusion, and relationship conflict show symptoms easing when this mechanism is recognised. By framing healing as recognition rather than repair, DI offers a testable paradigm for rapid, insight-driven change.

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