The Trouble with Language: Experiential Avoidance, Rules, and the Nature of Verbal Events

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APA Citation: 

Hayes, S. C., & Gifford, E. V. (1997). The trouble with language: experiential avoidance, rules, and the nature of verbal events. American Psychological Society, 8, 170-173.

Type of Publication: 
ACT: Conceptual
Other Third-Wave Therapies: Conceptual
Abstract: 

Experiential avoidance is the attempt to escape or avoid certain private experiences, such as particular feelings, memories, behavioral predispositions, or thoughts In this article, we discuss evidence that experiential avoidance is both pervasive and often harmful to human functioning We argue that experiential avoidance can be explained by two verbal processes, and we provide basic behavioral evidence on both the bidirectionality of derived stimulus relations in verbal humans and the insensitivity to the effects of responding produced by verbal rules If this analysis is correct, experiential avoidance is built into human language and thus can be undermined only with difficulty.

Comments

Can't read

Is there any chance this article could be re-posted? Even when I magnify it to the max, I still can't read it very well.

Thanks, Paula

Can't find a better version

Hi Paula,

I'm very sorry, but I can't seem to find a better version of this document. As for this article, this may be the best we can find. However, I can tell you it is likely that the concepts discussed therein also written about in other articles which may be easier to view. The connections between language, RFT, and experiential avoidance have been written about in many places. I encourage you to explore the other publications available. Please let me know if you have trouble finding the sorts of articles you are looking for, and I may be able to point you in the right direction.

Cheers,
Doug
ACBS