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A 6 page overview of the Rosemary R. Parse’s Theory of Human Becoming. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_khparse2.rtf
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Rogers (Cody, 2008). It is a theoretical perspective on health care, healing and the caring entailed by the nursing profession that differs notably from the medical model of care. This
theory is structured according to three major themes, which are meaning, rhythm and transcendence (Cody, 2008). Meaning, which is the first principle of Parses theory, pictures this factor as
referring to a co-created understanding of reality through the use of language in regards to "valuing and imaging" (Cody, 2008). As this suggests, this theme acknowledges the fact that the
way in which clients perceive reality, i.e., what is real for them, is created by them and derived through the self-expression of their values (Cody, 2008). A nurse can play
a role in co-creating this reality, that is, a nurse can affect the clients perception, but originates with the client. The second theme of "rhythmicity" expressed the idea that
the nurse and client also co-create "rhythmical patterns of relating," which underscore the "paradoxical unity of revealing-concealing and enabling limiting connecting-separating" (Cody, 2008). As this statement suggests, this principle is
meant to convey an understanding that "unit of life encompasses apparent opposites in rhythmic patterns of relating" (Cody, 2008). The third theme is transcendence and this is expressed in regards
to the "unique ways of originating" while "in the process of transforming" (Cody, 2008). There is innate tension in the need for transformation that requires tremendous energy expenditure, both physically
and mentally, so that is also a tendency to both seek transformation and avoid it (Hodges, Keeley and Grier, 2001). This paradox of inertia versus movement is described very well
by Parses theory in terms of connecting and separating Hodges, Keeley and Grier, 2001). As this indicates, Parse gives insight into the processes that aid a client/patient in achieving transcendence
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