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128 SECTION II Evolution of Nursing Theory: Essential Influences


nu

rtu
ring

towar
dwell-beingan
dm
ore


  • be
    ing
    Gestalt


Incarnate
in time
and space

Gestalt

Incarnate
in time
and space

NURSE
Response

well-being and
more-being

DIALOGUE

being and becoming
through intersubjective relating
(being with and doing with)

The Body knows
(a being in a body)
gut feeling

PAT I E N T
Call

HUMANISTIC NURSING

FIGURE 11–1 World of others and things.

that occurs in the living context of human beings,
human beings who interface and interact with oth-
ers and other things in the world. In the world of
Humanistic Nursing Theory, when we speak of
human beings, we mean patients (e.g., individuals,
members of families, members of communities, or
members of the human race) and nurses (see
Figure 11–2). A person becomes a patient when he
or she sends a call for help with some health-related
problem. The person hearing and recognizing the
call is a nurse. A nurse, by intentionally choosing to
become a nurse, has made a commitment to help
others with health-related needs.
It is important to emphasize that in humanistic
nursing theory, each nurse and each patient is taken
to be a unique human being with his or her own
particular gestalt (see Figure 11–3). Gestalt, repre-
senting all that particular human beings are, which
includes all past experiences, all current being, and
all hopes, dreams, and fears of the future that are
experienced in one’s own space-time dimension. As
illustrated, this gestalt includes past and current


social relationships, as well as gender, race, reli-
gion, education, work, and whatever individualized
patterns for coping a person has developed. It also
includes past experiences with persons in the
health-care system and a patient’s images and ex-
pectations of those persons.
Our gestalt is the unique expression of our indi-
viduality as incarnate human beings who exist in
this particular space at this particular time, with
circumscribed resources and in a physical body that
senses, filters, and processes our experiences to
which we assign subjective meanings. Accordingly,
a nurse and a patient perceive and respond to each
other as a gestalt, not just as the presentation of a
sum of attributes. In humanistic nursing we say
that each person is perceived as existing “all at
once.” In the process of interacting with patients,
nurses interweave professional identity, education,
intuition, and experience with all their other life
experiences, creating their own tapestry, which un-
folds during their responses.
One has only to observe nurses going about
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