PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Inner Child
  • Inner Child
  • Inner child
rdfs:comment
  • "Inner Child" is the fifteenth episode of the first season of Fringe.
  • The inner child is the best known lower third of a comprehensive model of the human psyche called the Three Selves. The term has manifold therapeutic applications in counseling and holistic health settings primarily. John Bradshaw, a U.S. educator, pop psychology and self-help movement leader, famously used "inner child" to point to unresolved childhood experiences and the lingering dysfunctional effects of childhood dysfunction. In this way "inner child" refers to all of the sum of mental-emotional memories stored in the sub-conscious from conception thru pre-puberty.
owl:sameAs
Season
  • 1
Aired
  • 7
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:es.fringe/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:fringe/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:religion/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Number
  • 15
Previous
  • "Ability"
Starring
Airdate
  • 2009-04-07
ep number
  • 115
NEXT
  • "Unleashed"
Writer
Director
Uncredited
  • Michael Cerveris como El Observador
guest cast
  • Alicia Goranson como Samatha Gilmore
  • Ari Graynor como Rachel
  • Carolyn Feldschuh como Older Woman
  • Carrie Keranen como Heavy Set Woman
  • Chad Gittens acomo Agent #2
  • Erik Palladino como Eliot Michaels
  • Jeremy Shamos como The Artist
  • Jimmy Palumbo como Mike
  • Lily Pilblad como Ella
  • Mary Lou Schriber como Nurse
  • Matt Mulhern como Dennis
  • Nelson Pena como Junior Agent
  • Phil Nee como Archie Donnelly
  • Robyn Payne como Agent
  • Sandra Daley como Dr. Winick
  • Spencer List como The Child
  • Victor Williams como Phil
abstract
  • "Inner Child" is the fifteenth episode of the first season of Fringe.
  • The inner child is the best known lower third of a comprehensive model of the human psyche called the Three Selves. The term has manifold therapeutic applications in counseling and holistic health settings primarily. John Bradshaw, a U.S. educator, pop psychology and self-help movement leader, famously used "inner child" to point to unresolved childhood experiences and the lingering dysfunctional effects of childhood dysfunction. In this way "inner child" refers to all of the sum of mental-emotional memories stored in the sub-conscious from conception thru pre-puberty. The Twelve-step program recovery movement considers healing the inner child to be one of the essential stages in recovery from addiction, abuse, trauma, or post-traumatic stress disorder. In the 1970s, the inner child concept emerged alongside the clinical concept of codependency (first called Adult Children of Alcoholics Syndrome.). These topics remain very active today.
is Appearances of