The Neuroses of Defence (A Christmas Fairy Tale)) pg147-153 The neuroses of defence: In this case study, frued speaks about the four types of defence. These are characterized by the results of hysteria, obssesional neurosis, paranoia, and acute hallucinatory amentia. This study is actually connected to sexuality and ifantilism. Freud says that “The precipitating cause must be of a sexual nature and it must occur at a time before sexual maturity has been reached.”1 Freud, in this study, is talking about how having bad experiences makes you defensive. He also says that these bad experiences are remembered as “unpleasrable”2So, this is not constant unpleasurable feelings, but rememberence of feeelings that were unpleasurable. Therefore, we remember …show more content…
Experiences can have more of an effect on you after you start puberty.3Freud says that repression of sexual repression is found when a upper class woman is sexually stimulated (creating disgust). Based on the idea that “Everday experience teaches us tht if libido is signifficantly ggreat, disgust ia not feltt and morality is overriden...”4 I would think that low libido is the cause and origin of unpleasure (Freud said it will remain unsolved without a correct thoery of sexual process). On page 148, Freud also diiscusses the four parts of the course to defensive neurosis (a bad sexual experience, repression, defence, and moving on). This way of thinking actually reminds me of DABDA or the …show more content…
This projection was based on times ( between experiences and sexual maturity). Obsession is produced as a reaction to the analougous experience that is masqurading aas the rreal one. This obsession can lead to a bad feeling such as shame or anxiety. Second defence is found at this point. Secondary defence is scene to cause basically very intense versions of the first defence symptoms, except they are more obvious and complex. Some secondary symptoms are drinking and brooding. There are three symptoms: The primary defense system(concsiensiousness), The compromise symptoms of illness(obssesions), and the secondary defensive symptoms (bbrooding, hoarding, obsessive ceremonies).6 Freud blames all, if not most, of thses problems on sexual tension. He says that unsatisfied libido is required to cause the fresh reocccurence. Obsessional neuroses can be cured by basically undoing everything. Frreud does this by retraining the brain to think ( by retraining its
Psychoanalysis created by Sigmund Freud is much like Individual therapy in the sense that it will explore the past and how any past circumstances are effecting the now adult. This therapy will last as long as the client needs the support of the counselor and relies on the client’s full participation. In this form of therapy the counselor will participate in guiding the client thru the unconscious mind to and find how it may be contributing to thoughts and behaviors that are causing the client distress. Like analytical therapy psychoanalysis will cover a variety of issues including psychosexual, compulsive, and depressive disorders. According to Haggerty, J. (2006) “The essence of Freud’s theory is that sexual and aggressive energies originating in the id (or unconscious) are modulated by the ego, which is a set of functions that moderates between the id and external reality. Defense mechanisms are constructions of the ego that operate to minimize pain and to maintain psychic equilibrium. The superego, formed during latency (between age 5 and puberty), operates to control id drives
Freud’s theory of personality examined the interplay between the primitive, instinctual urges—the ‘id’; the practical and rational ‘ego’; and the morally attuned ‘superego’; ‘object relations’ refer to the "object" of an instinct”, which is “the agent through which the instinctual aim is achieved”—most often a person and, according to Freud, most often the mother (Ainsworth 1969, p. 1). The psychosexual development theory that Freud launched reduces our behaviour to mechanistic responses to an instinctive need for pleasure fueled by the ‘libido’ and barriers or distortions to the gratification of the libido at various delineated stages of development were responsible for later problems in life (Kail & Zolner 2012, p. 5). Erik Erikson later added depth to the approach by including more humanistic elements to Freud’s stages and including more periods of development (p.
Freud is the psychologist who is credited with the development of psychodynamic perspective. He thought your personality came from id, ego, and superego. Your id is your unconscious drives and where a person’s sexual energy comes from. Your ego is what deals with demands of reality, it tries still bring you pleasure, but under the norms of reality. Your super ego is the harsh internal judge of your behavior. Freud also believed in defense mechanisms, strategies for dealing with anxiety. Defense mechanisms distort reality and protect you from a stressful situation. Denial is a defense mechanism in which the ego refuses to acknowledge a situation. Displacement is directing unacceptable impulses at a less frightening target. Projection is the defense mechanism in which we see in others those impulses that we most fear about ourselves. Freud thought every behavior stemmed from your sexual drive. When you 're a baby it is your oral stage, the pleasure center is the mouth. When you are a toddler it is your anal stage. Children learn they control when they can go to the bathroom. When you are 3-6 it 's your phallic stage.
Proposed that the disorder represents on unconscious effort by a girl to remain pre-pubescent as children want to remain child-like and have a fear of sexually maturing.
Sigmund Freud was a well known psychologist whose theories have founded the understanding of the human psyche. Freud’s theory of personality is one of his most known theories. It details that there are three segments of consciousness. The id is desire, immorality and is what drives us to do wrong. The superego exists to counteract and overpower the id, as it is morality, commonly known as our conscious. The ego exists to balance out both extremes and devises a solution to sate each segment. Then there are the defense mechanisms, repression, denial, projection, displacement, regression and sublimation. These are employed by the ego to keep the balance between the id and the superego and to protect the psyche, especially in traumatic times. Last, the Oedipus complex which Freud believed, only exists in children from the ages of 3-5, when they become attracted to
Psychoanalytic criticism originated in the work of Austrian psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud, who pioneered the technique of psychoanalysis. Freud developed a language that described, a model that explained, and a theory that encompassed human psychology. His theories are directly and indirectly concerned with the nature of the unconscious mind. Through his multiple case studies, Freud managed to find convincing evidence that most of our actions are motivated by psychological forces over which we have very limited control (Guerin 127). One of Freud’s most important contributions to the study of the psyche is his theory of repression: the unconscious mind is a repository of repressed desires,
The main aim of this essay is to demonstrate an understanding of Freud’s theory of psychosexual development and how this theory may help us to explain and identify adult neurotic behaviour. I shall be evaluating the pros and cons of psychosexual theory and the extent to which it helps us to understand a client’s presenting issue. I shall also define and consider the relationship between the Id, Ego and Superego and the way in which these constructs of our psyche are in many ways representative of earlier experiences and of those early
“Anxiety represents a repetition of the early traumatic experience; Anxiety in the present is related to an earlier danger (Cervone, Pervin, Oliver 2005 p93).” Freud suggested in his psychoanalytic theory that anxiety result from conflict between the drive of the id instincts and the threat of punishment by the superego (Cervone, Pervin, Oliver 2005 p93).
Like a wall to house the anxiety to protect the fragile psyche. Over time, the reality is able to be absorbed, but until that time the defense mechanisms remain in place. Vaillant’s theory states there are four stages of defense mechanism, and they are as follows: mature, neurotic, immature, and psychotic (Vaillant, 1992). Robbins, Chatterjee, and Canda says these defense mechanism “play a central role in resilience, growth, and maturation of the ego” (2012). “Freud identified five properties of defense mechanism: defenses are major means of managing instinct and effect, they are both unconscious and discrete, hallmarks of major psychiatric syndromes, dynamic and reversible, and adaptive as well as pathological”. Valliant states it is often the response to stress that “leads to psychopathology” (1994). Valliant uses the terms “innate involuntary responses” to reduce “cognitive dissonances”
Freud continued his work on repression, memories, and past experiences of trauma to be the motive for all neurotic symptoms. Trauma in past experiences was not always the key determinant for hysteria cases, there needed to be another component for the cause. The combination of past trauma and present trauma awakened memories of the earlier trauma which constituted the true aggravation (Storr, 1989, p. 15). However, he began to see a common factor in his work. Next Freud noticed that a common denominator of all his hysteria cases was premature sexual experiences. Sex encompasses many emotions through mind, body, and spirit that can influence a great deal of character if repressed. Storr pointed out that, “Freud became more and more convinced that the chief
Though this theory is being criticized, it is still important because many other theories are based
Psychoanalysis was the name given by Sigmund Freud to a system of interpretation and therapeutic treatment of psychological disorders. (McLeod, 2007) In particular, we present five key concepts on psychoanalytic therapy: structure of personality, psychosexual stages, defense mechanism, anxiety, and the unconscious mind.
Obsessional neurosis becomes a natural occurrence in psychoanalytic theory, where we develop natural urges that are prevented expression by the rules of
According to Freud, there are three kinds of anxiety – reality, moral and neurotic. Reality anxiety is experienced when there is an actual danger coming from the external world. Moral anxiety arises when there is a conflict between one’s behavior and what the superego is demanding one to do. Finally, neurotic anxiety is felt when the ego feels incapable of controlling the id and the urges hiding in it. The tools people use to get rid of anxiety is what psychoanalysts call “Defense Mechanisms” (Schultz and Schultz, 2009). Defense mechanisms are different behavioral patterns, some of them are considered mature (for example humor) and some immature but what is important for this paper is that in psychoanalytic therapy, defense mechanisms are identified and the goal of the therapy is to overcome them and access the unconscious conflicts which are according to the Freudians the root of any mental problem. Moreover, all problems’ origin can be found in childhood - most often in a faulty relationship with one of the primary caregivers (Hough,
These three elements of the mind, according to Freud, are constantly in conflict. “If the external world offers no scope for the satisfaction of the id’s pleasure drives, or, more commonly, if the satisfaction of some or all of these drives would indeed transgress the moral sanctions laid down by the super-ego, then an inner conflict occurs in the mind between its constituent parts or elements- failure to resolve this can lead to later neurosis” (Internet Encyclopedia). These conflicts occur everyday and their outcomes dictate almost all of an individual’s actions. To prevent these conflicts from becoming too dangerous, the mind employs defense mechanisms (Internet Encyclopedia). These include rationalization, repression, projection, displacement, reaction formation, regression, and identification (Weiten 364). Psychoanalysis involves the effort to utilize this understanding of the mind and the conflicts within to treat a patient with neurosis.