Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Anxiety and Defence Mechanisms
- What Defense Mechanisms Are
and Why We Use Them
- Techniques triggered by anxiety
- Employed by Ego
- Inner mechanism that better
protects the Ego
- Cause a change in perception which allows
anxiety to lessen
- They tend to distort, transform
or falsify reality
- When we experience anxiety
- When the impulsive Id is too insistent
- When the moral Superego is too overwhelming
- To keep the impulses and feelings out
of conscious and under control
- Learned behaviour
- Often appear unconsciously
- Help regulate process through life
- Helps us get through Anger, Frustration,
Sadness and Hurt
- Types of Defence Mechanisms
- Primitive (More Childlike)
- Denial
- The refusal to accept reality or admit
and obvious truth
- E.g. People who are suffering from a substance abuse problem will
often flat-out deny that their behavior is problematic
- ((More effective in short term,
harmful for long term))
- Regression
- The abandonment of coping strategies and reversion to
patterns of behavior used earlier in development
- E.g. Crying or sulking upon hearing unpleasant news
- Projection
- The tranfer of your own unacceptable
feelings or desires on to someone who
does not have those feelings or desires
- E.g. If you have a strong dislike for someone, you might instead
believe that he or she does not like you
- Repression
- The pushing of painful memories out of
the conscious mind and into the
unconscious
- E.g A person who has repressed memories of abuse suffered as
a child may later have difficulty forming relationships
- Mature (More Developed)
- ((More effective in long term,
better for development))
- Displacement
- The diversion of thoughts/feelings/impulses at a substitute
person or object that is less threatening
- Slamming a door instead of hitting your boss
- Rationalisation
- The explaining of an unacceptable behaviour or feeling in a rational or logical
manner, avoiding the true reasons for the behaviour
- E.g. A student might blame a poor exam score on the instructor
rather than his or her lack of preparation
- Sublimation
- The channeling out of unacceptable and
potentially distruptive impulses in a socially
acceptable way
- E.g. A person experiencing extreme anger might take up
kick-boxing as a means of venting frustration
- Anxiety
- Anxiety is an unpleasant inner state that people
seek to avoid
- It acts as a signal to the Ego that things are not going right
- Results of Overuse and/or
Underutilization
- Emotional problems arise
- More likely to
experience stress
- More likely to experience mental
health problems
- They should be worked around or with
as appropriate
- Should be learnt how to handle; if not,
seek professional help