Acceptance: Anticipation
Acceptance: Anticipation
Acceptance: Anticipation
Acceptance of a situation that has been causing anxiety is one technique that we might use to
live with an undesirable circumstances or feelings. For instance, someone may acknowledge
that they have behaved unreasonably towards their father owing to an Oedipus Complex, or
accept their new circumstances after separating from a partner.
Acting Out
When the id component of the human psyche signals the desire to act on an impulse, the ego
and super ego will often counteract it if they feel that that behavior would be
counterproductive or immoral. A person may want to curse after falling over in a busy street,
but the ego, perceiving this as contradicting social etiquette, will often lead to them holding
back on the expletives. On some occasions, however, we may not be able to balance the
impulses of the id and will defend the ego by simply acting out the irrational desires.
For example a person might “act out” by theatrically storming out of a stressful meeting
when they would otherwise stay calm and hide their unease.
Anticipation
The anticipation of a potentially stressful event is one way a person might mentally prepare
for it. Anticipation might involve rehearsing possible outcomes in one’s mind or telling
oneself that will not be as bad as they imagine. A person with a phobia of dentists might
anticipate an appointment to have a tooth filling by telling themselves that the procedure will
be over in just a few minutes, and reminding themselves that they have had one previously
without any problems.
Altruism
An act of goodwill towards another person, known as altruistic behavior, can be used as a
way of diffusing a potentially anxious situation. Altruism may be used as a defence
mechanism, for example, by being particularly helpful to a person who we feel might dislike
us or neutralising an argument with kind words and positivity.
Avoidance
When a perceived situation creates anxiety, one convenient option is sometimes to avoid it.
Although avoidance can provide an escape from a particular event, it neglects to deal with the
cause of the anxiety. For example, a person might know that they are are due to give a
stressful presentations to colleagues at work, and take a sick day in order to avoid giving it.
Avoidance in this situation might be only a short term option, however, if the presentation is
rescheduled to another day. Someone may also avoid thinking about something which causes
anxiety, preferring to leave it unresolved instead of confronting it.
Conversion
Conversion is a defence mechanism whereby the anxiety caused by repressed impulses and
feelings are ‘converted’ into a physical complaint such as a cough or feelings of paralysis.
Freud observed this physical manifestation of anxieties in clients such as Dora, who
complained of a cough, losing her voice and feelings resembling appendicitis. Upon
investigation, Freud attributed her cough to fixation during the oral stage of psychosexual
development, and linked her appendicitis to a “childbirth fantasy”.
Denial
The self denial of one’s feelings or previous actions is one defence mechanism to avoid
damage to the ego caused by the anxiety or guilt of accepting them. A married woman might
deny to herself that she hold affections for her husband’s friend, rather than accepting her true
feelings. A person might also deny to their physical behavior, such as theft, preferring to
think that someone forced them into committing the crime, in order to avoid dealing with the
guilt should they accept their actions. Denial is an undesirable defense mechanism as it
contravenes the reality principle that the id adheres to, delving into an imaginary world that is
separate from our actual environment.
Displacement
Displacement occurs when a person represses affection, fear or impulses that they feel
towards another person. Accepting that it is irrational or socially unacceptable to demonstrate
such feelings, the psyche prevents them from being converted into actions. However, the
feelings are instead displaced towards a person or animal whom it is acceptable to express
such sentiments for.
A person who dislikes their teacher after being given low grades may feel that they would be
punished if they express their hostility towards them. Therefore, they may unconsciously
displace their antipathy onto their best friend, making excuses for treating them badly without
justification.
In the case of Little Hans, Freud believed that the boy had displaced a fear of his father onto
horses, whose blinkers and facial features reminded him of his parent. Instead of misbehaving
towards his father, he felt anxious at being in the presence of horses and would avoid leaving
the house when possible.
Dissociation
People who use dissociation as a defense mechanism tend to momentarily lose their
connection to the world around them. They may feel separated from the outside world, as
though they exist in another realm. Dissociation often helps people to cope with
uncomfortable situations by ‘removing’ themselves from them. The may enter a state of
daydreaming, staring into space and letting their mind wander until someone nudges them,
prompting them to acknowledge reality once more.
A case which Freud analysed after reading an autobiographical account of an illness was that
of Daniel Schreber, a German judge who described the dissociative feeling that he and the
rest of the world were separated by a veil. Schreber felt as though he was not entirely a part
of his environment and that he was in some way separate from it.
Fantasy
When life seems mundane or distressing, people often use fantasy as a way of escaping
reality. They may fantasise about winning the lottery or idealised outcomes of their lives
changing for the better in some way. Fantasies help us to explore alternatives to situations
that we are unhappy with but unrealistic expectations of them being fulfilled can lead to us
losing touch with reality and taking more viable actions to improve our lives.
Humor
George Vaillant described the use of humor as a “mature” defense mechanism - a primarily
adaptive technique to help us to cope with tense or stressful situations. Looking for a funny
aspect in an environment in which we lack control can help us to endure it, and can even be
an altruistic act in helping others to better cope as well.
Humility
Showing humility involves lowering our expectations and view of our self importance,
sacrificing our pride and often focussing on others. Humility can enable us to pacify those
around us in tense conflicts and encourage cooperation with other people to take place. For
example, someone who is known to boast about their abilities may show humility whilst
trying to complete a difficult task. This might encourage others to empathise with, and help,
them.
Idealisation
Identification
According to Freud’s concept of the Oedipus Complex, a child may experience feelings of
resentment towards their father as they compete for the affection of their mother and the
resulting castration anxiety - an irrational fear directed towards the father - may lead them to
feel the need to appease the father. In order to pacify a person whom we perceive to be a
threat, we may emulate aspects of their behavior. By adopting their mannerisms, repeating
phrases or language patterns that they tend to use and mirroring their character traits, a person
may attempt to appease a person. This defense mechanism was described by Anna Freud as
identification with an aggressor.
A person moving schools or countries, starting a new job or entering a new social circle
might adopt the social norms or attitudes of classmates, neighbors, colleagues or other people
whom they seek acceptance from, for example, in order to avoid being rejected by their new
peers.
Intellectualisation
When a person is attached emotionally to an issue, they may be tempted to consider it in
intellectual terms. This often involves standing back from the situation and attempting to take
a cold, neutral view of it. For instance, a person who has been made redundant after twenty
years of service to a company may intellectualise it, acknowledging the management’s view
that redundancies needed to be made for the company to survive. However, this defense
mechanism of intellectualisation would not necessarily prevent the person’s passionate
feeling that they have been betrayed after committing to work for the company for so long.
Introjection
Introjection occurs when a person takes stimuli in their environment and adopts them as their
own ideas. This may involve internalising criticism from another person and believing the
other person’s points to be valid. A person may introject religious ideas that they have heard
at church, or political opinions that friends espouse. Behavior can also be introjected - the
mannerisms of a father may be observed by his son and then replicated.
Isolation
The defense mechanism of isolation can lead a person to separate ideas or feelings from the
rest of their thoughts. In distinguishing an emotion or impulse from others in this way, a
person attempts to protect the ego from anxieties caused by a specific situation. For example,
a person with a particularly stressful job may use isolation to separate their work life from
their family life, avoiding the stress affecting their relationships.
Passive Aggression
Displays of aggression are considered unsociable and undesirable in many societies, so when
aggressive or violent impulses are experienced, people tend to avoid them as much as
possible. However, the remaining energy driving such aggression may prove to be more
difficult contain, and may manifest in other forms, known as passive aggression. A passive
aggressive person may be uncooperative in carrying out their duties or other tasks, may
deliberately ignore someone when spoken to and might adopt a negative view of their
situation, such as their job, and of those around them (e.g. colleagues).
Projection
When we experience feelings or desires that cause anxiety, or that we are unable to act on
owing to the negative impact that they would have on us or those around us, we may defend
the ego from resulting anxieties by projecting those ideas onto another person. A person who
is afraid of crossing a bridge with a friend might accuse them of having a fear of heights, for
example, and in doing so, avoids accepting their own weaknesses. In the case of Daniel
Schreber, who accused his therapist of attempting to harm him, projection may have occurred
when he attributed his own feelings and desires onto his therapist, Professor Flechsig.
Rationalisation
Rationalisation occurs when a person attempts to explain or create excuses for an event or
action in rational terms. In doing so, they are able to avoid accepting the true cause or reason
resulting in the present situation.
Examples of rationalisation include a shoplifter blaming the high price of sweets to justify
their theft of a chocolate bar, when in reality they simply enjoyed the act of shoplifting. If a
person fails an exam, they may excuse themselves from blame by rationalising that they were
too busy to revise during the revision period.
Reaction Formation
When the insatiable desires of the id conflict with the ego and super ego, a person may
formulate a reaction to those impulses. Often, this action is the direct opposite to the demans
of the original desire, and helps to counteract impulses which may be unacceptable to act out
or fulfill.
For example, a man may experience feelings of love towards a married woman. The super
ego recognises that the fulfillment of his desires would contradict social norms regarding
acceptable behavior, and so a reaction formation would occur - the man may experience
feelings of dislike towards her - the opposite of the original feelings.
Repression
Repression is perhaps the most significant of defense mechanisms in that repressed feelings
and impulses can lead to the use of many other mechanisms. According to Sigmund Freud’s
psychodynamic theory, the impulsive desires of the psyche’s id are prevented by being
fulfilled by the ego, which observes the Reality Principle - that our actions are restricted by
our environment, including social etiquette. Moreover, the superego acts as our moral
compass, inducing feelings of guilt at having experienced the irrational desires that the id
creates.
Tensions inevitably arise between the id, ego and super ego and the guilt induced by the latter
can lead to feelings of anxiety and shame. In order to live with such feelings, Freud believed
that our minds repress the thoughts at the source of our anxieties: instead of contemplating
them consciously, they are ‘bottled up’ in the unconscious mind, emerging in symbolic
dreams and unexplained patterns of behavior.
Freud and his colleague, Josef Breuer, used techniques such as hypnosis, regression and free
association to encourage clients to recall and accept repressed memories and impulses.
Regression
Regression occurs when a person reverts to the types of behavior that they exhibited at an
earlier age. Stress of adult life and the associated anxiety may lead to a person seeking
comfort in things which they associate with more secure, happier times. They might regress
by eating meals that they were given as a child, watching old films or cartoons, acting
without thought for the consequences of their actions.
The self serving bias arises from our need to protect the ego from self criticism and to defend
ourselves from the complaints of others. We show a self serving bias when we exaggerate the
importance of our own achievements - after passing a test, we might over-estimate the
significance of that particular exam, and take credit for completing it without acknowledging
the role that tutors played in our success. Similarly, when faced with potential criticism we
might deflect blame, apportioning responsibility for failure to anybody but ourselves. Whilst
many of us show signs of this self serving bias, it can be an ineffective method of defence as
it distort our view of reality and our ability to rationalise and interpret events effectively.
Social Comparison
When people feel that they have been victims of unjust actions, they may defend the ego by
comparing themselves to those worse off. Similarly, we may see similarities between
ourselves and others in a better position to improve our self image. These defense
mechanisms are known as download or upward social comparisons. For example, a man who
has broken a leg and confined to a wheelchair may make a downwards social comparison
with a person who has been diagnosed with a more serious condition to make their own
situation seem less troublesome. Alternatively, a person might seek to identify with a person
of a perceived higher social position, such as when they learn that a celebrity is eating at the
same restaurant as they are.
Splitting
Splitting occurs when the ego attempts to reconcile multiple aspects or rationales, but resorts
to understanding the world in “black and white” terms. A person who experiences splitting
may take an “either-or” approach when making evaluations of the world around them,
including objects, situations, and people. They tend to view ideas as either right or wrong,
with no middle ground or compromise. Similarly, they may take a “good versus bad”
approach in relationships, admiring one group of people whilst completely rejecting those
who do not live upto their expectations.
Sublimation
When the energy of the libido surfaces in the form of impulses in the psyche’s id, these
desires are disabled by the ego, and the super ego may produce guilt at having experienced
unacceptable feelings. Whilst these impulses may be repressed, the energy behind them
remains. Instead of converting this energy into socially unacceptable behavior, a person may
use sublimation to redirect this motivation into more acceptable, even productive,
endeavours.
Freud believed that artists’ creative energies were often a refocusing of carnal impulses or
other anxieties, through sublimation, onto their work. Athletes may also use sublimation to
concentrate their energy on productive activities such as training.
Somatization
The somatization defence mechanism occurs when the internal conflicts between the drives
of the id, ego and super ego take on physical characteristics.
Josef Breuer, a colleague of Sigmund Freud, observed this in the case of Anna O, who sought
help from Breuer for hysteria. Breuer discovered that Anna’s anxieties had resulted from
traumatic events that had been repressed, but later manifested themselves physically. For
example, she experienced paralysis on one side, which Breuer linked to a dream in which she
felt paralysed whilst trying to fend off a snake from her bed-bound father.
Suppression
Unlike many other defense mechanisms, the suppression of thoughts and emotions is
something which occurs consciously and we may be entirely aware that we are attempting to
suppress anxieties. Suppression involves attempting not to think about a memory or feelings -
a person may try to think of another subject when an uneasy thought enters their mind or they
might preoccupy their minds by undertaking an unrelated task to distract themselves. A
person may also suppress feelings of love or dislike towards a person, behaving normally
towards them as though they felt dispassionate towards them.
Undoing
When we act on an idea or impulse that we later regret, we may adopt a defense mechanism
of attempting to “undo” that action in order to protect the ego from feelings of guilt or shame.
A person may intentionally push past someone in a shop, but realising that the person was
frail, feel guilty with regards to their behavior. They may try to undo their action by
apologising or offering to help the person.