what is the fundamental hypotheses of psychoanalytic theory?
psychic determinism: every event/symptom has meaning
what are the psychosexual stages of development?
libido: life force (includes sexual, aggressive)
1. oral: birth - 1.5 years: sucking, dependent
continue having oral traits as an adult (food, gum, smoke, drink)
2. anal: 1.5-3 yrs: crawling, exploring, NO!, potty training, terrible twos
as an adult: neat, on time, correct, organized, careful with money, controlled
3. phallic phase: 3-5/6 yrs: curious about sex differences, close to parent of opposite sex
4. latency phase: 6-adolescent
5. genital phase: adolescent/adult on: capacity for true intimacy
fixation
extra investment of libido in one phase
regression
reversion to earlier phase under stress
ID
child - from birth
fun, gratification: “I want now!”
superego
parent: from 5 on conscience, rules, morals, values develops based on input from parents, teachers, religious authorities, political authorities, social norms, legal system "thou salt not" DISSOLVES IN ALCOHOL
ego
adult
growing, evolving “i”
purpose: deals with internal (Id and ego) and external reality
level I defense mechanisms
“psychotic” mechanisms: common in a healthy individual before age 5 and common in adult dreams and fantasy
delusional projection
frank delusions about external reality, usually of a persecutory type
psychotic denial
denial of external reality (I am Jesus Christ, not John Williams)
distortion
grossly reshaping external reality to suit inner needs
level II defense mechanisms
immature mechanisms: common in healthy individuals 3-15 and personality disorders
projection
attributing one’s own unacknowledged feels to others
somatization
turning an unacceptable impulse or feeling eg from bereavement, loneliness, fear or anger into complaints of pain or somatic illness
-hypochondriac, psychosomatic disorders
acting out
direct expression of an unconscious wish or impulse in order to avoid being conscious of the affect that accompanies it
delinquent or impulsive act to avoid being aware of one’s feelings eg anger, sadness
-use of drugs, failure, perversion, self-inflicted injury to relieve tension
-antisocial personality disorder
splitting
seeing people and events as ALL good or ALL bad
level III defense mechanisms
neurotic defenses: common in health individuals age 3-90
denial
unable to accept (ignore, be unaware of, denies) intolerable facts about reality
-commonest defense in medical practice
displacement
redirection of feelings toward a relatively less cared for (less cathected) object than the person or situation arousing the feelings
dissociation
temporary but drastic modification of one’s character or of one’s sense of personal identity to avoid emotional distress
identification
unconscious patterning of one’s behavior after a powerful, influential person
intellectualization
thinking about instinctual wishes in formal, affectively bland terms, and NOT acting on them - idea is in consciousness, but feeling is missing
isolation of affect
intellectual knowledge and understanding of a negative event without experiencing the feelings
rationalization
providing superficially reasonable accounts to explain away negative events, feelings, actions