Defence Mechanisms

Defence mechanisms arise in order to protect the ego from too much anxiety.

They are all lies of one sort or another even if we are not using them consciously. Without them anxiety can become a threat to mental health. Using various defence mechanisms the ego blocks impulses or distorts them into more acceptable and less threatening forms. We cannot live without defence mechanisms because there is too much to cope with in life without them.

Defence mechanisms are used unconsciously and within reason. They are helpful, healthy and they all appear in the behaviour of normal healthy people. If they are overactive or persistent they can become damaging as they require a lot of mental effort to sustain them and mask issues that really need to be resolved. In this case they become a strategy for hiding from anxiety and blind us from true feelings and motives.

Freud, Klein and others identified many different defence mechanisms which are as follows:

1.Repression. This is the most common defence mechanism and formed the basis of many of Freud’s theories. Undesirable information about a person, a situation or an event becomes locked away in the unconscious. Repression is a form of forgetting. The advantage of repression is that we don’t have to deal with painful feelings and memories. People can lose whole blocks of time in this way after a traumatic event. Conscious efforts to recall events have no effect. This can apply to emotional traumas and traumas caused by external events and are healthy. The disadvantage of repression is that we are denying reality and this can give rise to behavioural problems and or symptoms such as phobia. Repression is often used in combination with other defence mechanisms.

2.Denial is closely related to repression but the person refuses to accept the reality of the situation. It is a deeper and more primitive than repression. It is sometimes acceptable as a very short defence but will be dangerous if the situation is not dealt with properly. It can be used in forgetting that you have a serious physical complaint e.g. anorexics don’t see themselves as thin. Denial can be there on its own with one particular symptom or sign or can be part of other defence mechanisms.

3.Regression. Regression is where the person reverts back to an earlier behaviour or developmental stage they feel safe or comforting. We all have a tendency to do it when we are ill or upset and it is common in children who need more attention.

4. Displacement arises from repression. If a person cannot release a basic feeling like anger, it can build up. The feeling is directed towards another person, animal or objects that have got nothing to do with the original situation, e.g. a man might have a bad day at work, rather than confront the boss who gave him the bad day goes home and kicks the dog. The original impulse is directed into a substitute target and it is the substitute target that is often seen as safer. Love as well as anger can be displaced, e.g. if you are unable to have a normal relationship with another human being one might lavish affection on a pet, or sexual desire for a particular person which is banned or not allowed in some way may find itself a substitute such as an object fetish. Displacement can also appear passively, like the person who complains and demands attention.

5. Passive Aggression. Conveying an unspoken message that one has done something unpleasant can be a passive variation of displacement.

6. Turning against the self is a special form of displacement. The substitute target is the self in this case. This usually happens with negative feelings that we refuse to acknowledge, such as hate, anger, contempt, aggression. It gives rise to feelings of self hatred, depression or inferiority and its more extreme cases may lead to physical self abuse.

7. Projection. Projection is a combination of denial and displacement. The person is unable to recognise the reality of their behaviour or feelings. The taboo urges or faults are projected outwards onto another person. A member of the staff will cover their deficiencies by accusing everyone else of being bossy. Projection may be seen when a person complains about a particular trait they despise in others people even though its there in themselves. Desires or faults are present in the person but can be denied because they are identified with someone else. Related to projection is altruistic surrender where a person tries to fulfil their needs vicariously, i.e., through other people, most common in women. The person may lead their life putting others needs before their own. The opposite of turning against the self.

8. Introjection. Involves absorbing someone else’s identity or personal characteristics into your own to compensate for some emotional short fall. It is the mechanism by which the super ego develops. It is seen in small children who tell cuddly toys not to be afraid of the dark or teenagers mimicking pop idols and film stars.

9. Identificationwith the aggressor is related to introjection in that it focuses on negative feelings of feared traits. The Stockholm Syndrome is often quoted; hostages once released become sympathetic towards their captors rather than angry with what they have done.

10. Rationalisation. Here a person finds an excuse for their behaviour that is more

acceptable to their ego than the real reason, e.g. the car driver might say “I took a

wrong turning to avoid a learner driver who was all over the road”. This covers up

the fact that the driver was not paying any attention. Rationalisation allows people

to get off the hook and allows avoidance of responsibility and or guilt.

11. Reaction formation. It is an attempt to cover up an impulse or a feeling by

displaying the exact opposite e.g. being terribly polite to someone who you really

want to be rude to. This is a common form of defence in teenagers who act

antagonistically to somebody they are really attracted to.

12. Undoing or Magical Undoing is linked to reaction formation. It is a way of using

special gestures or rituals to cancel out unpleasant thoughts or events after the

events have occurred, e.g. “The Wolf Man” had to breath out noisily every time he

encountered people he felt sorry for in order to avoid becoming like them.

13. Intellectualisation or isolation. The person strips emotion from a threatening

memory or impulse and gives the impression that the emotion, memory or situation

is of no consequence. This can happen during an emergency. After the event the

person will then have the time to become upset. It may follow a traumatic event

from earlier in life. This mechanism is essential for a professional to continue

functioning effectively, e.g. police at the scene of a murder.

14. Sublimation. This mechanism should be seen as a positive defence. Sublimation

involves transforming unacceptable impulses such as fear and aggression into

socially acceptable forms. So a person who has deviant sexual desires might

channel them into writing a novel.

15. Splitting. Refers to the division of an object into “good and bad”. The child in his

mind splits his mother into two separate persons, a good mother or idealised

mother whom he loves and the bad frustrating mother whom he hates. By keeping

good and bed separate, ambivalent conflict about essentially the one person, is

avoided.

16 Projective identification. An important and complex subject which provokes

controversy. Projection is attributing our difficult and unacceptable feelings to

others, e.g. blaming others for our short comings. This allows us to disown

responsibility and have a sense of mastering over our feelings.

Identification refers to a process by which self representations are built up and modified during development (not just copied by imitation). Klein conceived projective identification in a specific way. bad parts of the infantile self are split off from the rest of the self and projected onto the mother or her breast. As a result the infant feels the mother has become the bad parts of himself. The projection is “into”. What is projected is not so much a feeling or an attitude but itself or part of the self. The target of the projections maybe unaware of his role, e.g., the paranoid person projects malicious intentions on to politicians with whom he never comes into contact with.

Projective identification is also a communication and can be viewed as an interaction in that the recipient of the projection may be induced to feel or act in ways that originate with the projector and feelings in the recipient can reflect aspects of the patient’s inner world so projective identification becomes a process in which projector and recipient interact with one another at an unconscious level. The recipient may enact these feelings, e.g., becoming sleepy, bored, sad.

There is a positive form of identification underlying empathy where the mother

contains projective painful and hostile feelings, detoxes them and gives them back to

the infant in a benign form at an appropriate time.

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