Psychodynamic

    Cards (42)

    • Assumption 1
      The unconscious mind
    • Assumption 2
      The tripartite personality
    • Assumption 3
      Influence of childhood experiences
    • The unconscious mind 

      • Iceberg analogy - 80% of our mind is unconscious
      • the preconscious and unconscious mind
      • conscious mind is logical, this isn't & is ruled by pleasure seeking
      • can't be directly accessed, expresses itself indirectly - through dreams
      • Freud believes it determines much of our behavior
      • contains two conflicting drives within it - Eros and Thanatos
    • Eros
      • the libido
      • determines behaviors that seek sexual gratification, love and companionship
    • Thanatos
      • the death drive
      • instinct that leads to self destructive, violent, aggressive behaviors
    • Ego defence mechanisms
      • related to the unconscious mind
      • lead to abnormal behaviour
      • can cause psychiatric illness when overused
      • conflicts between the id, ego and super ego
      • the ego protects itself through defence mechanisms
      • Displacement
      • Projection
      • Repression
    • Displacement
      transfer of impulses from one person/object to another (usually a less threatening one)
    • Projection
      undesirable thoughts are attributed to someone else
    • Repression
      pushing pushing memories deep into the unconscious mind so the appear forgotten
    • The tripartite personality
      • adult personality is structured into 3 parts:
      • id
      • ego
      • super ego
    • The id
      • inborn
      • unconscious and impulsive
      • governed by the pleasure principle
      • aims to gain pleasure/gratification at any cost
    • The ego
      • develops at age 2
      • conscious and rational
      • governed by the reality principle
      • works out realistic ways to balance the demands of the id in a socially acceptable way
    • The super ego
      • develops at age 4
      • unconscious
      • governed by the morality principle (sense of right and wrong, our conscious)
      • formed through identification with our parents and others
    • The tripartite personality
      • id and superego often in conflict
      • ego resolves the conflict
      • if the super ego or id are left unchecked their desires can be reflected in behaviour
    • Influence of childhood experiences
      • Freud believed experiences during childhood shaped our adult personality
      • believed development in childhood took place during a series a key developmental stages - the psychosexual stages
      • each stages represents a fixation of libido (translated as sexual drives/desires)
      • problems at any stage can result in a child getting fixated (stuck) at the associated body part to the stage
      • fixation can occur through:
      • overindulgence
      • frustration
    • frustration
      the stage hasn't been resolved because the needs of the child haven't been met, the child is undersatisfied
    • overindulgence
      the needs of the child have been more than satisfied, the child feels too comfortable and is reluctant to move on to the next stage
    • The psychosexual stages
      • oral
      • anal
      • phallic
      • latency
      • genital
      • OAPLG
    • oral stage
      • 0-18 months
      • source of libido: mouth (sucking, chewing, biting, swallowing)
      • key events: breastfeeding, weaning onto solid food
      • frustration: pessimism, envy, sarcasm
      • overindulgence: optimism, neediness, gullibility
    • anal stage
      • 18 months-3 years
      • source of libido: anus (withholding, expelling, playing with faeces)
      • key events: potty training
      • frustration: stubborn, possessive, overly tidy
      • overindulgence: disorganised, messy, reckless
    • phallic stage
      • 3-5 years
      • source of libido: genitals (masturbation)
      • key events: Oedipus complex leads to the super ego and gender identity
      • outcome of fixation: vain, self assured, may have problems with sexuality and difficulty building/maintaining relationships in adulthood.
    • latency stage
      • 5 years-puberty
      • source of libido: little/no sexual motivation
      • key events: acquiring knowledge and understanding of the world
      • outcome of fixation: no fixation so no pleasure focus
    • genital stage
      • puberty onwards
      • source of libido: genitals (heterosexual intercourse)
      • no key events
      • outcome of fixation: well developed adult personality, well adjusted (if the complexes during the phallic stage are resolved)
    • Dream analysis
      "dreams are the royal road to the unconscious mind" - Freud
    • Eros - The Life Drive

      • deals with basic survival, pleasure and reproduction
      • includes instincts such as thirst, hunger and pain avoidance
      • energy created by the drive is call the libido
      • focuses on the preservation of life ( of the individual and species)
      • compels people to engage in actions that sustain their own lives (looking after your health, safety)
      • exerts itself through sexual drives motivating people to reproduce
      • Freud said it was opposed by a self destructive death instinct
    • Thanatos - The Death Drive
      • freud believed people mainly channeled this outwards, which manifested as agression towards others
      • if directed inwards it could result in self-harm or suicide
      • based this on clinical observations - people who had experineced a traumatic event often revist/recreate it
      • soilders who retuned from WW1 tended to revist their traumatic experiences in their dreams, which took them back to the combat
      • from these observations he conculded people hold an unsconsious desire to die but life instincts largely controlled this wish, so eros and thanatos are in conflict
    • psychodynamic reasoning behind dream analysis

      • psychiatric illness is caused by an overuse of ego defence mechanisms (e.g destructive behaviours associated with thanatos)
      • dreams are symbolic of unfulfilled wishes and desires created by the id which may be rooted in childhood experinces of the dreamer
      • it aims to make unconscoius desire conscious again so they can be resolved by undoing the dreamwork process to achieve catharsis
    • catharsis
      process of releasing, and providing relief from strong/repressed emotions
    • dreams are wish fulfilment
      • freud believed dreams were the unconscious fulfilment of wishes that couldnt be satisfied in the conscoius mind
      • dreams protect the dreamer but allow some expression to these buried urges (wish fulfilment)
    • symbolism in dreams

      • freud believed the contents of a dream was expressed symbolically
      • latent and manifest content
      • psychoanalysists are trained to interpret the symbols (a penis may be a snake or gun)
      • to understand the meaning of dream symbols fully it needed to be considered in the context of the patients life (a fish may represent a friend who is a fisherman)
      • recognised not everything in a dream is symbolic
    • Latent content
      • the real meaning of a dream
      • transfered into the manisfest content
    • Manisfest content
      • what you actaully experince in a dream
      • latent content is translated into a more innocous (harmless) form (manifest content)
    • Dreamwork
      • the process of the latent content of a dream being translated into the manifest content of the dream
      • the processes are applied to repressed wishes to produce the content of the dream experienced
    • role of the therapist
      • to reverse the dreamwork process (decode the manifest content back into the latent content)
      • should offer various interpretations so the patient can select those that make sense based on their feedback and knowlege of their life experiences
    • Condesnation
      • creates the dream: 2 or more images/associations are combined into one object in the dream
      • undone: seperating objects in the dream into two or more objects to reveal their true meaning
    • Displacement
      • creates the dream: censores dream content(traumatising images made into less threatning ones)
      • undone: working out which dream objects are symbolic of those that actually cause anxiety
    • Representation
      • creates the dream: thoughts are translated into visual images in the dream
      • undone: visual images translated back into thoughts
    • Symbolism
      • creates the dream: symbol replaces an action, person or idea
      • undone: considering what the real meaning is behind each symbol
    • Secondary elaboration
      • creates the dream: unconscoius mind takes the symbols and other imahes to creat a logical storyline (Manifest content)
      • undone: re-ordering the wish fulfiling images to uncover the obscured latent content
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