Overview of Contemporary Counseling Models

Overview of Contemporary Counseling Models

Overview of Contemporary Counseling Models

Ego-Defense Mechanisms

Defense

Uses for Behavior

Repression

Threatening or painful thoughts and feelings are excluded from awareness.

One of the most important Freudian processes, it is the basis of many other ego defenses and of neurotic disorders. Freud explained repression as an involuntary removal of something from consciousness. It is assumed that most of the painful events of the first five or six years of life are buried, yet these events do influence later behavior.

Denial

“Closing one’s eyes” to the existence of a threatening aspect of reality.

Denial of reality is perhaps the simplest of all self defense mechanisms. It is a way of distorting what the individual thinks, feels, or perceives in a traumatic situation. This mechanism is similar to repression, yet it generally operates at preconscious and conscious levels. Overview of Contemporary Counseling Models.

Reaction formation

Actively expressing the opposite impulse when confronted with a threatening impulse.

By developing conscious attitudes and behaviors that are diametrically opposed to disturbing desires, people do not have to face the anxiety that would result if they were to recognize these dimensions of themselves. Individuals may conceal hate with a facade of love, be extremely nice when they harbor negative reactions, or mask cruelty with excessive kindness.

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Projection

Attributing to others one’s own unacceptable desires and impulses.

This is a mechanism of self-deception. Lustful, aggressive, or other impulses are seen as being possessed by “those people out there, but not by me.”

Displacement

Directing energy toward another object or person when the original object or person is inaccessible.

Displacement is a way of coping with anxiety that involves discharging impulses by shifting from a threatening object to a “safer target.” For example, the meek man who feels intimidated by his boss comes home and unloads inappropriate hostility onto his children. Overview of Contemporary Counseling Models.

Rationalization

Manufacturing “good” reasons to explain away a bruised ego.

Rationalization helps justify specific behaviors, and it aids in softening the blow connected with disappointments. When people do not get positions, they have applied for in their work, they think of logical reasons they did not succeed, and they sometimes attempt to convince themselves that they really did not want the position anyway.

Sublimation

Diverting sexual or aggressive energy into other channels.

Energy is usually diverted into socially acceptable and sometimes even admirable channels. For example, aggressive impulses can be channeled into athletic activities, so that the person finds a way of expressing aggressive feelings and, as an added bonus, is often praised.

Regression

Going back to an earlier phase of development when there were fewer demands.

In the face of severe stress or extreme challenge, individuals may attempt to cope with their anxiety by clinging to immature and inappropriate behaviors. For example, children who are frightened in school may indulge in infantile behavior such as weeping, excessive dependence, thumb-sucking, hiding, or clinging to the teacher. Overview of Contemporary Counseling Models.

Introjection

Taking in and “swallowing” the values and standards of others.

Positive forms of introjection include incorporation of parental values or the attributes and values of the therapist (assuming that these are not merely uncritically accepted). One negative example is that in concentration camps some of the prisoners dealt with overwhelming anxiety by accepting the values of the enemy through identification with the aggressor.

Identification

Identifying with successful causes, organizations, or people in the hope that you will be perceived as worthwhile.

Identification can enhance self-worth and protect one from a sense of being a failure. This is part of the developmental process by which children learn gender-role behaviors, but it can also be a defensive reaction when used by people who feel basically inferior.

Compensation

Masking perceived weaknesses or developing certain positive traits to make up for limitations.

This mechanism can have direct adjustive value, and it can also be an attempt by the person to say “Don’t see the ways in which I am inferior, but see me in my accomplishments.”