psychodynamics lectures 1-3 Flashcards
Horney
-women can develop psychology
-we will always feel, to some extent, abandoned and isolated
-goal of therapy is partly to make the unconscious conscious
-innate needs for connectedness, safety, and autonomy
healthy person
(not a lot of hostility) learns to spontaneously and flexibly relate to others through authentic, real self that is a reflection of a persons true interests, traits, abilities, and attitudes
idealized selves
when basic hostility and basic anxiety get to much
- tend to contain a set of unrealistic standards that the neurotic person compulsively attempts to achieve in order to combat aloneness
-tyranny of the should
-leads to hating one’s real self
neurotic needs
strategies employed to combat basic anxiety
neurotic needs
- affection and approval
- dominant life partner
- prestige
- independence
- exploitation
neurotics
(those with strong feelings of basic anxiety) pursue only a few needs inflexibly (thus neglecting other important aspects of existence) in order to combat aloneness
3 negative basic anxiety-management strategies
- toward: compulsive compliance (pleasing and relying upon others) = compliant personality
- against: compulsive aggression (contradicting, exploiting, besting others) = aggressive personality
- away from: compulsive withdrawal (proving you don’t need others) = detached personality
3 healthier anxiety-management strategies
- toward: spontaneous seeking (friendly, loving behavior)
- against: spontaneous competitiveness (holding ones own)
- away from: spontaneous autonomy (serene self-sufficiency)
geraldine downey et al. : rejection sensitivity
women high is RS are more likely to end relationships when they get into an argument
neurotic pride
defensive pride based on fantasy rather than reality
Ian McGregor et al.: measure defensive pride by looking at
-low implicit self-esteem
-dismissive-avoidant attachment style
-narcissism
results:
in these studies, it was consistently found that after a relevant self-esteem threat, defensively high self-esteem folks, dismissive-avoidant folks, and narcissistic folks would defensively claim that most people agreed with them on important social issues
object relations theory
objects in environments that satisfy ID instincts
4 broad object relations theory themes
- in any relationship, the flip side of satisfaction is frustration
- those whom we love the most are also those toward whom we occasionally feel the most hate
- the parts of the object are not the same thing as the whole object
- out contradictory feelings toward important objects are both unconsciously recognized and a source of psychological discomfort
Margaret Mahler’s contributions to OR theory
- separation-individuation: differentiate “self” from mom/dad
- separation anxiety
- internalized object relation
Heinz Kohuts 3 narcissistic needs
- to be mirrored
- to idealize
- twinship