Tag: psychological defense


EGO DEFENSE

The Conceptual Foundation of Ego Defense Ego defense mechanisms represent the collection of unconscious psychological strategies employed by the ego to cope with the internal and external pressures that threaten psychological stability. Fundamentally, these mechanisms serve the crucial function of protecting the individual from experiencing overwhelming anxiety originating from conflicts between instinctual drives (the id), […]

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SECURITY OPERATIONS

Introduction to Security Operations Security operations, a foundational concept within the Interpersonal Theory of Psychiatry developed by US psychoanalyst Harry Stack Sullivan (1892–1949), refer to a diverse collection of interpersonal protective procedures. These procedures are automatically employed by an individual to defend against the painful experience of apprehension—Sullivan’s term for anxiety derived from social disapproval—or […]

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ARMORING

Definition and Historical Context of Armoring Armoring, in the context of psychological and somatic theory, is defined as an effective and frequently natural defense mechanism utilized by the individual to achieve emotional distance. This distancing is accomplished primarily through the systematic and often unconscious withholding of emotional expression, effectively creating a barrier between the individual’s […]

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REPRESSIVE COPING STYLE

Definition and Conceptual Overview The repressive coping style, often termed “repressive defensiveness,” describes a specific psychological strategy characterized by the systematic maintenance of an unnaturally positive subjective view of the self and the world, achieved primarily through the active minimization, denial, or avoidance of negative information, problems, or misfortunes. Individuals employing this style often present […]

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