Frustration and Conflicts: Guilty
Frustration and Conflicts: Guilty
Frustration and Conflicts: Guilty
Sources of Frustration
1. Environmental forces (external sources) that block motive
fulfilment. The obstacle may be something physical, e.g. a
locked door, lack of money or it may be people-parents,
teachers or policemen. The restrictions placed on behaviour
by the rules of the society is another source of frustration.
2. Personal inadequacies(internal sources) that make it impossible
toreach goals. For example, some people are handicapped by
blindness or paralysis. As children grow into adulthood, the
of performance
s o m e w n a t similar desires, but theu
Most individuals have are
not equally equipped to satisty them. In life's struggle for ealth,
Types of Conflicts
Conflicts are of four basic forms:
conflict
Fig. 4.2: Approach-approach
Escape
++
Reactions to Frustrations
Frustration creates uncomfortable emotional tensions and so
the individual tries to reduce the tension in a variety of ways. The
important reactions are as follows:
intensity of attack is
usually some other person or object and the
proportionate to the amount offrustration.
5 Adjustment Mechanisms
Mechanism
Defence
Mechanisms or
Adjustment
mechanism" to refer to the
"defence
used the term
Freud, in 1904, against anxiety. When
that defends aperson
unconscious process
serious conflict
with the contro
drives are in
the primitive ID individual suffers from
the
imposed by the 'Ego' or the Superego', reflected in the
uncomfortable situation is
tension and anxiety. This
method of developing a compromise
individual's behaviour. Some
is needed. The human being
and relieving the tension and anxiety
certain forms of
is usually able to reduce the tension by utilising
adaptationwhich are called ego defence mechanisms,
adjustment
mechanisms or mental dynamisms.
Delence mechanisms enable a person to "resolve the conflict
and reduce the "stress and anxiety" associated with it. Of course,
many of these strategies are self-deceptive in nature. When more
adaptive measures to resolve the conflicts are not available to the
individual, these mechanisms help him to live comfortably without
having to face very difficult problems. For instance, individuals
who suffer from disease such as cancer and are sure to
a
die
may deny such a state of affairs to themselves and may plan their
future projects as if they have many years of life before
them. Such
a denial of fact rids the individual
of the of
his impending death.
agony thinking aboul
Mental mechanisms are a means of
forbidden desires, feelings of compromising wit
is
guilt admission that one
or an
inadequate infacing certain
individual's self-respect, avoid an problems. They salvage the
open admission of failure
an
Defence Mechanisms or Adjustment Mechanisms 33
strongly emotionallvt
oression
desires and ideas, y toned
Agroupof repressed
forms a complex. is an
repression is an expensive
expensive def
defe
energy,
In terms of psychic prevents feelin.
smoothly and of
m e c h a n i s m . If it operates
a well adjusted life. it is
promote
anxiety, it may help mechanism. Ine repressed material
a sort of "burying alive m e m o r i e s o r urges contin
and the unconscious nue
active
always
and may emerge
in the lorm of accidents" (e
to seek expression
neurotic symptoms. Many painfd
or pen") or
"slips of the tongue
are repressed during
early childhood and becom.
experiences
unconscious sources
of emotional contlict in later life. Selfish
Projection
Projection is a frequently used unconscious mechanism that
relieves tension and anxiety by transferring the responsibility
for unacceptable ideas, impulses, wishes or thoughts to another
person. It is an attempt to deal with our own shortcomings, by
seeing them in others and denying them in ourselves.
The student who believes that everybody cheats in examinations
may also cheat in the same way. People who are dishonest often
attribute dishonesty to others. An adulterer blames his wife that she
is an adulteress. When we feel guilty about our dislike of another
nurse, we complain that she is the one who dislikes us. The nurse
who is poor in clinical practice may claim that all health care team
members are giving poor patient care. The surgeon who bungled
an operation may insist that it happened because the theatre
nurse and ward boy did their task poorly. Carried to the extreme,
projection is the mask of a behaviour disorder known as paranoia.
When you practice projection, your relationship with others
will be strained. Firstly, you will not see or understand your own
failings. Secondly, you will find others relating poorly with you
because of your negative attitude towards them. Thirdly, you
will find it very difficult to accept responsibilities for your own
behaviour because you blame others for anything that
goes wrong
Rationalisation
In
rationalisation, we "make excuses" giving a reason different Irom
thereal one for what we are doing. It is a defence mechanism in
which an individual justifies his failures and socially unacceptable
bldviours by giving socially approved reasons. For example,
Students who fail in the examination may complain that the hostel
umosphere was not favourable for study. Atense father who beats
his child
uhdmay may rationalise
rat that it is for the child's good. Ascientist
unable to carry out research of high order may blame the
lackOof facilities
facilitiesiin his laboratory. An employee who fails to get
promotion may blame the employer's partiality.
GNM.M and BPT Studer
for
Sociology
Psychology
and
36
lying.
We
believe
ou
in our explar
anatio
erates
operaOns
is not It
inin ytw
weaknesses.
R a t i o n a l i s a t i o n
human
cover
the
b l a n k e t to
is like a
forms:
and
Sour g r a p e s ,
a.
b. Sweet lemon.
of the fox and grapes):
A
(from Aesop's
fable
that a beautif.
voiuN
ungman
Sourgrape
Intellectualisation
Related to rationalisation is intellectualisation, another defene
mechanism which involves reasoning. It is the distancing fro
an emotional or threatening situation by talking or thinking aboi
it in intellectual terms. A nurse, doctor or paramedical worki
cannot afford to becoome emotionally attached to each patien
So they use the technique of detaching themselves from emotio
through calm abstract statements about the situation. As a stuae
nurse, probably you use this most of the time when working Wi
patients who acutely or terminally ill. You may speak ca
are
and
intelligently rather than emotionally with patients ana the
families. For example, if
tell the
there is a
family members rather than saving "I am s0 patient who is acuesy ill, cal
ptC. etc.
This is a
helpful defence mechanism to S* frC
yourself
professional crises. But to separate yu
go on using it in
all your
Mechanisms or Adjustment Mechanisms 37
Defence
emotional experiences.
healthy
withouth e a l
without
D i s p l a c e m e n t
Regression
Toregress inbehaviourmeans to behave in a less mature way, i.e. go
backwards. An adult behavinglikea child is practising regression.
When faced with difficulties of life, an individual reverts to a less
mature form of behaviour, where he finds less conflict, and hence
less anxiety.
Faced with the unwelcome arrival of a new
school for the first
baby or going to
time, a five years old may have toilet accidents,
revert to
"baby talk, demand cuddling, etc. "Crying on someone's
shoulder" is symbolic of the infant's
maternal seeking comfort at the
bosom. You may practice regression when faced with
pressures of an
examination. Another example is, when the nurse
dkes an error in giving medicines or
nursing care and then starts
crying.
Adults
us too,too, m
may regress to the oral stage of
suck their thumbs when life development and
gets stressful. One may
profoundly that he
it without moving. will curl up in the fetal
gress so
are
are regressive
a
Tegressions, such as tears on becoming
quite normal
trait.
very emotional
formeormal
forms and whilefacing serious
degrees of regression result inproblems in life. Extreme
psychosis.
Sthucte
and B
BPT
P T Studer
and
GNM
for
S o c i o l o g y
P s y c h o l o g y
and
38
38 ially unacceptable driver
unacceptable e or
socially
S u b l i m a t i o n
strong
and
society. . The
most
most
important
c h a n n e l l i n g
ofa a c c e p t a b l e
to
aggressive
aggressive
feelina
feelir
t h a t is
the are
are
tis Others
O n e r S
form
into a
d e s i r e s .
urge
are
sexual
positive
positive
anisms of
m e c h a n i s
mechar
these
of
and cultura
cultural
m
moor
ree
is for
mu
m uch
h
Sublimation for u n m a r r i e d
woman can
responsible
responsible
An
nd is
and peope. scho
aa nursery
nursery
a d j u s t m e n t
civilised
becoming
becoming
a c h i e v e m e n t s ofthe desires,
by
lover m ay
may
t u r n to write
his lover
sexual
repressed
has lost not be
express
man
who feelings may
aggressive
has
A b o x e r or soldier
young
teacher. who
a
love. A person
become
about can
but A4
poetry society b u s i n e s s m a n .
these in s u c c e s s t u l
a
able to express can
become
into fiction
energies
with greed re-channel
these
A person love can
who needs
person
find gratificatior
maternal c a r e may
Writing need to give and
unfulflled much love
The
Some lonely people give thei
of the sick. for giving
in the care
opportunity
occurs
ldentihcation
satistactio
By adjustment, the individual feels the personal
this
in the success and achievements of other people and group
Thus, the little boy takes the masculine attributes that he adm
in his father. Girls identify with their mother, later perhaps
their teacher, and later still
perhaps with a film star. Young nu
identify with the ward sister. Hero worship is an obvious lo
identification.
Parents may
lliterate
identify themselves with their children.
father often takes his son's higher education as o
achievement. A dignified
her own mother takes
her daughter's a res
degeneration. Many people, while
watching a nln
Detence MechanisIms or Adjustmont Mechanisms 39
with the hero a d heroine to the extent that they burst into tears
Compensation
Compensation means something given to replace a loss or to
make up for a defect. Just as nature compensates for disease in
our bodies
(as when a blind person develops extraordinarily
keen
hearing), so we develop personality traits to compensate for various
inadequacies. When people are frustrated in their desires in one
direction, they compensate for it by attaining success in other
directions. A student who fails in his studies may
by becoming the college champion in athletics. A
compensate
cannot compete with her more beautiful sisters
plain girl who
may compensate
by studying hard and come first in her
class. Rivalry often leads to
Compensation. A mother is over-protective of and
over-indulgent
Oa child whom unconsciously she rejects. When carried to excess,
Called
wnen
over
compensation. Students practice compensation
they excel in objective and practical exams after doing
poorly
40 Psychology and Sociology for GNM and BPT Students
Denial
Denial of reality is when we refuse to accept or believe in the
existence of something that is very unpleasant to us. We use
denial most often when faced with death, serious illness or
something painful and threatening. A patient often practices
denial, at least for a period of time, when he knows he has a fatal
illness but cannot accept his impending death. Parents of fatally
ill children will also deny the serious nature of illness for some
time. Many old people will not easily accept that their mental
and physical powers are on the decline as they advance in age.
Backward students do not find any reliability in the intelligence
tests. When some very near and dear one dies in the family, some
people try to keep up the pretence that he is still alive. At the
dining table, his place is left empty. A patient admitted to the
psychiatric ward may say that he just "needs rest" A student who
spends beyond his means is denying his lack of money. Often,
nurses protect themselves from
the impact of the numerous
traumatic experiences of
emergencies, suffering and death by
developing an unfeeling
and apparently callous attitude.
Denial is quite harmless if
but can lead
practised in moderation,
to serious difficulties in health
and lifestyle if
practised to excess.
Fantasy or Daydreaming
It is kind ofwithdrawal when
a
faced with real
retire to a make belief
world, where
problems of life. We
we are victors or everything is possible, where
conquerors. The tendency to
pronounced during adolescence. daydreaming is most
Daydreaming is a pleasant thing. It
times of stress. For
example, when
mayhelp us to escape during
one can one is having financial
temporarily by planning howproblems,
escape from them
to spenu
Defence Mechanisms or Adjustment Mechanisms 41
Withdrawal
Whenever an individual suspects that he is likely to be criticised,
ridiculed or disgraced on account of some prior unfortunate
experience or failure, he resorts to withdrawal. Such a person is
seen as avoiding all work saying that
he cannot do this or that. It is a
device by which the individual prevents further hurt and
protective
and avoding all
damage to his security by withdrawing from people
close interpersonal relations. It may occur as a temporary pattern.
Conversion
Conversion is a defence mechanism by which an emotional
conflict is expressed as a physical symptom for which there is
no demonstrable organic basis. A student nurse, very anxious
about her exam, may develop a headache. A woman invited for
a party which presents an upsetting situation to her, develop
gastrointestinal symptoms and may excuse herself from the
party. Usually when the party time is over, her symptoms resolve
themselves.
Conversion hysteria is the converting of strong emotional
CEs into such physical symptoms that the very helplessness
ofe the victim
victim will resolve the conflict. For example, a soldier in the
battlefield may be deeply upset at the prospect of having to kill
or be
killed. He develops paralysis of his legs as an
defa
defence mechanism.
unconscious
Suppression
scsion is intentional pushing away irom awareness ofcer
ertai
unwelcome ideas, memories Or Ieenngs. We merely push.the
into our subconscious mind, where th
into the background,
wIsh to remember them. Ran
accessible to us wheneverwe use
defence mechanism in the strict sense
isconscious, it is not a
decides not to thin
the term. For example, a student consciously
that she can study eftectively. A patier-
about her weekend, so
may refuse to
consider his difficulties by saying that he does ne
is easier to deal with, becau
want to talk about it. Suppression
conscious.
the material remains