The Oral Stage of Psychosexual Development (Birth To 18 Months)
The Oral Stage of Psychosexual Development (Birth To 18 Months)
The Oral Stage of Psychosexual Development (Birth To 18 Months)
The oral stage of infancy is a critical period in personality formation. The centers of
pleasurable body movements are the mouth, lips and tongue. The child regards
sucking his mothers breast as the most pleasurable activity. But conflict ensures when
the source of love or pleasure is terminated i.e. the breast feeding. The child at this
stage is self-centered and pre-occupied with his own needs. He also experiences
common problems associated with fixation as dependent personality with unnecessary
demand for mothering, oral aggressive, and excessive oral behaviours such as the
compulsive eating, nail biting etc.
Anal Stage (18 months to 3 years)
This stage refers to the stage when the focus of pleasurable body zone shifts from
mouth to anus, rectum and bladder. The child takes most pleasurable activities in
urinating and defecating. The source of conflict results in toilet training by the mother.
The child develops ambivalent attitudes as a result of parent’s interference with his
activities. The child also resolves conflict between his need for parental love and his
need for instinctual gratification through the development of lifelong attitudes toward
cleanliness, submissiveness, orderliness, punctuality etc. The problems alongside with
fixation are hostile and challenging personality accompanied with adherence to rules,
regulations, neatness and orderliness.
Abraham Maslow developed the hierarchy of human motives to show how we have to
satisfy certain needs before we can satisfy higher needs. Discuss this statement
drawing examples from Maslow hierarchy of needs.
Maslow's hierarchy of needs is a theory by Abraham Maslow, which puts forward that
people are motivated by five basic categories of needs: physiological, safety, love,
esteem, and self-actualization.
In this theory, higher needs in the hierarchy begin to emerge when people feel they
have sufficiently satisfied the previous need.
In order to better understand what motivates human beings, Maslow proposed that
human needs can be organized into a hierarchy. This hierarchy ranges from more
concrete needs such as food and water to abstract concepts such as self-fulfillment.
According to Maslow, when a lower need is met, the next need on the hierarchy
becomes our focus of attention.