Psychoanalysis Theory
Psychoanalysis Theory
Psychoanalysis Theory
THEORIES OF COUNSELING
Prepared by:
Winnie Mugomati
August 2020
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THEORIES OF COUNSELING
WHAT IS A THEORY?
IMPORTANCE OF THEORIES
ELEMENTS OF THEORIES
A statement of the basic assumption underlying the theory e.g. for Carl Rogers
person centered theory people are basically good and can be trusted
An explanation of acquisition of helpful and unhelpful behaviors e.g. for
person centered theory individuals are operating from the external locus of
evaluation.
An explanation of the maintenance and perpetuation of helpful and unhelpful
behaviors.
An explanation of how clients change their behaviors and consolidate their
gains when counsel
Testable
Empirical support
Simple
Fruitful (room for further research)
Practical
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CLASSIFICATION OF THEORIES
Psychoanalytic approach
Cognitive approach
Humanistic approach
Family system approach
He made his patients lay on the couch face the ceiling and freely talk about their
concerns without being censored. He discovered that by doing so they were able to
release pent up feelings and gained the healing. He also realized that he had deep
hatred for his father because they were competing for the same object. He said that his
neurotic problems e.g. migraine, anxiety and deep fear for death emanated from these
sexual conflicts pent up feelings. He also found out that the Therapeutic community
had pent up sexual related conflicts and when they freely talked about them they got a
healing .It was the Victorian period when sex was a taboo and by freely talking about
sex Freud opened a can of worms.
The clinic was closed down by the authorities and Freud was isolated. During the
period of isolation he subjected himself to the same type pf treatment he had given his
patients
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Psychoanalysis is viewed in 3 perspective:
3: As a method of psychotherapy.
Key concepts
View of human nature-
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Structure of personality
According to Psychoanalytic view, Personality consists of three systems;
Id- the Id is a biological trait that one is born with. It is immoral, selfish. It does not
tolerate pain and is insistent
Super ego- it is the judicial branch of personality. It is concerned with the right or
wrong and generates guilt when people do not follow rules (morals), values, ideas and
moral precepts all of which are derived from parents or other authority figures.
For some people super-ego can develop as excessively punishing so that attitude of perfection
are fostered which can in turn lead to depression. Ego maintains a balance. Integrated behavior
depends on the balance between the three
Anxiety:
i. Reality anxiety- this is based on something real and threatening one’s existence
ii. Moral anxiety- the feeling that comes when one breaks values and beliefs (when
you transgress)
iii. Neurotic anxiety- fear of unknown or fear of losing one’s sanity.
NB: to cope with these fears the ego defence mechanisms are put in place
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i. Dreams: They are royal road to unconsciousness. They help us to get to
unconscious needs, wishes and fears.
ii. Through slips of the tongue
iii. Using free association- letting the client speak without censoring
iv. Hypnosis- the client is half asleep, half awake and a guided imagery is used to
help the counselor analyse the client’s hidden information.
v. Material derived from projective techniques
The aim of Psychoanalytic therapy is to make the unconscious motive conscious through
helping the client to get insight. Understanding the role of the unconscious is central to
grasping the essence of Psychoanalytic model of behaviour.
Personality development
i. Oral stages (0-1 and 1/2) years- the child finds pleasure in the mouth (sexual
pleasure). After some time, they enjoy biting their mother’s breast. They find
pleasure by suckling. If they do not negotiate in this stage, they might have
‘fixations’ in adulthood. If the child did not breastfeed enough, they will have
moral incorporate such smoking, greed, alcoholism, and drug addiction. They
might also have oral aggression with behaviours such as sarcasm, gossip.
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ii. Anal stage-(1 and1/2 years to 2 years) at this stage the sexual pleasure moves
from the mouth to the anus. They enjoy defecating on themselves. If the
caregivers are not strict with potty training the child may develop anal aggression
behaviour characterised by disorderliness, arrogance and temper tantrums. If the
parents are strict the child may develop anal retentive behaviour characterised by
hoarding, perfectionism, very strict with routine and orderliness
iii. Phallic stage (3-6 years).At this stage the sexual pleasure moves form the anus to
genitals. Here the children manipulate their genitals and masturbate. Girls develop
a penis anxiety called electra complex. Boys develop oedipal complex (fear of
castration). The children also develop unconscious infatuations to opposite
parents, thus competing with their parents for love. If they fixate, they may have
homosexual issues.
iv. Latency (6-12 years)-at this stage there are no sexual feelings and the children
are busy playing games and forming relationships with people of the same sex. If
the children don’t play enough and do not socialise enough, they may become
anti-social and lack social skills.
v. Genital stage- (13-18 years) feelings of phallic stage are actualised. Boys and
girls from relationships. If they are fixated, they also lack social skills and thus
cannot maintain long term relationships.
Goals of psychoanalysis
1. Creating insights
2. Making the unconscious become conscious
3. Reduce the impulses of the ego
4. Helps clients manage and deal with anxiety.
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Techniques
The client lies on a coach looks up to the ceiling without distractions, other
environmental factors are left constant. For example marital status, time of session
and job
2: Free association
The client is helped to relax and just talk about anything that comes to their mind.
The counsellor extracts key points they need to discover where the client is stuck or
fixated.
4: Dream analysis
Clients are required to remember all their dreams so that the analyst the can analyse
and try to interpret them. Clients are also required to try and interpret them. Dreams
are royal road to unconscious wishes. It is about our unmet wishes, desires, conflicts
and motivations.
Resistance is anything that works against the client's progress in therapy and
prevents the client from producing the unconscious material. Freud saw resistance as
unconscious way that people use to defend the intolerable anxiety and pain that would
rise if they were to be aware of their repressed feelings.
Clients often react to their therapists as they did to their significant person.
Manifestation of transference is significant because it provides the client the
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opportunity to re-experience a variety of feelings that would otherwise have been
inaccessible.
Contributions
Limitations
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