Lesson Review

This lesson gave you the opportunity to study some of the unusual neurotic behaviours people develop when plagued by guilt, anxiety, and stress. Neurosis interferes with a person’s everyday functioning, but it is usually not serious enough to destroy completely the person’s sense of self and ability to cope with life. Neurosis takes many shapes and forms.

Lesson 3 Summary - Section 3: Studying Behaviour

To summarize:

• Each culture’s definition of normal behaviour is different.

• Being normal means adjusting to the demands and expectations of one’s own culture whatever they are.

• Mentally challenged people are those whose mental development has been hindered by birth defects or injuries of some kind.

• Mental illness refers to problems with one’s perceptions of life and one’s behaviour patterns.

• Although we may be tempted to diagnose someone else’s behaviour and attach a label to it, we must remember that labels can impose very negative value judgements.

• One of the obvious characteristics of people with neurosis is the excessive anxiety they feel.

• Free-floating anxiety means that the person has a general feeling of worry or uneasiness that is not connected to any specific object, event, or situation.

• Bound anxiety is linked to a specific cause—an object, event, or situation.

• Neurotic individuals feel irritable, tense, and dissatisfied with life.

• Amnesia is the forgetting of important memories through repression and dissociation or disconnecting key links between activities and behaviour.

• Sleep disturbances are another type of dissociation; sometimes sleepwalking disorders can be violent.

• Conversion hysteria occurs when strong, repressed emotions disturb the smooth functioning of some organ.

• The hypochondriac continually worries about many body ailments just for the sake of getting sympathy and attention.

• Chronic Fatigue Syndrome prevents people from performing everyday functions when they are overcome by such symptoms as an overwhelming sense of fatigue, headaches, muscle pain, fever, and depression.

• Obsessive behaviours are persistent thoughts that grip the mind.

• Compulsive behaviours are repetitive, ritualistic actions.

• Obsessive-compulsive behaviours are a combination of rigid ideas and controlling behaviours.

• Anorexia nervosa is an eating disorder wherein the young person stops eating until he or she become thin almost to the point of starvation.

• Bulimia is an eating disorder characterized by periods of binge (nonstop) eating and then purging to get rid of the food that has been consumed.

• Phobias are types of intense, panic fear reactions; a person will go to any lengths to avoid the specific object or event that creates a phobia.

• Desensitization is a method of treating fears or phobias by having a person gradually confront the object that is feared using small steps with more and more frightening situations.

• Flooding is a method of treating fears or phobias by immediately confronting the feared object from the beginning.

• Depression is a serious physical/emotional state that causes a person to be unable to function when fulfilling everyday duties.

• A depressed person will display some of the following characteristics: feelings of worthlessness and sadness, problems with sleeping, restlessness, fatigue, digestive problems, body pains, and inability to concentrate on tasks.

• Brainwashing means forcibly controlling a person’s mind by destroying personality and beliefs and then programming new ideas.