Lesson 3: Neurosis
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.
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. |