
image by
Milo WinterDefense Mechanisms are psychological processes
that protect the conscious mind from threatening
impulses, thoughts and feelings
they do so by denying or distorting reality, and
they are largely unconscious
defense mechanisms are normal and, if used in
moderation, they can be helpful -
helpful in that they can give us time to recognize
our discomfort, identify its source and find ways
to consciously deal with it
however, the extensive and prolonged use of
defense mechanisms can be problematic in that
underlying difficulties remain, energy is wasted
and stress builds
Sigmund Freud first used "defense" as a psycho-
analytic term in 1894; and it was his daughter,
Anna Freud, who refined and expanded his
theories in the 1930s
the defense mechanism referred to as
rational-
ization is the cognitive distortion of facts, done
at a near-conscious level, to reduce discomfort or
distress
for an example of rationalization, consider the
illustration above
it is from
The Fox and the Grapes, one of the
collection of
Aesop's Fables here, the fox is unable to reach the grapes that
hang high on a vine
he is frustrated and angry; and rather than acknow-
ledging his distress, he seeks to reduce it
he does so by unconsciously distorting reality, by
seeking to convince himself that the grapes are not
what he knows them to be - sweet
he devalues them, re-defines them as sour, and
he goes on his way -
the fox has reduced his distress through the use of
rationalization, but he leaves with a distorted sense
of reality