Dreams
are more than random fragments spun from your waking life.
Pay them proper respect and they will reward you with a greater
understanding of yourself and your world as you see it.
Dreams: symbolic expressions of the unconscious (and of the
total psyche). A phylogenetically older form of thought. The
dream is a fact of objective nature and therefore not a disguise.
(Sugar in the blood means sugar and nothing else.) It is its
own interpretation and is only misunderstood when we don't
fathom its symbols. The manifest aspect is the dream images
themselves, and they contain the "latent" meaning.
It's not what causes a dream, but it's purpose, that matters.
As I said earlier, for Freud, the sex drive is the most important
motivating force. In fact, Freud felt it was the primary motivating
force not only for adults but for children and even infants.
When he introduced his ideas about infantile sexuality to
the Viennese public of his day, they were hardly prepared
to talk about sexuality in adults, much less in infants!
It is true that the capacity for orgasm is there neurologically
from birth. But Freud was not just talking about orgasm. Sexuality
meant not only intercourse, but all pleasurable sensation
from the skin. It is clear even to the most prudish among
us that babies, children, and, of course, adults, enjoy tactile
experiences such as caresses, kisses, and so on.
Freud noted that, at different times in our lives, different
parts of our skin give us greatest pleasure. Later theorists
would call these areas erogenous zones. It appeared to Freud
that the infant found its greatest pleasure in sucking, especially
at the breast. In fact, babies have a penchant for bringing
nearly everything in their environment into contact with their
mouths. A bit later in life, the child focuses on the anal
pleasures of holding it in and letting go. By three or four,
the child may have discovered the pleasure of touching or
rubbing against his or her genitalia. Only later, in our sexual
maturity, do we find our greatest pleasure in sexual intercourse.
In these observations, Freud had the makings of a psychosexual
stage theory.
The oral stage lasts from birth to about 18 months. The focus
of pleasure is, of course, the mouth. Sucking and biting are
favorite activities.
The anal stage lasts from about 18 months to three or four
years old. The focus of pleasure is the anus. Holding it in
and letting it go are greatly enjoyed.
The phallic stage lasts from three or four to five, six,
or seven years old. The focus of pleasure is the genitalia.
Masturbation is common.
The latent stage lasts from five, six, or seven to puberty,
that is, somewhere around 12 years old. During this stage,
Freud believed that the sexual impulse was suppressed in the
service of learning. I must note that, while most children
seem to be fairly calm, sexually, during their grammar school
years, perhaps up to a quarter of them are quite busy masturbating
and playing "doctor." In Freud's repressive era,
these children were, at least, quieter than their modern counterparts.
The genital stage begins at puberty, and represents the resurgence
of the sex drive in adolescence, and the more specific focusing
of pleasure in sexual intercourse. Freud felt that masturbation,
oral sex, homosexuality, and many other things we find acceptable
in adulthood today, were immature.
This is a true stage theory, meaning that Freudians believe
that we all go through these stages, in this order, and pretty
close to these ages.
The Oedipal crisis
Each stage has certain difficult tasks associated with it
where problems are more likely to arise. For the oral stage,
this is weaning. For the anal stage, it's potty training.
For the phallic stage, it is the Oedipal crisis, named after
the ancient Greek story of king Oedipus, who inadvertently
killed his father and married his mother.
Here's how the Oedipal crisis works: The first love-object
for all of us is our mother. We want her attention, we want
her affection, we want her caresses, we want her, in a broadly
sexual way. The young boy, however, has a rival for his mother's
charms: his father! His father is bigger, stronger, smarter,
and he gets to sleep with mother, while junior pines away
in his lonely little bed. Dad is the enemy.
About the time the little boy recognizes this archetypal
situation, he has become aware of some of the more subtle
differences between boys and girls, the ones other than hair
length and clothing styles. From his naive perspective, the
difference is that he has a penis, and girls do not. At this
point in life, it seems to the child that having something
is infinitely better than not having something, and so he
is pleased with this state of affairs.
But the question arises: where is the girl's penis? Perhaps
she has lost it somehow. Perhaps it was cut off. Perhaps this
could happen to him! This is the beginning of castration anxiety,
a slight misnomer for the fear of losing one's penis.
To return to the story, the boy, recognizing his father's
superiority and fearing for his penis, engages some of his
ego defenses: He displaces his sexual impulses from his mother
to girls and, later, women; And he identifies with the aggressor,
dad, and attempts to become more and more like him, that is
to say, a man. After a few years of latency, he enters adolescence
and the world of mature heterosexuality.
The girl also begins her life in love with her mother, so
we have the problem of getting her to switch her affections
to her father before the Oedipal process can take place. Freud
accomplishes this with the idea of penis envy: The young girl,
too, has noticed the difference between boys and girls and
feels that she, somehow, doesn't measure up. She would like
to have one, too, and all the power associated with it. At
very least, she would like a penis substitute, such as a baby.
As every child knows, you need a father as well as a mother
to have a baby, so the young girl sets her sights on dad.
Dad, of course, is already taken. The young girl displaces
from him to boys and men, and identifies with mom, the woman
who got the man she really wanted. Note that one thing is
missing here: The girl does not suffer from the powerful motivation
of castration anxiety, since she cannot lose what she doesn't
have. Freud felt that the lack of this great fear accounts
for fact (as he saw it) that women were both less firmly heterosexual
than men and somewhat less morally-inclined.
Before you get too upset by this less-than-flattering account
of women's sexuality, rest assured that many people have responded
to it. I will discuss it in the discussion section.
Character
Your experiences as you grow up contribute to your personality,
or character, as an adult. Freud felt that traumatic experiences
had an especially strong effect. Of course, each specific
trauma would have its own unique impact on a person, which
can only be explored and understood on an individual basis.
But traumas associated with stage development, since we all
have to go through them, should have more consistency.
If you have difficulties in any of the tasks associated with
the stages -- weaning, potty training, or finding your sexual
identity -- you will tend to retain certain infantile or childish
habits. This is called fixation. Fixation gives each problem
at each stage a long-term effect in terms of our personality
or character.
When we are between five and eight months old, we begin teething.
One satisfying thing to do when you are teething is to bite
on something, like mommy's nipple. If this causes a great
deal of upset and precipitates an early weaning, you may develop
an oral-aggressive personality. These people retain a life-long
desire to bite on things, such as pencils, gum, and other
people. They have a tendency to be verbally aggressive, argumentative,
sarcastic, and so on.
In the anal stage, we are fascinated with our "bodily
functions." At first, we can go whenever and wherever
we like. Then, out of the blue and for no reason you can understand,
the powers that be want you to do it only at certain times
and in certain places. And parents seem to actually value
the end product of all this effort!
Some parents put themselves at the child's mercy in the process
of toilet training. They beg, they cajole, they show great
joy when you do it right, they act as though their hearts
were broken when you don't. The child is the king of the house,
and knows it. This child will grow up to be an anal expulsive
(a.k.a. anal aggressive) personality. These people tend to
be sloppy, disorganized, generous to a fault. They may be
cruel, destructive, and given to vandalism and graffiti. The
Oscar Madison character in The Odd Couple is a nice example.
Other parents are strict. They may be competing with their
neighbors and relatives as to who can potty train their child
first (early potty training being associated in many people's
minds with great intelligence). They may use punishment or
humiliation. This child will likely become constipated as
he or she tries desperately to hold it in at all times, and
will grow up to be an anal retentive personality. He or she
will tend to be especially clean, perfectionistic, dictatorial,
very stubborn, and stingy. In other words, the anal retentive
is tight in all ways. The Felix Unger character in The Odd
Couple is a perfect example.
There are also two phallic personalities, although no-one
has given them names. If the boy is harshly rejected by his
mother, and rather threatened by his very masculine father,
he is likely to have a poor sense of self-worth when it comes
to his sexuality. He may deal with this by either withdrawing
from heterosexual interaction, perhaps becoming a book-worm,
or by putting on a rather macho act and playing the ladies'
man. A girl rejected by her father and threatened by her very
feminine mother is also likely to feel poorly about herself,
and may become a wall-flower or a hyper-feminine "belle."
But if a boy is not rejected by his mother, but rather favored
over his weak, milquetoast father, he may develop quite an
opinion of himself (which may suffer greatly when he gets
into the real world, where nobody loves him like his mother
did), and may appear rather effeminate. After all, he has
no cause to identify with his father. Likewise, if a girl
is daddy's little princess and best buddy, and mommy has been
relegated to a sort of servant role, then she may become quite
vain and self-centered, or possibly rather masculine.
These various phallic characters demonstrate an important
point in Freudian characterology: Extremes lead to extremes.
If you are frustrated in some way or overindulged in some
way, you have problems. And, although each problem tends to
lead to certain characteristics, these characteristics can
also easily be reversed. So an anal retentive person may suddenly
become exceedingly generous, or may have some part of their
life where they are terribly messy. This is frustrating to
scientists, but it may reflect the reality of personality!
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