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  1. Repression is associated in the literature with terms such as non-expression, emotional control, rationality, anti-emotionality, defensiveness and restraint. Whether these terms are synonymous with repression, indicate a variation, or are essentially different from repression is uncertain. To clarify this obscured view on repression, this paper ...

    • Depression
    • Subjugation
    • Paranoia
    • Self-Righteousness
    • Passive-Aggressiveness

    Do you feel sad for seemingly no reason? Do you often feel hopeless and empty? Do you lack energy and motivation, even towards goals you have set? Have you been experiencing an underlying current of sadness for a long period of time? Psychoanalysts have long known that when anger is repressed and turned inward, it turns into depression. People who ...

    Some people have learned from their families, schools, or religion that anger is a bad or even immoral thing. They become afraid of the power of their own rage. When anger emerges, they feel an intense inner conflict. Simultaneously there is a force to squash it all down. They may immediately switch the focus onto other people’s needs, or ‘what the...

    Paranoiais a less known impact of repressed anger, but it can emerge. When someone has repressed anger, they can sometimes project it outward. Rather than acknowledging that something has caused them to feel hostile, they project these feelings onto others and perceive others to be hostile to them. They experience the world to be a strange and dang...

    This kind of anger is quieter, and even if expressed, it is worded as ‘frustration,' or ‘annoyance.' When repressed anger is paired with perfectionistic or obsessive-compulsive tendencies, it may manifest in a self-righteous way, in which the person becomes highly critical of themselves and others with unrelenting standards. People who are highly p...

    Passive-aggressiveanger often involves withholding behaviours. A person may forget something, neglect their responsibilities, procrastinate, or perform badly in a task. They may give their partners a cold shoulder, make sarcastic comments, forget their promises, or stubbornly refuse to comply with any request. Someone with passive-aggressive anger ...

  2. Oct 4, 2023 · People sometimes use “repressed emotions” and “suppressed emotions” interchangeably. But in psychoanalysis, these terms have different meanings. According to Freud, repression is an ...

  3. synonymous. Some personality traits are predominantly cognitive or behavioral in nature (e.g., facets of fantasy, orderliness) and, as discussed next, empirical associations between personality traits and emotion regulation are meaningful but moderate in magnitude (Barańczuk, 2019).

  4. August 5, 2024. Repression is a psychological defense mechanism that plays a critical role in shaping our mental and emotional landscape. Introduced by Sigmund Freud, repression involves unconsciously blocking unwanted thoughts, memories, and emotions from entering conscious awareness. This article delves into the intricacies of repression ...

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  5. Sep 5, 2023 · Repression is associated with a multitude of experiences, thoughts, or emotions. Here are a few examples: Traumatic events from childhood: People might unconsciously repress traumatic events, such as accidents, abuse, or losses. Repressed desires: Sometimes, unfulfilled desires and wishes may be repressed if they conflict with societal norms or ...

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  7. Sep 9, 2024 · Anxiety: Childhood trauma increases the risk of anxiety. Anxiety triggers a reaction where adrenaline courses through the body, telling it to fight or leave a situation. Your heart rate increases, and you may feel sick to your stomach. Childish reactions: Childish reactions may look like a tantrum.