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  1. A typical example of a person with repressive tendencies would be a sociable and cheerful man who rarely complains about any misfortune including disease, and whose self-image is one of a positive-minded person who is in control of his life.

  2. May 26, 2024 · In psychology, repression refers to the unconscious mechanism by which the mind prevents certain thoughts, memories, or feelings from entering conscious awareness. It is a defense mechanism proposed by Sigmund Freud to protect the individual from potentially distressing or harmful content.

  3. Sep 5, 2023 · Repression is a defense mechanism to avoid thoughts or memories. It happens unconsciously. This article lists examples of emotions, desires, experiences, and thoughts people repress.

  4. Repression: Expulsion or withholding of a distressing idea from consciousness while allowing affect to remain, in contrast to isolation, thereby attenuating conscious realization of what object or situation is related to the affect. From: States and Processes for Mental Health, 2021

  5. Apr 1, 2009 · The processes that keep unwanted thoughts from entering consciousness are known as defense mechanisms and include repression, suppression and dissociation. On supporting science journalism

  6. Again, we found examples of scholars specifically endorsing unconscious repressed memories. Second, as opposed to what Brewin reports, recent survey research now exists that bears directly on people’s beliefs regarding unconscious repression.

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  8. Sep 6, 2022 · We study a model of endogenous rebellion and repression to understand how different types of individual motivation affect participation, state repression, and the mechanisms by which state violence affects political contention.

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