Defense Mechanisms
Written by: Jim Arndt, MS
CIGNA Behavioral Health
We are sometimes confronted with situations, feelings, and emotions that can
put us on the defensive. Situations such as making a mistake on a work
assignment, or setting the family budget may cause stress and conflict.
Defense mechanisms are our unconscious way of distancing ourselves from our
awareness of unpleasant thoughts and feelings. Using defense mechanisms may
seem to make situations more tolerable, however they often result in issues
going unresolved.
Some positive defenses may be helpful in certain situations, such as
offering a person a helping hand up if they fall. Our defenses can mask,
impede, or change our feelings and emotions that can distort our view of
reality. In many cases, negative defenses can affect our relationships with
family, friends, or co-workers.
To help understand the different types of defense mechanisms, George
Vaillant (1986) outlined a model explaining positive and negative defense
mechanisms.
Useful defense mechanisms:
- Understanding — sharing problems and/or difficulties
with others without trying to make someone else responsible for them
- Acceptance — accepting the difficult situation
- Transference — changing negative emotions or instincts
into positive actions, behavior, or emotion
- Anticipation — realistic planning for future discomfort
Less helpful defense mechanisms:
- Passive aggression — aggression towards others
expressed indirectly.
- Physical signs — changing negative feelings towards
others into negative feelings toward self, (e.g. pain, illness and
anxiety).
- Blaming — attributing one's own unacknowledged feelings
to others
Unhealthy defense mechanisms:
- Denial — a refusal to accept external reality because
it is too threatening.
- Delusions — may assign feeling or take action in
response to an external world based on perception rather than actual
reality.
- Repression — blocking the unacceptable impulses and
feelings from our consciousness
This information may help us improve our understanding and raise our
consciousness about our coping styles. This awareness may make it possible
to learn effective coping styles that can help us to develop healthier
relationships. By trying to use positive defense mechanisms in place of the
negative methods we can hope to be more responsive to the people around us.
If you have any concerns about your situation, please call your family
doctor or mental health professional.
References:
Vaillant, G. E., Bond, M., & Vaillant, C. O. (1986). An empirically
validated hierarchy of defense mechanisms. Archives of General
Psychiatry, 73, 786-794. George Eman Valillant
This material is provided by CIGNA Behavioral Health, Inc. for
informational/educational purposes only. It is not intended as
medical/clinical advice. Only a healthcare provider can make a diagnosis or
recommend a treatment plan. For more information about your behavioral
health benefits, you can call the member services or behavioral health
telephone number listed on your healthcare identification card.