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According
to Freud, we are born with our Id.
The id is an important part of our personality
because as newborns, it allows us to get our
basic needs met. Freud believed that the
id is based on our pleasure principle.
In other words, the id wants whatever feels
good at the time, with no consideration for
the reality of the situation. When a
child is hungry, the id wants food, and
therefore the child cries. When the
child needs to be changed, the id cries.
When the child is uncomfortable, in pain, too
hot, too cold, or just wants attention, the id
speaks up until his or her needs are met.
The
id doesn't care about reality, about the needs
of anyone else, only its own satisfaction.
If you think about it, babies are not real
considerate of their parents' wishes.
They have no care for time, whether their
parents are sleeping, relaxing, eating dinner,
or bathing. When the id wants something,
nothing else is important.
Within
the next three years, as the child interacts
more and more with the world, the second part
of the personality begins to develop.
Freud called this part the Ego.
The ego is based on the reality principle.
The ego understands that other people have
needs and desires and that sometimes being
impulsive or selfish can hurt us in the long
run. Its the ego's job to meet the needs
of the id, while taking into consideration the
reality of the situation.
By
the age of five, or the end of the phallic
stage of development, the Superego
develops. The Superego is the moral part
of us and develops due to the moral and
ethical restraints placed on us by our
caregivers. Many equate the superego
with the conscience as it dictates our belief
of right and wrong.
In
a healthy person, according to Freud, the ego
is the strongest so that it can satisfy the
needs of the id, not upset the superego, and
still take into consideration the reality of
every situation. Not an easy job by any
means, but if the id gets too strong, impulses
and self gratification take over the person's
life. If the superego becomes to strong,
the person would be driven by rigid morals,
would be judgmental and unbending in his or
her interactions with the world. You'll
learn how the ego maintains control as you
continue to read.
Typographical
Model
Freud
believed that the majority of what we
experience in our lives, the underlying
emotions, beliefs, feelings, and impulses are
not available to us at a conscious level.
He believed that most of what drives us is
buried in our unconscious.
If you remember the Oedipus and Electra
Complex, they were both pushed down into the
unconscious, out of our awareness due to the
extreme anxiety they caused. While
buried there, however, they continue to impact
us dramatically according to Freud.
The
role of the unconscious is only one part of
the model. Freud also believed that
everything we are aware of is stored in our conscious.
Our conscious makes up a very small part of
who we are. In other words, at any given
time, we are only aware of a very small part
of what makes up our personality; most of what
we are is buried and inaccessible.
The
final part is the preconscious or
subconscious. This is the part of us
that we can access if prompted, but is not in
our active conscious. Its right below
the surface, but still buried somewhat unless
we search for it. Information such as
our telephone number, some childhood memories,
or the name of your best childhood friend is
stored in the preconscious.
Because
the unconscious is so large, and because we
are only aware of the very small conscious at
any given time, this theory has been likened
to an iceberg, where the vast majority is
buried beneath the water's surface. The
water, by the way, would represent everything
that we are not aware of, have not
experienced, and that has not been integrated
into our personalities, referred to as the
nonconscious.
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