Chapter 15 Defense mechanisms 2

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Across
  1. 2. A disruption in consciousness, memory, identity, or perception of the environment that results in compartmentalizing uncomfortable or unpleasant aspects of oneself.
  2. 4. Unconscious rejection of emotionally unacceptable features and attributing them to others
  3. 5. Unconscious process of subsisting mature and socially acceptable activity for immature and unacceptable impulses This is considered constructive use of a defense mechanism.
  4. 8. An unconscious exclusion of unpleasant or unwanted experiences, emotions, or ideas from conscious awareness
  5. 9. Unacceptable feelings or behaviors controlled and kept out of awareness by developing the opposite behavior or emotion
  6. 10. Involves escaping unpleasant, anxiety-causing thoughts, feelings, wishes, or needs by ignoring their existence
  7. 11. Used to counterbalance perceived deficiencies by emphasizing strengths
  8. 12. Most commonly seen in children. It is when a person makes up for an act or communication.
  9. 13. The conscious denial of a disturbing situation or feeling
  10. 15. Inability to integrate positive and negative qualities of oneself or others into a cohesive image
Down
  1. 1. Attributing to oneself the characteristics of another person or group. This may be done consciously or unconsciously.
  2. 2. Transference of emotions associated with a particular person, object, or situation to another nonthreatening person, object, or situation
  3. 3. Unconscious transformation of anxiety into a physical symptom with no organic cause
  4. 6. Consists of justifying illogical ideas, actions, or feelings by developing acceptable explanations satisfying the teller and listener
  5. 7. Events analyzed based on remote, cold facts and without passion, rather than incorporating feelings and emotion into the processing
  6. 14. Reverting back to an earlier, more primitive and childlike pattern of behavior that may or may not have been previously exhibited