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Section
1: Introduction to Neo-Freudian Theory
Section
2: Alfred Adler's Individual Psychology
Section
3: Carl Jung's Analytic Psychology
Section
4: Erik Erikson's Ego Psychology
Section
5: Karen Horney's Feminine Psychology
Section
6: Harry Stack Sullivan
Section
7: Erich Fromm
The
First to Leave
Alfred
Adler joined Freud's analytic society in 1902 and
was even named the first president in 1910.
However, after growing disagreements he left with
several other theorists in 1911, starting his own
group originally named the 'Society for Free Psychoanalytic
Research.' It is suspected that this name was
meant as an attack on Freud's stubbornness to
accepting disagreements and challenge to his
theories. The name was later changed to
'Individual Psychology,' perhaps as a means to
differentiate Adler as an independent theorist in
his search for overcoming his perceived inferiority.
Inferiority
According
to Adler's theory, each of us is born into the world
with a sense of inferiority. We start as a
weak and helpless child and strive to overcome these
deficiencies by become superior to those around
us. He called this struggle a striving for
superiority, and like Freud's Eros and Thanatos,
he saw this as the driving force behind all human
thoughts, emotions, and behaviors.
For
those of us who strive to be accomplished writers,
powerful business people, or influential
politicians, it is because of our feelings of
inferiority and a strong need to over come this
negative part of us according to Adler. This
excessive feeling of inferiority can also have the
opposite effect. As it becomes overwhelming
and without the needed successes, we can develop an
inferiority complex. This belief leaves us
with feeling incredibly less important and deserving
than others, helpless, hopeless, and unmotivated to
strive for the superiority that would make us
complete.
Parenting
and Birth Order
Parenting
Styles. Adler did agree with Freud on some
major issues relating to the parenting of children
and the long term effects of improper or inefficient
child rearing. He identified two parental
styles that he argued will cause almost certain
problems in adulthood. The first was
pampering, referring to a parent overprotecting a
child, giving him too much attention, and sheltering
him from the negative realities of life. As
this child grows older, he will be ill equipped to
deal with these realities, may doubt his own
abilities or decision making skills, and may seek
out others to replace the safety he once enjoyed as
a child.
On
the other extreme is what Adler called
neglect. A neglected child is one who is not
protected at all from the world and is forced to
face life's struggles alone. This child may
grow up to fear the world, have a strong sense of
mistrust for others and she may have a difficult
time forming intimate relationships.
The
best approach, according to this theory, is to
protect children form the evils of the world but not
shelter them from it. In more practical terms,
it means allowing them to hear or see the negative
aspects of the world while still feeling the safety
of parental influence. In other words, don't
immediately go to the school principal if your child
is getting bullied, but rather teach your child how
to respond or take care of herself at school.
Birth
Order. Simply put, Adler believed that the
order in which you are born to a family inherently
effects your personality. First born children
who later have younger siblings may have it the
worst. These children are given excessive
attention and pampering by their parents until that
fateful day when the little brother or sister
arrives. Suddenly they are no longer the
center of attention and fall into the shadows
wondering why everything changed. According to
Adler, they are left feeling inferior, questioning
their importance in the family, and trying desperately
to gain back the attention they suddenly lost.
The birth order theory holds that first born
children often have the greatest number of problems
as they get older.
Middle
born children may have it the easiest, and
interestingly, Adler was a middle born child.
These children are not pampered as their older sibling
was, but are still afforded the attention. As
a middle child, they have the luxury of trying to
dethrone the oldest child and become more superior
while at the same time knowing that they hold this
same power over their younger siblings. Adler
believed that middle children have a high need for superiority
and are often able to seek it out such as through
healthy competition.
The
youngest children, like the first born, may be more
likely to experience personality problems later in
life. This is the child who grows up knowing
that he has the least amount of power in the whole
family. He sees his older siblings having more
freedom and more superiority. He also gets
pampered and protected more than any other child
did. This could leave him with a sense that he
can not take on the world alone and will always be
inferior to others.
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