jueves, 8 de noviembre de 2012

Religion psychoanalytic



Psychoanalysts have religious beliefs, but do not worship a God but we are dangerously seduced by the consistency of psychoanalysis.

The image of a deserted island where you will find a couple of humans, refers to the mother-child relationship.

Two castaways, casually beautiful and of a similar age, come to this island where they have to start living together forced by circumstances unchangeable.

The dramatic interest of this fiction arises of what actually happened when we were with our mother externally attached after delivery.

First we were a part of it but then we are a couple with her in a sort of desert island because our union is so psychologically intense as if there was nobody around us.

If he wanted us to be related to chance, so she can help by appealing to our similarities, but if we are not, we will enter a permanent conflict will occur in this climate our evolution into adulthood.

As we see, the fate determined who we would meet on that desert island to try to live as we could.

The characteristics of mother and mine may be compatible or not. What always happens in the early years will be that she will have to help me survive because I can not do it alone.

She will have to order me, encourage me, stop myself, stroking and hitting me.

Doses of painful stimuli and pleasant, not only depend on our respective personalities but also influenced by other factors will be equally casual: environmental opportunities, the chances for accidents, diseases, occurrence, desires, wishes, fatigue, boredom, Random weather and so on.

These experiences seem to be primary determinants of how to face life, but this is nothing more than a belief, deeply rooted in the psychoanalysts, but as unlikely as the existence of God.

Note: Original in Spanish (without translation by Google): La religión psicoanalítica

(This is the Article No. 1741)

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