PSYCH 307 UM Application of Freud Theory Personality Development QuestionsCourse
PSYCH 307 UM Application of Freud Theory Personality Development QuestionsCourse
PSYCH 307School
University of Maryland Eastern ShoreDepartment
Question Description
Case Study #1It is Friday night. Hank is sitting in his apartment eating a pint of Ben and Jerry’s Cherry Garcia ice cream and contemplating this past week, which had been stressful. He is five feet six inches tall and weighs 250 pounds. Today he saw a therapist about his weight for the first time, something he had been considering after yet another woman decided not to continue a relationship with him. After just two dates, Sally told Hank they should not see each other anymore because they were incompatible. Sally and Hank had met through a chat room espousing the virtues of Macs over PCs, and Hank became impressed with Sally’s knowledge of computers and software. After chatting a few times on the computer, Sally and Hank found that they lived in the same city and both were single. Because they seemed to have their love of computers in common, they both thought it would be nice to get to know each other better; They met for drinks at a mutually agreed upon bar and then went on to dinner. The date did not go as well as Sally had hoped, and one could understand Sally’s view. She tends to be a calm, friendly person with an aversion to conflict. Hank, however, tends to be quite sarcastic and often says offensive things. For example, Hank made an unkind comment about Sally’s occupation. She is an insurance saleswoman and he implied that she tries to rip off other people by feasting on their insecurities and selling them insurance they do not need. Other examples of his verbal insensitivity include Hank berating the waiter at the restaurant because he was dissatisfied with the service. Hank became so loud that everyone at the restaurant stopped talking to watch Hank ad Sally. Sally was mortified. Far from being occasional, these verbal outbursts seemed to be the norm because Hank engaged in similar behavior on their second date when they went to a computer show. Hank got into an argument with one of the exhibitors about which graphics software package was better. Unfortunately, Hank has always been sarcastic and his biting comments alienated him from his peers, even as a child. When he was growing up, he had difficulty establishing relationships. Friendships were practically nonexistent for Hank. As a child, while all the other kids were hanging out with their best friends and interacting in groups, Hank was learning to use the computer, which now placed him at an advantage in his line of work. Hank has other annoying habits that tend to alienate others, including Sally. For example, he often chews his fingernails when he is nervous. Although minor this tendency repulsed Sally. In addition, he is a chain smoker, and Sally is a nonsmoker. Hank, however, thought that Sally broke up with him because of his weight problem and soothed his ego by telling himself that she was a very shallow person indeed if she could not see past his appearance and value his personality. After all, his weight was probably part genetic: his whole family was somewhat overweight, including his father, mother, and siblings. He also suggested to others (and to himself) that hewas about to break up with her.The week after his break up with Sally, Hank started experiencing chest pains. After a trip to the emergency room, Hank found out that he had a heart problem. The doctor told him that he must stop smoking, lose weight, change his eating habits, and start an exercise problem. Otherwise, he was headed for a heart attack that he might not survive. This was certainly good advice. Hank continuously had something in his mouth, either food or cigarettes. He especially ate and smoked a lot when he was nervous. This news about his health was especially disturbing to Hank because he is relatively young. He is a Caucasian man, only 33 years old.And so Hank was scared into considering seeing a therapist to help him lose weight to improve his health. During his first visit to the therapist, the therapist described himself as psychonamically oriented and then continued to describe the types of experiences that would occur in the therapy process. Hank felt confidence in this therapist by the end of the session and decided to continue so he would lose weight and become healthier.Hank also thought about the trying week he had at work. As an employee of an advertising firm, Hank worked primarily with computers. He was the person others went to when they had a computer of software question. A whiz at computer graphics, Hank designed and maintains the firm’s Web page. Occasionally, he met with the client or potential clients, but his boss usually assigned this duty to other members of the firm. This week, however,his boss asked Hank to meet with a potential client, primarily because the people who usually did so were too busy working to meet a deadline on a different advertising campaign and because other members of the firm were out with the flu. Apparently, the meeting did not go well because shortly after afterward the boss called Hank in and chewed him out, stating that this potential client called Hank a loud-mouthed, belligerent cretin. Hank couldn’t figure out where this opinion came from; he thought the meeting went pretty well. Sure, he told the client that their health food products were tasteless and that the portions were too small, but the jerk kept self-righteously promoting weight loss and healthy eating. Someone had to put him in his place, Hank thought.His mother often described Hank in terms that implied that he had been loud even as a baby. He cries used to pierce the air, and his mother would often rush to make a bottle for Hank or give him a cookie to regain some peace and quiet, even when he could not understand why he was hungry because he had eaten so recently. She laughs about it now, but it was stressful at the time.The ice cream started to make Hank feel better, more relaxed, and once he finished off the pint he pulled out a cigarette and lit it. The first inhale also helped to reduce the tension he was feeling. He hoped that the next week would be better. Hank wished that his co-workers would appreciate him and offer him friendship. When he was younger, he thought that by becoming good at computers (which he thought were cool), and being able to answer other people’s questions about computers, he would be able to make contact with others and form the close relationships that other people do, but so far, this strategy has been unsuccessful. More than anything, Hank wishes a woman would fall in love with him. He thinks that love will solve all his problems: He would not be lonely anymore, and he would be able to lost weight and quit smoking, too, if he just had the love of a woman. APPLICATION QUESTIONS Use Freud’s theory of personality development to help explain Hank’s behavior by answering the following questions.1.What personality (or character) type does Hank display according to Freudian theory? Provide evidence for your answer. 2.At what stage is Hank fixated, according to the Freudian perspective? Find evidence of fixation in the case study. What would have caused his fixation?3.Find an example of a Freudian defense mechanism that Hank uses in this description. Explain it. 4.Find an example of regression in the case study. Explain it.5.Would a Freudian therapist view Hank’s weight problem as a behavioral problem, in and of itself, or as a symptom of another problem? Ex