There’s a person who you see throughout the day, you don’t like them, you can’t exactly grasp your spite for a stranger, whom you’ve never spoken to, yet have heard speak several times. You watch the person walk around, their walk, their mannerisms, their speech, they don’t sit well with you. You see another person throughout the day, you like them, you’re not sure why, but you do, you’re okay with how they act, they’re tolerable and you gravitate towards them, you’d much rather do a favor for them than the person mentioned prior. Why is this? What causes you to like or dislike people you have never met? These actions and thoughts are based on a psychological phenomena known as Transference. The phenomena is described as a subconscious, nearly second hand, thought process of projecting your feelings onto objects or people, as they act like surrogates to your repressed, and or forgotten feelings. Transference, as first described by Sigmund Freud occurs from the constant repression of childhood feelings of anguish, fear, pain, or unrelieved tensions. As you reach adult hood you start to project those repressed feeling onto people or objects, without a second thought. Carl Jung, a psychoanalyst who worked very closely with Freud Text Review: Jung Question 6
There’s a person who you see throughout the day, you don’t like them, you can’t exactly grasp your spite for a stranger, whom you’ve never spoken to, yet have heard speak several times. You watch the person walk around, their walk, their mannerisms, their speech, they don’t sit well with you. You see another person throughout the day, you like them, you’re not sure why, but you do, you’re okay with how they act, they’re tolerable and you gravitate towards them, you’d much rather do a favor for them than the person mentioned prior. Why is this? What causes you to like or dislike people you have never met? These actions and thoughts are based on a psychological phenomena known as Transference. The phenomena is described as a subconscious, nearly second hand, thought process of projecting your feelings onto objects or people, as they act like surrogates to your repressed, and or forgotten feelings. Transference, as first described by Sigmund Freud occurs from the constant repression of childhood feelings of anguish, fear, pain, or unrelieved tensions. As you reach adult hood you start to project those repressed feeling onto people or objects, without a second thought. Carl Jung, a psychoanalyst who worked very closely with Text Review: Jung Question 6
There’s a person who you see throughout the day, you don’t like them, you can’t exactly grasp your spite for a stranger, whom you’ve never spoken to, yet have heard speak several times. You watch the person walk around, their walk, their mannerisms, their speech, they don’t sit well with you. You see another person throughout the day, you like them, you’re not sure why, but you do, you’re okay with how they act, they’re tolerable and you gravitate towards them, you’d much rather do a favor for them than the person mentioned prior. Why is this? What causes you to like or dislike people you have never met? These actions and thoughts are based on a psychological phenomena known as Transference. The phenomena is