Neurotic character
Introduction
Introduction A neurotic character is an abnormal character that has no confidence in oneself, is suspicious of others, and is full of anxiety and anxiety about the environment. The formation of neurotic personality is caused by the development of some irrational neurotic needs for self-defense under the psychological pressure of long-term basic anxiety. People with neurotic personality, when faced with psychological difficulties, will have strong anxiety in their mentality, and thus lead to a misunderstanding, and mistake the psychophysiological changes such as anxiety and discomfort of healthy people as pathological or abnormal.
Cause
Cause
The formation of neurotic personality is caused by the development of some irrational neurotic needs for self-defense under the psychological pressure of long-term basic anxiety.
And 10 neurotic needs are divided into three categories according to their nature, each class representing a personality:
Compliance character: refers to the lack of independence of individuals, the strong need for the care of others, the reliance on the emotional support of others, on the surface is close, but in the subconscious is to rely on compliance to eliminate anxiety.
Aggressive character: refers to an individual's attitude toward a hostile attack, so that the attack is a strategy to gain the attention of others.
Detached character: refers to an individual who is not close to a person. On the surface, he is independent, but in the subconscious, he is sensitive to interpersonal feelings.
Examine
an examination
Related inspection
Urine vitamin B6 electromyography
Allergic to irritations, over-reflection, carelessness, lack of confidence, feeling of imperfection, feeling of inferiority, fatigue and compulsion.
Diagnosis
Differential diagnosis
Need to be identified with the following symptoms:
Loss of Will Character: Mental retardation varies greatly among patients. Recent memory loss is the most obvious feature. Patients often show sluggishness, spontaneous or active activities decline, and conversation, reading, writing, hobbies, and creativity are weakened. Not caring, indifferent or cold, lonely, and inefficient. Some people call these complex activity anomalies the loss of temperament. The loss of will character is one of the clinical symptoms of normal intracranial pressure hydrocephalus.
The old man is solitary: away from the city, away from the sound. Although clean is conducive to slowing the decline of hearing in the elderly, a too quiet environment may also cause the physical and mental health of the elderly to be impaired. Older people live in an environment that is too quiet. When they are long, they will lead to a decline in resistance, and they will become detached and indifferent to life. The old man living alone is so isolated that he is prone to mental illnesses such as victimized paranoia.
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