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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75132 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+ SELECTED PAPERS ON HYSTERIA
+ AND
+ OTHER PSYCHONEUROSES
+
+ BY
+
+ PROF. SIGMUND FREUD
+
+ VIENNA
+
+
+ AUTHORIZED TRANSLATION
+
+ BY
+
+ A. A. BRILL, PH.D., M.D.
+
+ CHIEF OF NERVOUS DISPENSARY, BETH ISRAEL HOSPITAL; CLINICAL ASSISTANT,
+ DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHIATRY AND NEUROLOGY, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY; ASSISTANT
+ IN MENTAL AND NERVOUS DISEASES, O. P. D., BELLEVUE HOSPITAL; ASSISTANT
+ VISITING PHYSICIAN, HOSPITAL FOR NERVOUS DISEASES.
+
+
+ NEW YORK
+
+ THE JOURNAL OF NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE
+ PUBLISHING COMPANY
+
+ 1909
+
+
+
+
+ Copyright 1909, by
+
+ THE JOURNAL OF NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE PUBLISHING COMPANY.
+
+
+
+
+ CONTENTS.
+
+
+ PAGE.
+ TRANSLATOR’S PREFACE iii
+ CHAPTER.
+ I. THE PSYCHIC MECHANISM OF HYSTERICAL PHENOMENA 1
+ II. THE CASE OF MISS LUCY R. 14
+ III. THE CASE OF MISS ELISABETH V. R. 31
+ IV. THE PSYCHOTHERAPY OF HYSTERIA 75
+ V. THE DEFENSE NEURO-PSYCHOSES. A Tentative Psychological
+ Theory of Acquired Hysteria, many Phobias and Obsessions,
+ and Certain Hallucinatory Psychoses 121
+ VI. ON THE RIGHT TO SEPARATE FROM NEURASTHENIA A DEFINITE
+ SYMPTOM-COMPLEX AS “ANXIETY NEUROSIS” 133
+ VII. FURTHER OBSERVATIONS ON THE DEFENSE NEUROPSYCHOSES 155
+ VIII. ON PSYCHOTHERAPY 175
+ IX. MY VIEWS ON THE RÔLE OF SEXUALITY IN THE ETIOLOGY OF THE
+ NEUROSES 186
+ X. HYSTERICAL FANCIES AND THEIR RELATIONS TO BISEXUALITY 194
+
+
+
+
+ TRANSLATOR’S PREFACE.
+
+
+In the first place I wish to express my gratitude to Doctors Frederick
+Peterson, William A. White, and Ernest Jones, for their many helpful
+suggestions in the translation of this work. This does not, however,
+imply that they are in any way responsible for the numerous barbarisms
+found in the translation, for this I, alone, ask the reader’s
+indulgence. For one thing, it must be borne in mind that, aside from the
+subject-matter, Freud is not easy to read, even in the original. Indeed,
+I feel quite certain that only those who have read the original will
+best appreciate the task of the translator. But no matter how devoid of
+literary excellencies this translation may be, it can at least claim one
+merit, to wit, it is a faithful reproduction of the author’s thoughts.
+This is really all that should be required of a translation.
+
+The chapters contained in this book were taken from three different
+volumes of the author’s works, published at different intervals within
+the last fifteen years. Although the first four chapters appear in the
+“Studien über Hysterie” which was published by Breuer and Freud,[1]
+still only the first chapter, “The Psychic Mechanism of Hysterical
+Phenomena,” was written conjointly by both authors. The authorship of
+the other three chapters belongs exclusively to Freud. The remaining six
+chapters of the book were taken from Freud’s Collection of Small
+Articles.[2]
+
+It was by no means an easy task to compile in a single limited volume
+Freud’s theories of the actual- and psychoneuroses. Freud’s views are
+not only new and revolutionary, being based on an entirely new
+psychology, but unless one is thoroughly familiar with their development
+one is apt to misunderstand them. To obviate this it was thought best to
+collect those chapters from the author’s works which fully illustrate
+his theories and at the same time show the gradual evolution of his
+psychology.
+
+That Freud’s views have undergone some changes, or rather modifications,
+within the last fifteen years we readily admit; but who will blame the
+surgeon for modifying or rejecting some technique of his operation, if
+after years of careful work he feels justified in so doing? Surely such
+an action merits applause rather than reproach. It was only after
+carefully investigating for years that Freud saw fit to change some of
+his views, yet nothing was really totally discarded.
+
+It is quite unnecessary to discuss here the whys and wherefores of the
+modifications in question, these are fully explained in the text. But it
+will not be mal à propos to say a few words concerning the technique of
+the treatment.
+
+For reasons given in the book the author has abandoned hypnotism and
+used the pressure procedure, but this in turn was given up because it
+was cumbersome for both doctor and patient and proved to be utterly
+needless.
+
+The technique is as follows: The patient lies on his back on a lounge,
+the physician sitting behind the patient’s head at the head of the
+lounge. In this way the patient remains free from all external
+influences and impressions. The object is to avoid all muscular exertion
+and distraction, thus allowing thorough concentration of attention on
+the patient’s own psychic activities. The patient is then asked to give
+a detailed account of his troubles, after having been told before to
+repeat everything that occurs to his mind, even such thoughts as may
+cause him embarrassment or mortification. On listening to such a history
+one invariably notices many memory gaps, both in reference to time and
+causal relations. These the patient is urged to fill in by concentration
+of attention on the subject in question, and by repeating all the
+unintentional thoughts originating in this connection. This is the so
+called method of “free association!” The patient is required to relate
+all his thoughts in the order of their sequence even if they seem
+irrelevant to him. He must do away with all critique and remain
+perfectly passive. It is in this way that we fathom the original meaning
+of the symptom. But as the thoughts which originate in this manner are
+of a disagreeable and painful nature they are pushed back with the
+greatest resistance. This is further enhanced by the fact that the
+hysterical symptom is the symbolic expression of the realization of a
+repressed wish, and serves as a gratification for the patient. He
+strives very hard, unconsciously of course, to retain the symptom, as it
+is the only thing left to him from his former unattainable conscious
+wishes and strivings. The object of the psychanalytic treatment is to
+overcome all these resistances, and to reconduct to the patient’s
+consciousness the thoughts underlying the symptoms. Here lies the
+greatest difficulty, for just as in the normal life and the dream, a
+psychoneurotic symptom is merely a symbolic or cryptic expression of the
+original repressed thoughts. Every hysterical symptom, every obsession,
+and every phobia, has a definite meaning, and as was shown by
+Bleuler,[3] Jung,[4] Riklin,[5] and others,[6] the same holds true for
+the psychoses proper.
+
+To discover the hidden mechanism, one must make use of the author’s
+developed method of interpretation, that is, one must look for
+symbolic actions, lapses in speech, memory, etc., and above all, one
+must resort to the analysis of dreams, as they give the most direct
+access to the unconscious. No one is really qualified to use or
+judge Freud’s psychanalytic method who has not thoroughly mastered
+the Traumdeutung,[7] the Psychopathologie des Alltagsleben,[8] and
+the Drei Abhandlungen zur Sexualtheorie,[9] and has not had
+considerable experience in analyzing his own and other’s dreams and
+psychopathological actions. It is especially in the Traumdeutung
+that Freud has fully developed his psychanalytic technique and a
+perfect knowledge of which is the sine qua non in the treatment. It
+is only by following Freud in this manner that one can hope to solve
+the hitherto unsolved riddles of the psychoneuroses and psychoses.
+
+This treatment is more difficult than one can describe in a preface. It
+not only presupposes a thorough knowledge of Freud but an equal
+knowledge of normal and abnormal psychology. Those who have not acquired
+this knowledge by reason of time or otherwise may remember the words of
+the younger Pliny: _Ut enim de pictore scalptore fictore nisi artifex
+indicare, ita nisi sapiens non potest perspicere sapientem_.
+
+ A. A. BRILL.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+ THE PSYCHIC MECHANISM OF HYSTERICAL PHENOMENA.[10]
+ (PRELIMINARY COMMUNICATION.)
+
+
+ I.
+
+Instigated by a number of accidental observations we have investigated
+for a number of years the different forms and symptoms of hysteria in
+order to discover the cause and the process which provoked the phenomena
+in question for the first time, in a great many cases years back. In the
+great majority of cases we did not succeed in elucidating this starting
+point from the mere history, no matter how detailed it might have been,
+partly because we had to deal with experiences about which discussion
+was disagreeable to the patients, but mainly because they really could
+not recall them; often they had no inkling of the causal connection
+between the occasioning process and the pathological phenomenon. It was
+generally necessary to hypnotize the patients and reawaken the memory of
+that time in which the symptom first appeared, and we thus succeeded in
+exposing that connection in a most precise and convincing manner.
+
+This method of examination in a great number of cases has furnished us
+with results which seem to be of theoretical as well as of practical
+value.
+
+It is of theoretical value because it has shown to us that in the
+determination of the pathology of hysteria the accidental moment plays a
+much greater part than is generally known and recognized. It is quite
+evident that in “traumatic” hysteria it is the accident which evokes the
+syndrome. Moreover in hysterical crises, if patients state that they
+hallucinate in each attack the same process which evoked the first
+attack, here too, the causal connection seems quite clear. The state of
+affairs is more obscure in the other phenomena.
+
+Our experiences have shown us _that the most varied symptoms which pass
+as spontaneous, or so to say idiopathic attainments of hysteria, stand
+in just as stringent connection with the causal trauma as the
+transparent phenomena mentioned_. To such causal moments we were able to
+refer neuralgias as well as the different kinds of anesthesias often of
+years duration, contractures and paralyses, hysterical attacks and
+epileptiform convulsions which every observer has taken for real
+epilepsy, petit mal and tic-like affections, persistent vomiting and
+anorexia, even the refusal of nourishment, all kinds of visual
+disturbances, constantly recurring visual hallucinations, and similar
+affections. The disproportion between the hysterical symptom of years
+duration and the former cause is the same as the one we are regularly
+accustomed to see in the traumatic neurosis. Very often they are
+experiences of childhood which have established more or less intensive
+morbid phenomena for all succeeding years.
+
+The connection is often so clear that it is perfectly manifest how the
+causal event produced just this and no other phenomenon. It is quite
+clearly determined by the cause. Thus let us take the most banal
+example; if a painful affect originates while eating but is repressed,
+it may produce nausea and vomiting and continue for months as a
+hysterical symptom. A girl was anxiously distressed while watching at a
+sick bed. She fell into a dreamy state and experienced a frightful
+hallucination, and at the same time her right arm hanging over the back
+of a chair became numb. This resulted in a paralysis, contracture, and
+anesthesia of that arm. She wanted to pray but could find no words, but
+finally succeeded in uttering an English prayer for children. Later, on
+developing a very grave and most complicated hysteria, she spoke, wrote,
+and understood only English, whereas her native tongue was
+incomprehensible to her for a year and a half. A very sick child finally
+falls asleep. The mother exerts all her will power to make no noise to
+awaken it, but just because she resolved to do so she emits a clicking
+sound with her tongue (“hysterical counter-will”). This was later
+repeated on another occasion when she wished to be absolutely quiet,
+developing into a tic which in the form of tongue clicking accompanied
+every excitement for years. A very intelligent man was present while his
+brother was anesthetized and his ankylosed hip stretched. At the moment
+when the joint yielded and crackled he perceived severe pain in his own
+hip which continued for almost a year.
+
+In other cases the connection is not so simple, there being only as it
+were a symbolic relation between the cause and the pathological
+phenomenon, just as in the normal dream. Thus psychic pain may result in
+neuralgia, or the affect of moral disgust may cause vomiting. We have
+studied patients who were wont to make the most prolific use of such
+symbolization. In still other cases such a determination is at first
+sight incomprehensible, yet to this group belong the typical hysterical
+symptoms such as hemianesthesia, contraction of visual field,
+epileptiform convulsions and many others. The explanation of our views
+on this group we have to reserve for the more detailed discussion of the
+subject.
+
+_Such observations seem to demonstrate the pathogenic analogy between
+simple hysteria and traumatic neurosis and justify a broader conception
+of “traumatic hysteria.”_ The active etiological factor in traumatic
+neurosis is really not the insignificant bodily injury but the affect of
+the fright, that is, the psychic trauma. In an analogous manner our
+investigations show that the causes of many, if not of all, cases of
+hysteria can be designated as psychic traumas. Every experience which
+produces the painful affect of fear, anxiety, shame or of psychic pain
+may act as a psychic trauma. Whether an experience becomes of traumatic
+importance naturally depends on the person affected as well as on the
+determination to be mentioned later. In ordinary hysteria instead of one
+big trauma we not seldom find many partial traumas, grouped causes which
+can be of traumatic significance only when summarized and which belong
+together in so far as they form small fragments of the sorrowful tale.
+In still other cases apparently indifferent circumstances gain traumatic
+dignity through their connection with the real effective event or with a
+period of time of special excitability which they then retain but which
+otherwise would have no significance.
+
+Nevertheless the causal connection between the provoking psychic trauma
+and the hysterical phenomena does not perhaps resemble the trauma which
+as the _agent provocateur_ would call forth the symptom which would
+become independent and continue to exist. We have to claim still more,
+namely, that the psychic trauma or the memory of the same acts like a
+foreign body which even long after its penetration must continue to
+influence like a new causative factor. The proof of this we see in a
+most remarkable phenomenon which at the same time gives to our
+discoveries a distinct practical interest.
+
+We found, at first to our greatest surprise, _that the individual
+hysterical symptoms immediately disappeared without returning if we
+succeeded in thoroughly awakening the memories of the causal process
+with its accompanying affect, and if the patient circumstantially
+discussed the process giving free play to the affect_. Affectless
+memories are almost utterly useless. The psychic process originally
+rebuffed must be reproduced as vividly as possible so as to bring it
+back into the _statum nascendi_ and then be thoroughly “talked over.” At
+the same time if we deal with such exciting manifestations as
+convulsions, neuralgias and hallucinations they appear once more with
+their full intensity and then vanish forever. Functional attacks like
+paralyses and anesthesias likewise disappear, but naturally without any
+appreciable distinctness of their momentary aggravation.[11]
+
+It is quite reasonable to suspect that one deals here with an
+unintentional suggestion. The patient expects to be relieved of his
+suffering and it is this expectation and not the discussion that is the
+effectual factor. But this is not so. The first observation of this kind
+in which a most complicated case of hysteria was analyzed and the
+individual causal symptoms separately abrogated, occurred in the year
+1881, that is in a “pre-suggestive” time. It was brought about through a
+spontaneous autohypnosis of the patient and caused the examiner the
+greatest surprise.
+
+In reversing the sentence: _cessante causa cessat effectus_, we may
+conclude from this observation that the causal process continues to act
+in some way even after years, not indirectly by means of a chain of
+causal connecting links but directly as a provoking cause, just perhaps
+as in the awakened consciousness where the memory of a psychic pain may
+later call forth tears. _The hysteric suffers mostly from
+reminiscences._[12]
+
+
+ II.
+
+It would seem at first rather surprising that long-forgotten experiences
+should effect so intensively, and that their recollections should not be
+subject to the decay into which all our memories merge. We will perhaps
+gain some understanding of these facts by the following examinations.
+
+The blurring or loss of an affect of memory depends on a great many
+factors. In the first place it is of great consequence whether there was
+an energetic reaction to the affectful experience or not. By reaction we
+here understand a whole series of voluntary or involuntary reflexes,
+from crying to an act of revenge, through which according to experience
+affects are discharged. If the success of this reaction is of sufficient
+strength it results in the disappearance of a great part of the affect.
+Language attests this fact of daily observation, in such expressions as
+“to give vent to one’s feeling,” to be “relieved by weeping,” etc.
+
+If the reaction is suppressed the affect remains united with the memory.
+An insult retaliated, be it only in words, is differently recalled than
+one that had to be taken in silence. Language also recognizes this
+distinction between the psychic and physical results and designates most
+characteristically the silently endured suffering as “grievance.” The
+reaction of the person injured to the trauma has really no perfect
+“cathartic” effect unless it is an adequate reaction like revenge. But
+man finds a substitute for this action in speech through which help the
+affect can well nigh be ab-reacted[13] (“abreagirt”). In other cases
+talking in the form of deploring and giving vent to the torments of the
+secret (confession) is in itself an adequate reflex. If such reaction
+does not result through deeds, words, or in the lightest case through
+weeping, the memory of the occurrence retains above all the affective
+accentuation.
+
+The ab-reaction (abreagiren), however, is not the only form of discharge
+at the disposal of the normal psychic mechanism of the healthy person
+who has experienced a psychic trauma. The memory of the trauma even
+where it has not been ab-reacted enters into the great complex of the
+association. It joins the other experiences which are perhaps
+antagonistic to it and thus undergoes correction through the other
+ideas. For example, after an accident the memory of the danger and
+(dimmed) repetition of the fright is accompanied by the recollection of
+the further course, the rescue, and the consciousness of present
+security. The memory of a grievance may be corrected by a rectification
+of the state of affairs by reflecting upon one’s own dignity and similar
+things. Thus the normal person is able to cause a disappearance of the
+accompanying affect by means of association.
+
+In addition there appears that general blurring of impressions, that
+fading of memories which we call “forgetting,” and which above all wears
+out the affective ideas no longer active.
+
+It follows from our observations that those memories which become the
+causes of hysterical phenomena have been preserved for a long time with
+wonderful freshness and with their perfect emotional tone. As a further
+striking and a later realizable fact we have to mention that the
+patients do not perhaps have the same control of these as of their other
+memories of life. On the contrary, _these experiences are either
+completely lacking from the memory of the patients in their usual
+psychic state or at most exist greatly abridged_. Only after the
+patients are questioned in the hypnotic state do these memories appear
+with the undiminished vividness of fresh occurrences. Thus one of our
+patients in a hypnotic state reproduced with hallucinatory vividness
+throughout half a year all that excited her during an acute hysteria on
+the same days of the preceding year. Her mother’s diary which was
+unknown to the patient proved the faultless accuracy of the
+reproduction. Another patient, partly in hypnosis and partly in
+spontaneous attacks, went through with a hallucinatory distinctness all
+experiences of a hysterical psychosis which she passed through ten years
+before and for the greatest part of which she was amnesic until its
+reappearance. She also showed with surprising integrity and sentient
+force some etiologically important memories of fifteen to twenty-five
+years’ duration which on their return acted with the full affective
+force of new experiences.
+
+The reason for this we can only find in the fact that in all the
+aforesaid relations these memories assume an exceptional position in
+reference to disappearance. _It was really shown that these memories
+correspond to traumas which were not sufficiently ab-reacted to_
+(“abreagirt”). On closer investigation of the reasons for this
+prevention we can find at least two series of determinants through which
+the reaction to the trauma was discontinued.
+
+To the first group we add those cases in which the patient has not
+reacted to psychic traumas because the nature of the trauma precluded a
+reaction as in the case of an irremediable loss of a beloved person or
+because social relations made the reaction impossible, or because it
+concerned things which the patient wished to forget and which he
+therefore intentionally inhibited and repressed from his conscious
+memory. It is just those painful things which in the hypnotic state are
+found to be the basis of hysterical phenomena (hysterical delirium of
+saints, nuns, abstinent women, and well-bred children).
+
+The second series of determinants is not conditioned by the content of
+the memories but by the psychic states with which the corresponding
+experiences in the patient have united. As a cause of hysterical
+symptoms one really finds in hypnosis presentations which are
+insignificant in themselves but which owe their preservation to the fact
+that they originated during a severe paralyzing affect like fright or
+directly in abnormal psychic conditions, as in the semi-hypnotic dreamy
+states of reveries, in autohypnosis and similar states. Here it is the
+nature of these conditions which make a reaction to the incident
+impossible.
+
+To be sure both determinants may unite, and as a matter of fact they
+often do. This is the case when a trauma in itself effective occurs in a
+state of a powerful paralyzing affect or in a transformed consciousness.
+But due to the psychic trauma it may also happen that in many persons
+one of these abnormal states occurs which in turn makes a reaction
+impossible.
+
+What is common to both groups of determinants is the fact that those
+psychic traumas which are not rectified by reaction are also prevented
+from adjustment by associative elaboration. In the first group it is due
+to the resolution of the patient who wishes to forget the painful
+experiences and in this way, if possible, to exclude them from
+association, and in the second group the associative elaboration does
+not succeed because there is no productive associative relationship
+between the normal and pathological state of consciousness in which
+these presentations originated. We shall soon have occasion to discuss
+more fully these relationships.
+
+Hence we can say, _that the reason why the pathogenically formed
+presentations retain their freshness and affective force is because they
+are not subject to the normal waste through ab-reaction and reproduction
+in conditions of uninhibited association_.
+
+
+ III.
+
+When we discussed the conditions which, according to our experience, are
+decisive in the development of hysterical phenomena from psychic
+traumas, we were forced to speak of abnormal states of consciousness in
+which such pathogenic presentations originate, and we had to emphasize
+the fact that the recollection of the effective psychic trauma is not to
+be found in the normal memory of the patient but in the hypnotized
+memory. The more we occupied ourselves with these phenomena the more
+certain became our convictions _that the splitting of consciousness, so
+striking in the familiar classical cases of double consciousness, exists
+rudimentarily in every hysteria, and that the tendency to this
+dissociation, and with it the tendency towards the appearance of
+abnormal states of consciousness which we comprehend as “hypnoid
+states,” is the chief phenomenon of this neurosis_. In this view we
+agree with Binet and with both the Janets about whose most remarkable
+findings in anesthetics we have had no experience.
+
+Hence, to the often cited axiom, “Hypnosis is artificial hysteria,” we
+would like to add another: “The existence of hypnoid states is the basis
+and determination of hysteria.” These hypnoid states in all their
+diversities agree among themselves and with hypnosis in the fact that
+their emerged presentations are very intensive but are excluded from the
+associative relations of the rest of the content of consciousness. The
+hypnoid states are associable among themselves, and their ideation may
+thus attain various high degrees of psychic organization. In other
+respects the nature of these states and the degree of their
+exclusiveness differ from the rest of the conscious processes as do the
+various states in hypnosis, which range from light somnolence to
+somnambulism, and from perfect memory to absolute amnesia.
+
+If such hypnoid states already exist before the manifested disease they
+prepare the soil upon which the affect establishes the pathogenic
+memories and their somatic resulting manifestations. This behavior
+corresponds to the predisposed hysteria. But the results of our
+observations show that a severe trauma (like that of a traumatic
+neurosis) or a painful suppression (perhaps of a sexual affect) may
+bring about a splitting of presentation groups even in persons otherwise
+not predisposed. This would then be the mechanism of the psychically
+acquired hysteria. Between the extremes of these two forms we have to
+admit a series in which the facility of dissociation in the concerned
+individuals and the magnitude of the affect of the trauma vary
+inversely.
+
+We are unable to give anything new concerning the formation of the
+predisposed hypnoid states. We presume that they often develop from
+“reveries” very common to the normal for which, for example, the
+feminine handwork offers so much opportunity. The questions why “the
+pathological associations” formed in such states are so firm and why
+they exert a stronger influence on the somatic processes than other
+presentations, all fall together with the problem of the effectivity of
+hypnotic suggestions in general. Our experiences in this matter do not
+show us anything new, on the other hand they throw light on the
+contradiction between the sentence “Hysteria is a psychosis” and the
+fact that among hysterics one may meet persons of the clearest
+intellects, the strongest wills, greatest principles, and of the
+subtlest minds. In these cases such characteristics are only true for
+the waking thought of the person, for in his hypnotic state he is
+alienated just as we are in the dream. Yet, whereas our dream psychoses
+do not influence our waking state, the products of hypnotic states
+project as hysterical phenomena into the waking state.
+
+
+ IV.
+
+Almost the same assertions that we have advanced in reference to the
+continuous hysterical symptoms we may also repeat concerning hysterical
+crises. As is known we have Charcot’s schematic description of the
+“major” hysterical attack which when complete shows four phases: (1) The
+epileptoid, (2) the grand movements, (3) the emotional—_attitudes
+passionnelles_ (hallucinatory phase), and (4) the delirious. By
+shortening or prolonging the attack and by isolating the individual
+phases Charcot caused a succession of all those forms of the hysterical
+attack which are really observed more frequently than the complete
+_grande attaque_.
+
+Our attempted explanation refers to the third phase, that is the
+_attitudes passionnelles_. Wherever it is prominent it contains the
+hallucinatory reproduction of a memory which was significant for the
+hysterical onset. It is the memory of a grand trauma, the so called κατ’
+ἐξοχὴν of traumatic hysteria or of a series of connected partial traumas
+found at the basis of the common hysteria. Finally the attack may bring
+back that occurrence which on account of its meeting with a moment of
+special predisposition was raised to a trauma.
+
+There are also attacks which ostensibly consist only of motor phenomena
+and lack the passionnelle phase. If it is possible during such an attack
+of general twitching, cataleptic rigidity or an _attaque de sommeil_, to
+put one’s self _en rapport_ with the patient, or still better, if one
+succeeds in evoking the attack in a hypnotic state, it will then be
+found that here, too, the root of it is the memory of a psychic trauma,
+or of a series of traumas which make themselves otherwise prominent in
+an hallucinatory phase. A little girl had suffered for years from
+attacks of general convulsions which could be and were taken for
+epileptic. She was hypnotized for purposes of differential diagnosis and
+she immediately merged into one of her attacks. On being asked what she
+saw she said, “The dog, the dog is coming,” and it was really found that
+the first attack of this kind appeared after she was pursued by a mad
+dog. The success of the therapy then verified our diagnosis.
+
+An official who became hysterical as a result of ill treatment on the
+part of his employer suffered from attacks, during which he fell to the
+floor raging furiously without uttering a word or displaying any
+hallucinations. The attack was provoked in a state of hypnosis and he
+then stated that he lived through the scene during which his employer
+insulted him in the street and struck him with a cane. A few days later
+he came to me complaining that he had the same attack, but this time it
+was shown in the hypnosis that he went through the scene which was
+really connected with the onset of his disease; it was the scene in the
+court room when he was unable to get satisfaction for the ill treatment
+which he received, etc.
+
+The memories which appear in hysterical attacks or which can be awakened
+in them correspond in all other respects to the causes which we have
+found as the basis of the continuous hysterical symptoms. Like these
+they refer to psychic traumas which were prevented from alleviation by
+ab-reaction or by associative elaboration, like these they lack entirely
+or in their essential components the memory possibilities of normal
+consciousness and appear to belong to the ideation of hypnoid states of
+consciousness with limited associations. Finally they are also amenable
+to therapeutic proof. Our observations have often taught us that a
+memory which has always evoked attacks becomes incapacitated when in a
+hypnotic state it is brought to reaction and associative correction.
+
+The motor phenomena of the hysterical attack can partly be interpreted
+as the memory of a general form of reaction of the accompanying affect,
+or partly as a direct motor expression of this memory (like the
+fidgeting of the whole body which even infants make use of), and partly,
+like the hysterical stigmata—the continuous symptoms—they are
+inexplainable on this assumption.
+
+Of special significance for the hysterical attack is the aforementioned
+theory, namely, that in hysteria there are presentation groups which
+come to light in hypnoid states which are excluded from the rest of the
+associative process but are associable among themselves, thus
+representing a more or less highly organized rudimentary second
+consciousness, a _condition seconde_. A persistent hysterical symptom
+therefore corresponds to a projection of this second state into a bodily
+innervation otherwise controlled by the normal consciousness. A
+hysterical attack gives evidence of a higher organization of this second
+state, and if of recent origin it signifies a moment in which this
+hypnoid consciousness gained control of the whole existence, and hence
+we have an acute hysteria, but if it is a recurrent attack containing a
+memory we simply have a repetition of the same. Charcot has already
+given utterance to the fact that the hysterical attack must be the
+rudiment of a _condition seconde_. During the attack the control of the
+whole bodily innervation is transferred to the hypnoid consciousness. As
+familiar experiences show, the normal consciousness is not always
+repressed, it may even perceive the motor phenomena of the attack while
+the psychic processes of the same escape its cognizance.
+
+The typical course of a grave hysteria, as everybody knows, is as
+follows: At first an ideation is formed in the hypnoid state which after
+sufficient development gains control in a period of “acute hysteria” of
+the bodily innervation and the existence of the patient thus forming
+persistent symptoms and attacks, and then with the exception of some
+remnants there is a recovery. If the normal personality can regain the
+upper hand, all that survived the hypnoid ideation then returns in
+hysterical attacks and at times it reproduces, in the personality,
+states which are again amenable to influences and capable of being
+affected by traumas. Frequently a sort of equilibrium then results among
+the psychic groups which are united in the same person; attack and
+normal life go hand in hand without influencing each other. The attack
+then comes spontaneously just as memories are wont to come, it may also
+be provoked just as memories may be by the laws of association. The
+provocation of the attack results either through stimulating a
+hysterogenic zone or through a new experience which by similarity
+recalls the pathogenic experience. We hope to be able to show that there
+is no essential difference between the apparently two diverse
+determinants, and that in both cases the hyperesthetic memory is
+touched. In other cases there is a great lability of equilibrium, the
+attack appears as a manifestation of the hypnoid remnant of
+consciousness as often as the normal person becomes exhausted and
+incapacitated. We cannot disregard the fact that in such cases the
+attack becomes denuded of its original significance and may return as a
+contentless motor reaction.
+
+It remains a task for future investigation to discover what conditions
+are decisive in determining whether a hysterical individuality should
+manifest itself in attacks, in persistent symptoms, or in a mingling of
+both.
+
+
+ V.
+
+We can now understand in what manner the psychotherapeutic method
+propounded by us exerts its curative effect. _It abrogates the efficacy
+of the original not ab-reacted presentation of affording an outlet to
+the strangulated affect through speech. It brings it to associative
+correction by drawing it into normal consciousness (in mild hypnosis) or
+it is done away with through the physician’s suggestion just as happens
+in somnambulism with amnesia._
+
+We maintain that the therapeutic gain obtained by applying this process
+is quite significant. To be sure we do not cure the hysterical
+predisposition as we do not block the way for the recurrence of hypnoid
+states; moreover, in the productive stage of acute hysteria our
+procedure is unable to prevent the replacement of the carefully
+abrogated phenomena by new ones. But when this acute stage has run its
+course and its remnants continue as persistent hysterical symptoms and
+attacks, our radical method usually removes them forever, and herein it
+seems to surpass the efficacy of direct suggestion as practiced at
+present by psychotherapists.
+
+If by disclosing the psychic mechanisms of hysterical phenomena we have
+taken a step forward on the path so successfully started by Charcot with
+his explanation and experimental imitation of hystero-traumatic
+paralysis, we are well aware that in doing this we have only advanced
+our knowledge in the mechanisms of hysterical symptoms and not in the
+subjective causes of hysteria. We have but touched upon the etiology of
+hysteria and could only throw light on the causes of the acquired forms,
+the significance of the accidental moments in the neurosis.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+ THE CASE OF MISS LUCY R.
+
+
+Towards the end of 1892 a friendly colleague recommended to me a young
+lady whom he had been treating for chronic recurrent purulent rhinitis.
+It was later found that the obstinacy of her trouble was caused by a
+caries of the ethmoid. She finally complained of new symptoms which this
+experienced physician could no longer refer to local affections. She had
+lost all perception of smell and was almost constantly bothered by one
+or two subjective sensations of smell. This she found very irksome. In
+addition to this she was depressed in spirits, weak, and complained of a
+heavy head, loss of appetite, and an incapacity for work.
+
+This young lady visited me from time to time during my office hours—she
+was a governess in the family of a factory superintendent living in the
+suburbs of Vienna. She was an English lady of rather delicate
+constitution, anemic, and with the exception of her nasal trouble was in
+good health. Her first statements concurred with those of her physician.
+She suffered from depression and lassitude, and was tormented by
+subjective sensations of smell. Of hysterical signs, she showed a quite
+distinct general analgesia without tactile impairment, the fields of
+vision showed no narrowing on coarse testing with the hand, the nasal
+mucous membrane was totally analgesic and reflexless, tactile sensation
+was absent, and the perception of this organ was abolished for specific
+as well as for other stimuli, such as ammonia or acetic acid. The
+purulent nasal catarrh was then in a state of improvement.
+
+On first attempting to understand this case the subjective sensations of
+smell had to be taken as recurrent hallucinations interpreting
+persistent hysterical symptoms. The depression was perhaps the affect
+belonging to the trauma and there must have been an episode during which
+the present subjective sensations were objective. This episode must have
+been the trauma, the symbols of which recurred in memory as sensations
+of smell. Perhaps it would be more correct to consider the recurring
+hallucinations of smell with the accompanying depression as equivalents
+of hysterical attacks. The nature of recurrent hallucinations really
+makes them unfit to take the part of continuous symptoms, and this
+really did not occur in this rudimentarily developed case. On the other
+hand it was absolutely to be expected that the subjective sensations of
+smell would show such a specialization as to be able to correspond in
+its origin to a very definite and real object.
+
+This expectation was soon fulfilled, for on being asked what odor
+troubled her most she stated that it was an odor of burned pastry. I
+could then assume that the odor of burned pastry really occurred in the
+traumatic event. It is quite unusual to select sensations of smell as
+memory symbols of traumas, but it is quite obvious why these were here
+selected. She was afflicted with purulent rhinitis, hence the nose and
+its perceptions were in the foreground of her attention. All I knew
+about the life of the patient was that she took care of two children
+whose mother died a few years ago from a grave and acute disease.
+
+As a starting point of the analysis I decided to use the “odor of burned
+pastry.” I will now relate the history of this analysis. It could have
+occurred under more favorable conditions, but as a matter of fact what
+should have taken place in one session was extended over a number of
+them. She could only visit me during my office hours, during which I
+could devote to her but little of my time. One single conversation had
+to be extended for over a week as her duties did not permit her to come
+to me often from such a distance, so that the conversation was
+frequently broken off and resumed at the next session.
+
+On attempting to hypnotize Miss Lucy R. she did not merge into the
+somnambulic state. I therefore was obliged to forego somnambulism and
+the analysis was made while she was in a state not perhaps differing
+much from the normal.
+
+I feel obliged to express myself more fully about the point of the
+technique of my procedure. While visiting the Nancy clinics in 1889 I
+heard Dr. Liébeault, the old master of hypnotism, say, “Yes, if we had
+the means to put everybody into the somnambulic state, hypnotism would
+then be the most powerful therapeutic agent.” In Bernheim’s clinic it
+almost seemed that such an art really existed and that it could be
+learned from Bernheim. But as soon as I tried to practice it on my own
+patients I noticed that at least my powers were quite limited in this
+respect. Whenever a patient did not merge into the somnambulistic state
+after one to three attempts I possessed no means to force him into it.
+However, the percentage of somnambulists in my experience were far below
+that claimed by Bernheim.
+
+Thus I had my choice, either to forbear using the cathartic method in
+most of the cases suitable for it, or to venture the attempt without
+somnambulism by using hypnotic influence in light or even doubtful
+cases. It made no difference of what degree (following the accepted
+scales of hypnotism) the hypnotism was which did not correspond to
+somnambulism, for every direction of suggestibility is independent of
+the other and nothing is prejudicial towards the evocation of catalepsy,
+automatic movements and similar phenomena for the purpose of
+facilitating the awakening of forgotten recollections. I soon
+relinquished the habit of deciding the degree of hypnotism, as in a
+great number of cases it incited the patients’ resistance, and clouded
+the confidence which I needed for the more important psychic work.
+Moreover, in mild grades of hypnotism I soon tired of hearing, after the
+assurance and command, “You will sleep, sleep now!” such protests as,
+“But, Doctor, I am not sleeping.” I was then forced to bring in the very
+delicate distinction, saying, “I do not mean the usual sleep, I mean the
+hypnotic,—you see, you are hypnotized, you cannot open your eyes”; or,
+“I really don’t want you to sleep.” I, myself, am convinced that many of
+my colleagues using psychotherapy know how to get out of such
+difficulties more skilfully than I; they can proceed differently. I,
+however, believe that if through the use of a word one can so frequently
+become embarrassed, it is better to avoid the word and the
+embarrassment. Wherever the first attempt did not produce either
+somnambulism or a degree of hypnotism with pronounced bodily changes, I
+dropped the hypnosis and demanded only “concentration,” I ordered the
+patient to lie on his back and close his eyes as a means of reaching
+this “concentration.” With little effort I obtained as profound a degree
+of hypnotism as was possible.
+
+But inasmuch as I forbore using somnambulism, I perhaps robbed myself of
+a preliminary stipulation without which the cathartic method seems
+inapplicable. For it is based on the fact that in the altered state of
+consciousness the patients have at their disposal such recollections and
+recognize such connections which do not apparently exist in their normal
+conscious state. Wherever the somnambulic broadening of consciousness
+lacks there must also be an absence of the possibility of bringing about
+a causal relation which the patient cannot give to the doctor as
+something known to him, and it is just the pathogenic recollections
+“which are lacking from the memory of the patients in their usual
+psychic states or only exist in a most condensed state” (preliminary
+communication).
+
+My memory helped me out of this embarrassment. I, myself, saw Bernheim
+adduce proof that the recollections of somnambulism are only manifestly
+forgotten in the waking state and can be readily reproduced by slight
+urging accompanied by hand pressure which is supposed to mark another
+conscious state. He, for instance, imparted to a somnambulist the
+negative hallucination that he was no more present, and then attempted
+to make himself noticeable to her by the most manifold and regardless
+attacks, but was unsuccessful. After the patient was awakened he asked
+her what he did to her during the time that she thought he was not
+there. She replied very much astonished, that she knew nothing, but he
+did not give in, insisting that she would recall everything; and placed
+his hand on her forehead so that she should recall things, and behold,
+she finally related all that she did not apparently perceive in the
+somnambulic state and about which she ostensibly knew nothing in the
+waking state.
+
+This astonishing and instructive experiment was my model. I decided to
+proceed on the supposition that my patients knew everything that was of
+any pathogenic significance, and that all that was necessary was to
+force them to impart it. When I reached a point where to the question
+“Since when have you this symptom?” or, “Where does it come from?” I
+receive the answer, “I really don’t know this,” I proceeded as follows:
+I placed my hand on the patient’s forehead or took her head between my
+hands and said, “Under the pressure of my hand it will come into your
+mind. In the moment that I stop the pressure you will see something
+before you, or something will pass through your mind which you must
+note. It is that which we are seeking. Well, what have you seen or what
+came into your mind?”
+
+On applying this method for the first time (it was not in the case of
+Miss Lucy R.) I was surprised to find just what I wanted, and I may say
+that it has since hardly ever failed me, it always showed me the way to
+proceed in my investigations and enabled me to conclude all such
+analyses without somnambulism. Gradually I became so bold that when a
+patient would answer, “I see nothing,” or “Nothing came into my mind,” I
+insisted that it was impossible. They probably had the right thought but
+did not believe it and repudiated it. I would repeat the procedure as
+often as they wished, and every time they saw the same thing. Indeed, I
+was always right; the patients had not as yet learned to let their
+criticism rest. They repudiated the emerging recollection or fancy
+because they considered it as a useless intruding disturbance, but after
+they imparted it, it was always shown that it was the right one.
+Occasionally after forcing a communication by pressing the head three or
+four times I got such answer as, “Yes, I was aware of it the first time,
+but did not wish to say it,” or, “I hoped that it would not be this.”
+
+By this method it was far more laborious to broaden the alleged narrowed
+consciousness than by investigating in the somnambulic state, but it
+made me independent of somnambulism and afforded me an insight into the
+motives which are frequently decisive for the “forgetting” of
+recollections. I am in position to assert that this forgetting is often
+intentional and desired. It is always only manifestly successful.
+
+It appeared to me even more remarkable that apparently long forgotten
+numbers and dates can be reproduced by a similar process, thus proving
+an unexpected faithfulness of memory.
+
+The insignificant choice which one has in searching for numbers and
+dates especially allows us to take to our aid the familiar axiom of the
+theory of aphasia, namely, that recognition is a slighter accomplishment
+of memory than spontaneous recollection.
+
+Hence to a patient who is unable to recall in what year, month or day a
+certain event took place, enumerate the years during which it might have
+occurred as well as the names of the twelve months and the thirty-one
+days of the month, and assure him that at the right number or name his
+eyes will open themselves or that he will feel which number is the
+correct one. In most cases the patients really decide on a definite date
+and frequently enough (as in the case of Mrs. Cäcilie N.) it could be
+ascertained from existing notes of that time that the date was correctly
+recognized. At other times and in different patients it was shown from
+the connection of the recollected facts that the dates thus found were
+incontestable. A patient, for instance, after a date was found by
+enumerating for her the dates, remarked, “This is my father’s birthday,”
+and added “Of course I expected this episode [about which we spoke]
+because it was my father’s birthday.”
+
+I can only slightly touch upon this theme. The conclusion which I wished
+to draw from all these experiences is that the pathogenic important
+experiences with all their concomitant circumstances are faithfully
+retained in memory, even where they seem forgotten, as when the patient
+seems unable to recall them.[14]
+
+After this long but unavoidable digression I now return to the history
+of Miss Lucy R. As aforesaid, she did not merge into somnambulism when
+an attempt was made to hypnotize her, but lay calmly in a degree of mild
+suggestibility, her eyes constantly closed, the features immobile, the
+limbs without motion. I asked her whether she remembered on what
+occasion the smell perception of burned pastry originated.—“Oh, yes, I
+know it well. It was about two months ago, two days before my birthday.
+I was with the children (two girls) in the school room playing and
+teaching them to cook, when a letter just left by the letter carrier was
+brought in. From its postmark and handwriting I recognized it as one
+sent to me by my mother from Glasgow and I wished to open it and read
+it. The children then came running over, pulled the letter out of my
+hand and exclaimed, ‘No you must not read it now, it is probably a
+congratulatory letter for your birthday and we will keep it for you
+until then.’ While the children were thus playing there was a sudden
+diffusion of an intense odor. The children forgot the pastry which they
+were cooking and it became burned. Since then I have been troubled by
+this odor, it is really always present but is more marked during
+excitement.”
+
+“Do you see this scene distinctly before you?”—“As clearly as I
+experienced it.”—“What was there in it that so excited you?”—“I was
+touched by the affection which the children displayed towards me.”—“But
+weren’t they always so affectionate?”—“Yes, but I just got the letter
+from my mother.”—“I can’t understand in what way the affection of the
+little ones and the letter from the mother contrasted, a thing which you
+appear to intimate.”—“I had the intention of going to my mother and my
+heart became heavy at the thought of leaving those dear children.”—“What
+is the matter with your mother? Was she so lonesome that she wanted you,
+or was she sick just then and you expected some news?”—“No, she is
+delicate but not really sick, and has a companion with her.”—“Why then
+were you obliged to leave the children?”—“This house had become
+unbearable to me. The housekeeper, the cook, and the French maid seemed
+to be under the impression that I was too proud for my position. They
+united in intriguing against me and told the grandfather of the children
+all sorts of things about me, and when I complained to both gentlemen I
+did not receive the support which I expected. I then tendered my
+resignation to the master (father of the children) but he was very
+friendly, asking me to reconsider it for two weeks before taking any
+definite steps. It was while I was in that state of indecision that the
+incident occurred. I thought that I would leave the house but have
+remained.”—“Aside from the attachment of the children is there anything
+particular which attracts you to them?”—“Yes, my mother is distantly
+related to their mother and when the latter was on her death bed I
+promised her to do my utmost in caring for the children, that I would
+not forsake them, and be a mother to them, and this promise I broke when
+offering my resignation.”
+
+The analysis of the subjective sensation of smell seemed completed. It
+was once objective and intimately connected with an experience, a small
+scene, in which contrary affects conflicted, sorrow at forsaking the
+children, and the mortification which despite all urged her to this
+decision. Her mother’s letter naturally recalled the motives of this
+decision because she thought of returning to her mother. The conflict of
+the affects raised this moment to a trauma and the sensation of smell
+which was connected with it remained as its symbol. The only thing to be
+explained was the fact that out of all the sensory perceptions of that
+scene, the perception of smell was selected as the symbol, but I was
+already prepared to use the chronic nasal affliction as an explanation.
+On being directly questioned she stated that just at that time she
+suffered from a severe coryza and could scarcely smell anything but in
+her excitement she perceived the odor of burned pastry, it penetrated
+the organically motived anosmia.
+
+As plausible as this sounded it did not satisfy me; there seemed to be
+something lacking. There was no acceptable reason wherefore this series
+of excitements and this conflict of affects should have led to hysteria.
+Why did it not all remain on a normal psychological basis? In other
+words, what justified the conversion under discussion? Why did she not
+recall the scenes themselves instead of the sensations connected with
+them which she preferred as symbols for her recollection? Such questions
+might seem superfluous and impertinent when dealing with old hysterias
+in whom the mechanism of conversion was habitual, but this girl first
+acquired hysteria through this trauma, or at least through this slight
+distress.
+
+From the analysis of similar cases I already knew that where hysteria is
+to be newly acquired one psychic determinant is indispensible; namely,
+that some presentation must intentionally be repressed from
+consciousness and excluded from associative elaboration.
+
+In this intentional repression I also find the reason for the conversion
+of the sum of excitement, be it partial or total. The sum of excitement
+which is not to enter into psychic association more readily finds the
+wrong road to bodily innervation. The reason for the repression itself
+could only be a disagreeable feeling, the incompatibility of one of the
+repressible ideas with the ruling presentation-mass of the ego. The
+repressed presentation then avenges itself by becoming pathogenic.
+
+From this I concluded that Miss Lucy R. merged into that moment of
+hysterical conversion, which must have been under the determinations of
+that trauma which she intentionally left in the darkness and which she
+took pains to forget. On considering her attachment for the children and
+her sensitiveness towards the other persons of the household, there
+remained but one interpretation which I was bold enough to impart to
+her. I told her that I did not believe that all these things were simply
+due to her affection for the children, but that I thought that she was
+rather in love with her master, perhaps unwittingly, that she really
+nurtured the hope of taking the place of the mother, and it was for that
+reason that she became so sensitive towards the servants with whom she
+had lived peacefully for years. She feared lest they would notice
+something of her hope and scoff at her.
+
+She answered in her laconic manner: “Yes, I believe it is so.”—“But if
+you knew that you were in love with the master, why did you not tell me
+so?”—“But I did not know it, or rather, I did not wish to know it. I
+wished to crowd it out of my mind, never to think of it, and of late I
+have been successful.”[15]
+
+“Why did you not wish to admit it to yourself? Were you ashamed because
+you loved a man?”—“O, no, I am not unreasonably prudish; one is
+certainly not responsible for one’s own feelings. I only felt chagrined
+because it was my employer in whose service I was and in whose house I
+lived, and toward whom I could not feel as independent as towards
+another. What is more, I am a poor girl and he is a rich man of a
+prominent family, and if anybody should have had any inkling about my
+feelings they would have ridiculed me.”
+
+After this I encountered no resistances in elucidating the origin of
+this affection. She told me that the first years of her life in that
+house were passed uneventfully. She fulfilled her duties without
+thinking about unrealizable wishes. One day, however, the serious, and
+very busy and hitherto very reserved master, engaged her in conversation
+about the exigencies of rearing the children. He became milder and more
+cordial than usual, he told her how much he counted on her in the
+bringing up of his orphaned children, and looked at her rather
+peculiarly. It was in this moment that she began to love him, and gladly
+occupied herself with the pleasing hopes which she conceived during that
+conversation. However, as this was not followed by anything else, and
+despite her waiting and persevering no other confidential heart-to-heart
+talk followed, she decided to crowd it out of her mind. She quite agreed
+with me that the look in connection with the conversation was probably
+intended for the memory of his deceased wife. She was also perfectly
+convinced that her love was hopeless.
+
+After this conversation I expected a decided change in her condition but
+for a time it did not take place. She continued depressed and moody—a
+course of hydrotherapy which I ordered for her at the same time
+refreshed her somewhat mornings. The odor of burned pastry did not
+entirely disappear; though it became rarer and feebler it appeared only,
+as she said, when she was very much excited.
+
+The continuation of this memory symbol led me to believe that besides
+the principal scene it represented many smaller side traumas and I
+therefore investigated everything that might have been in any way
+connected with the scene of the burned pastry. We thus passed through
+the theme of family friction, the behavior of the grandfather and
+others, and with that the sensation of burned odor gradually
+disappeared. Just then there was a lengthy interruption occasioned by a
+new nasal affliction which led to the discovery of the caries of the
+ethmoid.
+
+On her return she informed me that she received many Christmas presents
+from both gentlemen as well as from the household servants, as if they
+were trying to appease her and wipe away the recollection of the
+conflicts of the last months. These frank advances made no impression on
+her.
+
+On questioning her on another occasion about the odor of burned pastry
+she stated that it had entirely disappeared, but instead she was now
+bothered by another and similar odor like the smoke of a cigar. This
+odor really existed before; it was only concealed by the odor of the
+pastry but now appeared by itself.
+
+I was not very much pleased with the success of my treatment. What
+occurred here is what a mere symptomatic treatment is generally blamed
+for, namely, that it removes one symptom only to make room for another.
+Nevertheless, I immediately set forth to remove this new memory symbol
+by analysis.
+
+This time I did not know whence this subjective sensation of smell
+originated, nor on what important occasion it was objective. On being
+questioned she said, “They constantly smoke at home, I really don’t know
+whether the smell which I feel has any particular significance.” I then
+proposed that she should try to recall things under the pressure of my
+hands. I have already mentioned that her recollections were plastically
+vivid, that she was a “visual.” Indeed under the pressure of my hands a
+picture came into her mind—at first only slowly and fragmentarily. It
+was the dining room of the house in which she waited with the children
+for the arrival of the gentlemen from the factory for dinner.—“Now we
+are all at the table, the gentlemen, the French maid, the housekeeper,
+the children and I. It is the same as usual.”—“Just keep on looking at
+that picture. It will soon become developed and specialized.”—“Yes,
+there is a guest, the chief accountant, an old gentleman who loves the
+children like his own grandchildren, but he dines with us so frequently
+that it is nothing unusual.”—“Just have patience, keep on looking at the
+picture, something will certainly happen.”—“Nothing happens. We leave
+the table, the children take leave and go with us up to the second floor
+as usual.”—“Well?”—“It really is something unusual, I now recognize the
+scene. As the children take leave the chief accountant attempts to kiss
+them, but my master jumps up and shouts at him, ‘Don’t kiss the
+children!’ I then experienced a stitch in the heart, and as the
+gentlemen were smoking, this odor remained in my memory.”
+
+This, therefore, was the second, deeper seated scene causing the trauma
+and leaving the memory symbol. But why was this scene so effective? I
+then asked her which scene happened first, this one or the one with the
+burned pastry?—“The last scene happened first by almost two
+months.”—“Why did you feel the stitch at the father’s interference? The
+reproof was not meant for you.”—“It was really not right to rebuke an
+old gentleman in such manner who was a dear friend and a guest, it could
+have been said quietly.”—“Then you were really affected by your master’s
+impetuosity? Were you perhaps ashamed of him, or have you thought, ‘If
+he could become so impetuous to an old friend guest over such a trifle,
+how would he act towards me if I were his wife?’”—“No, that is not
+it.”—“But still it was about his impetuosity?”—“Yes, about the kissing
+of the children, he never liked that.” Under the pressure of my hands
+there emerged a still older scene which was the real effective trauma
+and which bestowed on the scene with the chief accountant the traumatic
+effectivity.
+
+A few months before a lady friend visited the house and on leaving
+kissed both children on the lips. The father, who was present,
+controlled himself and said nothing to the lady, but when she left he
+was very angry at the unfortunate governess. He said that he held her
+responsible for this kissing; that it was her duty not to tolerate it;
+that she was neglecting her duties in allowing such things, and that if
+it ever happened again he would entrust the education of his children to
+some one else. This occurred while she believed herself loved and waited
+for a repetition of that serious and friendly talk. This episode
+shattered all her hopes. She thought: “If he can upbraid and threaten me
+on account of such a trifle, of which I am entirely innocent, I must
+have been mistaken, he never entertained any tenderer feelings towards
+me, else he would have been considerate.”—It was evidently this painful
+scene that came to her as the father reprimanded the chief accountant
+for attempting to kiss the children.
+
+On being visited by Miss Lucy R. two days after the last analysis I had
+to ask her what pleasant things happened to her. She looked as though
+transformed, she smiled and held her head aloft. For a moment I thought
+that after all I probably mistook the conditions and that the governess
+of the children had now become the bride of the master. But she soon
+dissipated all my suppositions, saying, “Nothing new happened. You
+really do not know me. You have always seen me while I was sick and
+depressed. I am otherwise always cheerful. On awaking yesterday morning
+my burden was gone and since then I feel well.”—“What do you think of
+your chances in the house?”—“I am perfectly clear about that. I know
+that I have none, and I am not going to be unhappy about it.”—“Will you
+now be able to get along with the others in the house?”—“I believe so,
+because most of the trouble was due to my sensitiveness.”—“Do you still
+love the master?”—“Certainly I love him, but that does not bother me
+much. One can think and feel as one wishes.”
+
+I now examined her nose and found that the pain and the reflex
+sensations had almost completely reappeared. She could distinguish
+odors, but she was uncertain when they were very intense. What part the
+nasal trouble played in the anosmia I must leave undecided.
+
+The whole treatment extended over a period of nine weeks. Four months
+later I accidentally met the patient at one of our summer resorts—she
+was cheerful and stated that her health continued to be good.
+
+
+ EPICRISIS.
+
+I would not underestimate the aforesaid case even though it only
+represents a young and light hysteria presenting but few symptoms.
+Moreover, it seems to me instructive that even such a slight neurotic
+affliction requires so many psychic determinants, and on a more
+exhaustive consideration of this history I am tempted to put it down as
+an illustration of that form of hysteria which even persons not burdened
+by heredity may acquire if their experiences favor it. It should be well
+noted that I do not speak of a hysteria which may be independent of all
+predisposition; such form does not probably exist, but we speak of such
+a predisposition only after the person became hysterical, as nothing
+pointed to it before this. A neuropathic disposition as commonly
+understood is something different. It is determined even before the
+disease by a number of hereditary burdens, or a sum of individual
+psychic abnormalities. As far as I know none of these moments could be
+demonstrated in the case of Miss Lucy R. Her hysteria could therefore be
+called acquired and presupposes nothing except probably a very marked
+susceptibility to acquire hysteria, a characteristic about which we know
+hardly anything. The chief importance in such cases lies in the nature
+of the trauma, to be sure in connection with the reaction of the person
+to the trauma. It is an indispensable condition for the acquirement of
+hysteria that there should arise a relation of incompatibility between
+the ego and some of its approaching presentations. I hope to be able to
+show in another place how a variety of neurotic disturbances originate
+from the different procedures which the “ego” pursues in order to free
+itself from that incompatibility. The hysterical form of defence, for
+which a special adaptation is required, consists in converting the
+excitement into physical innervation. The gain brought about by this
+process is the crowding out of the unbearable presentation from the ego
+consciousness, which then contains instead the physical reminiscences
+produced by conversion—in our case the subjective sensation of smell—and
+suffers from the affect which is more or less distinctly adherent to
+these reminiscences. The situation thus produced is no longer
+changeable, for changing and conversion annihilate the conflict which
+helped towards the adjustment of the affect. Thus the mechanism
+producing hysteria corresponds on the one hand to an act of moral faint
+heartedness, on the other hand it presents itself as a protective
+arrangement at the command of the ego. There are many cases in which it
+must be admitted that the defense of the increased excitement through
+the production of hysteria may actually have been most expedient, but
+more frequently one will naturally come to the conclusion that a greater
+measure of moral courage would have been an advantage to the individual.
+
+Accordingly the real traumatic moment is that, in which the conflict
+thrusts itself upon the ego and the latter decides to banish it. Such
+banishment does not annihilate the opposing presentation but merely
+crowds it into the unconscious. This process, occurring for the first
+time, forms a nucleus and point of crystallization for the formation of
+a new psychic group separated from the ego, around which, in the course
+of time, everything collects in accord with the opposing presentation.
+The splitting of consciousness in such cases of acquired hysteria is
+thus a desired and intentional one, and is often initiated by at least
+one arbitrary act. But literally, something different happens than the
+individual expects, he would wish to eliminate a presentation as though
+it never came to pass but only succeeds in isolating it psychically.
+
+The traumatic moment in the history of our patient corresponds to the
+scene created by the master on account of the kissing of the children.
+For the time being this scene remained without any palpable effects,
+perhaps it initiated the depression and sensitiveness, but I leave this
+open;—the hysterical symptoms, however, commenced later in moments which
+can be designated as “auxiliary,” and which may be characterized by the
+fact that in them there is a simultaneous flowing together of both
+separated groups just as in the broadened somnambulic consciousness. The
+first of these moments in which the conversion took place in Miss Lucy
+R., was the scene at the table when the chief accountant attempted to
+kiss the children. The traumatic memory helped along, and she acted as
+though she had not entirely banished her attachment for her master. In
+other cases we find that these different moments come together and the
+conversion occurs directly under the influence of the trauma.
+
+The second auxiliary moment repeated almost precisely the mechanism of
+the first. A strong impression transitorily reestablished the unity of
+consciousness and the conversion takes the same route opened to it in
+the first. It is interesting to note that the symptom occurring second
+concealed the first so that it could not be distinctly perceived until
+the second was eliminated. The reversal of the succession of events to
+which also the analysis must be adapted seems to me quite remarkable. In
+a whole series of cases I found that the symptoms which came later
+covered the first, and only the last thing in the analysis contained the
+key to the whole.
+
+The therapy here consisted in forcing the union of the dissociated
+psychic groups with the ego consciousness. It is remarkable that the
+success did not run parallel with the accomplished work, the cure
+resulted suddenly only after the last part was accomplished.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+ THE CASE OF MISS ELISABETH V. R.
+
+
+In the fall of 1892 I was requested by a friendly colleague to examine a
+young lady who had suffered from pains in her legs for over two years
+and who walked badly. He also added that he diagnosed the case as
+hysteria, though none of the usual symptoms of the neurosis could be
+found. He stated that he knew something of the family and that the last
+few years had brought them much misfortune and little pleasure. At first
+the father of the patient died, then the mother underwent a serious
+operation for the eyes, and soon thereafter a married sister succumbed
+to a chronic cardiac affection after childbirth. Our patient had taken
+an active part in all the afflictions and in all the nursings of the
+sick. I made no further progress into the case after I had seen the
+twenty-four-year-old patient for the first time. She seemed intelligent
+and psychically normal and her affliction, which interfered with her
+social relations and pleasure, she bore with a happy mien, thus vividly
+recalling the “belle indifference” of hysterics. She walked with the
+upper part of her body bent forward, but without any support; her gait
+did not correspond to any known pathological gait and it was in no way
+strikingly bad. She complained of severe pains on walking, of early
+fatigue in walking as well as standing, and after a brief period she
+would seek rest in which the pains became diminished but they by no
+means disappeared. The pain was of an indefinite nature—one could assume
+it to be a painful fatigue. The seat of the pain was given as a quite
+extensive but indefinitely circumscribed location on the superficial
+surface of the right thigh. It was from this area that the pains
+radiated and where they were of the greatest intensity. Here, too, the
+skin and muscles were especially sensitive to pressure and pinching,
+while needle pricks were rather indifferently perceived. The same
+hyperalgesia of the skin and muscles was demonstrable, not only in this
+area, but over almost the entire surface of both legs. The muscles were
+perhaps more painful than the skin, but both kinds of pains were
+unmistakably most pronounced over the thighs. The motor power of the
+legs was not diminished, the reflexes were of average intensity and all
+other symptoms were lacking, so that there was no basis for the
+assumption of a serious organic affection. The disease developed
+gradually during two years and changed considerably in its intensity.
+
+I did not find it easy to determine the diagnosis, but for two reasons I
+concluded to agree with my colleague. First, because it was rather
+peculiar that such a highly intelligent patient should not be able to
+give anything definite about the character of her pains. A patient
+suffering from an organic pain, if it is not accompanied by any
+nervousness will be able to describe it definitely and calmly; it may
+perhaps be lancinating, appearing at certain intervals, extending from
+this to that location, and in his opinion it may be evoked by this or
+that influence. The neurasthenic describing his pain gives the
+impression of being occupied with some difficult mental problem reaching
+far beyond his powers. His features are tense and distorted as though
+under the domination of a painful affect, his voice becomes shriller, he
+struggles for expression, he rejects all designations that the physician
+makes for his pains, even though they are undoubtedly afterwards found
+as appropriate. He is ostensibly of the opinion that language is too
+poor to give expression to his feelings. His sensations are something
+unique, they never existed before so that they can not be exhaustively
+described. He never tires of constantly adding new details and when he
+has to stop he is surely controlled by the impression that he was
+unsuccessful in making himself understood to the physician. All this is
+due to the fact that his pains absorb his whole attention. In the case
+of Miss v. R. we had just the opposite behavior and we had to conclude
+from this that she attributed sufficient significance to the pain, but
+that her attention was concentrated on something else of which the pains
+were the accompanying phenomena, perhaps on thoughts and sensations
+which were connected with the pain.
+
+A still greater determination for the conception of the pain must
+however, be found in a second moment. If we irritate a painful area in a
+patient suffering from an organic disease or neurasthenia his
+physiognomy will show a definite expression of discomfort or of physical
+pain. Furthermore, the patient winces, refuses to be examined and
+assumes a defensive attitude. With Miss v. R. when the hyperalgesic skin
+or muscles of her legs were pinched or pressed her face assumed a
+peculiar expression approaching nearer pleasure than pain, she cried out
+and—I had to think of a pleasurable tickling—her face reddened, she
+threw her head backward, closed her eyes, and her body bent backward;
+all this was not very distinct but sufficiently marked so that it could
+only agree with the conception that her affliction was a hysteria and
+that the irritation touched a hysterogenic zone.
+
+Her mien was not in accord with the pain which the pinching of the
+muscles and skin were supposed to excite. It probably harmonized better
+with the content of the thoughts which were behind the pain and which
+were evoked in the patient by irritating that part of the body
+associated with them. I have repeatedly observed similar significant
+expressions on irritating hyperalgesic zones in unmistakable cases of
+hysteria. The other gestures evidently corresponded to the slightest
+indications of a hysterical attack.
+
+We could not at that time find any explanation for the unusual
+localization of the hysterogenic zone. That the hyperalgesia chiefly
+concerned the muscles gave material for reflection. The most frequent
+affliction causing the diffuse and local pressure sensitiveness of the
+muscles is the rheumatic infiltration of the same, the common chronic
+muscular rheumatism about which aptitude to mask nervous affections I
+have already spoken. The consistency of the painful muscles in Miss v.
+R. did not contradict this assumption, as there were many hard cords in
+the muscle masses which seemed to be especially sensitive. There was
+probably also an organic change in the muscles, in the assumed sense,
+upon which the neurosis rested and which significance was markedly
+exaggerated by the neurosis.
+
+The therapy followed out was based on a supposition of a mixed
+affection. We recommended the continuation of a systematic massage and
+faradization of the sensitive muscles without regard to the pain
+produced, and in order to remain in communication with the patient I
+undertook the treatment of her legs by means of strong Franklin’s
+sparks. To her question whether she should force herself to walk we
+answered decidedly in the affirmative.
+
+We thus attained a slight improvement. She particularly liked the
+painful shocks of the influence machine and the stronger they were the
+more they seemed to suppress her pains. My colleague meanwhile prepared
+the soil for the psychic treatment, and when after four weeks of sham
+treatment I proposed the same and gave the patient some explanations
+concerning the procedures and its effects I found a ready understanding
+and only slight resistances.
+
+The work which then began became eventually the most arduous that ever
+befell my lot, and the difficulty of giving an account of this work
+ranks well with the obstacles that had to be overcome. For a long time,
+too, I did not understand the connection between the history of the
+disease and the affliction, a thing which should really have been caused
+and determined by this row of events.
+
+When one undertakes a cathartic treatment he at first asks himself
+whether the patient understands the origin and cause of her suffering.
+If that is so one does not need any special technique to cause her to
+reproduce the history of her ailment. The interest shown in her, the
+understanding which we foreshadow, the hope of recovery extended to her,
+all these will induce the patient to give up her secrets. With Miss
+Elisabeth it seemed probable to me right from the very beginning that
+she was conscious of the reasons for her suffering, that she had only a
+secret but no foreign body in consciousness. On looking at her one had
+to think of the poet’s words,
+
+ “That mask indicates a hidden meaning.”[16]
+
+At first I could thus forego hypnosis, reserving it, however, for future
+use if in the course of the confession conditions should arise for which
+explanation the memory would not perhaps suffice. Thus in this first
+complete analysis of a hysteria which I had undertaken, I reached a
+process of treatment which later I raised into a method and employed it
+consciously in the process of removing by strata the pathogenic psychic
+material which we used to compare with the technique of excavating a
+buried city. I at first allowed the patient to relate to me what was
+known to her, paying careful attention wherever a connection remained
+enigmatical or where a link in the chain of causation seemed to be
+lacking. Later I penetrated into the deeper strata of memory by using
+for those locations hypnotic investigation or a similar technique. The
+presupposition of the whole work was naturally the expectation that a
+perfect and sufficient determination could be demonstrated. The means of
+the deeper investigation will soon be discussed.
+
+The history which Miss Elisabeth gave was very dull and was woven of
+manifold painful experiences. During this recital she was not in a
+hypnotic state; I merely asked her to lie down and keep her eyes closed.
+I however made no objection if she from time to time opened her eyes,
+changed her position or sat up. Whenever she entered more deeply into a
+part of her history she seemed to merge spontaneously into a condition
+resembling a hypnotic state. She then remained motionless and kept her
+eyes firmly closed.
+
+I shall now reproduce the results of the superficial strata of her
+memory. As the youngest of three daughters she spent her youth with her
+parents, to whom she was devotedly attached, on their estate in Hungary.
+Her mother’s health was frequently disturbed by an affliction of her
+eyes and also by nervous conditions. It thus happened that she became
+especially and devotedly attached to her jovial and broadminded father
+who was wont to say that this daughter took the place of both a son and
+friend with whom he could exchange his thoughts. As much as the girl
+gained in mental stimulation in consequence of this intercourse it did
+not escape the father that her psychic constitution deviated from that
+ideal which one so much desires to see in a girl. Jocosely he called her
+pert and disputatious. He warned her against being too confident in her
+judgments, against her tendencies to tell the truth regardlessly to
+everybody, and expressed his opinion that she would find it difficult to
+get a husband. As a matter of fact she was very discontented with her
+girlhood; she was filled with ambitious plans, wishing to study or
+obtain a musical education, and revolted at the thought of being forced
+to give up her inclination to sacrifice her freedom of judgment on
+account of marriage. Meanwhile she was proud of her father, of the
+regard and social position of her family, and jealously guarded
+everything connected with these matters. The indifference with which she
+treated her mother and older sisters, as will be shown, was considered
+by her parents to be due to the blunter side of her character.
+
+The age of the girls impelled the family to move into the metropolis,
+where for a time Elisabeth enjoyed the richer and gayer life. But then
+came the calamity which destroyed the happiness of the home. The father
+either concealed or overlooked a chronic cardiac affection, and one day
+he was brought home in an unconscious state after the first attack of
+edema of the lungs. This was followed by an illness of one and a half
+years, during which Elisabeth took the most prominent part in nursing
+him. She slept in her father’s room, awoke at night at his call, watched
+over him faithfully during the day, and forced herself to appear
+cheerful while he went through a hopeless condition with amiable
+resignation. The beginning of her affection must have been connected
+with this time of her nursing, for she could recall that during the last
+half year of this care she had to remain in bed on one occasion for a
+day and a half on account of severe pain in the leg. She maintained,
+however, that these pains soon passed away and excited neither worry nor
+attention. As a matter of fact it was two years after the death of her
+father that she began to feel sick and became unable to walk on account
+of pain.
+
+The gap which the father left in the life of this family consisting of
+four women, the social solitude, the cessation of so many relations
+which promised stimulation and pleasure, the increased infirmity of the
+mother, all these clouded the mood of our patient, but simultaneously
+stimulated a warm desire that the family might soon find a substitute
+for the lost happiness and urged her to concentrate her entire devotion
+and care on the surviving mother. At the end of the mourning year the
+eldest sister married a talented and ambitious man of notable position,
+who by his mental capacity seemed to be destined for a great future, but
+who, however, very soon developed a morbid sensitiveness and egotistic
+perseveration of moods, and dared to show his disregard for the old lady
+in the family circle. That was more than Elisabeth could endure. She
+felt herself called upon to take up the fight against her brother-in-law
+whenever he gave occasion for it, while the other women took lightly the
+outburst of his excited temperament. To her it was a painful
+disillusionment to find that the reconstruction of the old family
+happiness experienced such a disturbance. She could not forgive her
+married sister because with feminine docility she strove to avoid
+espousing her cause. Thus a whole series of scenes remained in
+Elisabeth’s memory to which were attached a number of partially uttered
+grievances against her first brother-in-law. But what she reproached him
+most for was the fact that for the sake of a promotion in view he moved
+with his small family to a distant city in Austria and thus increased
+the lonesomeness of her mother. On this occasion Elisabeth distinctly
+felt her inability and helplessness to afford her mother a substitute
+for the lost happiness, and the impossibility of following out the
+resolution made at the death of her father.
+
+The marriage of the second sister seemed to promise more for the future
+of the family. The second brother-in-law, although not of the same
+mental calibre as the first, was a man after the heart of delicate
+ladies, and his behavior reconciled Elisabeth to the matrimonial
+institution and to the thought of the sacrifice connected with it. What
+is more the second couple remained near her mother, and the child of
+this brother-in-law and the second sister became Elisabeth’s pet.
+Unfortunately the year during which the child was born was clouded by
+another event. The visual affliction of the mother demanded many weeks’
+treatment in a dark room, in which Elisabeth participated. Following
+this an operation proved necessary and the excitement connected with
+this occurred at the same time that the first brother-in-law made
+preparations to move. Finally the operation, skilfully performed, proved
+successful, and the three families met at a summer resort. There
+Elisabeth, exhausted by the worries of the past months, had the first
+opportunity to recuperate from the effects of the suffering and anxiety
+that the family had undergone since the death of her father.
+
+But during the time spent at this resort Elisabeth was attacked by the
+pain and weakness. Afterwards, the pains, which had become noticeable
+for a short while some time previously, manifested themselves severely
+for the first time after taking a warm bath at a small watering place.
+In connection with this it was thought that a long walk, really a walk
+of half a day, a few days, previously, had some connection with the
+onset of the pains. This readily produced the impression that Elisabeth
+at first became “fatigued” and then “caught cold.”
+
+From this time on Elisabeth became the patient in the family. Following
+the advice of the physician she spent the rest of the summer in the
+watering place at Gastein, whither she went with her mother, but not
+without having a new worriment to think about. The second sister was
+again pregnant and information as to her condition was quite
+unfavorable, so that Elisabeth could hardly decide to take the journey
+to Gastein. After barely two weeks at Gastein both mother and sister
+were recalled as the patient at home did not feel well.
+
+An agonizing journey, which for Elisabeth was a mixture of pain and
+anxious expectations, was followed by certain signs at the home railroad
+station which forebode the worst, and then on entering the chamber of
+the patient they were confronted with the reality—that they arrived too
+late to take leave of the dying one.
+
+Elisabeth not only suffered from the loss of this sister whom she dearly
+loved but was also grieved by the thoughts caused by her death and the
+changes which it caused. The sister had succumbed to heart trouble which
+was aggravated by the pregnancy.
+
+She then conceived the thought that the heart trouble was the paternal
+inheritance. It was then recalled that in her early childhood the
+deceased went through an attack of chorea with a slight heart affection.
+The family then blamed themselves and the physicians for permitting the
+marriage. They could not spare reproaches to the unfortunate widower for
+impairing the health of his wife by two successive pregnancies without
+any pause. The sad thought that this happiness should terminate thus,
+after the rare conditions for a happy marriage had been found,
+thereafter constantly occupied Elisabeth’s mind. Moreover, she again saw
+everything fail that she had planned for her mother. The widowed
+brother-in-law was inconsolable and withdrew from his wife’s family. It
+seemed that his own family from whom he was estranged during his short
+and happy married life took advantage of the opportunity to again draw
+him into their own circle. There was no way of maintaining the former
+union; to live together with the mother-in-law was improper out of
+regard for the unmarried sister-in-law, and inasmuch as he refused to
+relinquish the child, the only legacy of the deceased, to the two
+ladies, he for the first time gave them the opportunity of accusing him
+of heartlessness. Finally, and that was not the least painful thing,
+Elisabeth received some indefinite information concerning a disagreement
+between the two brothers-in-law, the occasion for which she could only
+surmise. It seemed as if the widower made some requests concerning
+financial matters which the other brother-in-law considered
+unjustifiable, and thought, that in view of the recent sorrow of his
+mother, it was nothing but an evil extortion. This then was the history
+of the young woman of ambitious and loving disposition. Resentful of her
+fate, embittered over the failures of her little plans to restore the
+lustre of the home; of her beloved ones, some being dead, some away, and
+some estranged— without any inclination to seek refuge in the love of a
+strange man, she lived thus for a year and a half nursing her mother and
+her pains, separated from almost, all social intercourse.
+
+If we forget the greater sufferings and place ourselves in this girl’s
+position, we can but extend to Miss Elisabeth our hearty sympathy. But
+what is the physician’s interest in this sorrowful tale; what is its
+relation to her painful and her weak gait; what outlook is there for
+explaining and curing this case by the knowledge which we perhaps
+obtained from these psychic traumas?
+
+For the physician this confession of the patient signified at first a
+great disappointment, for to be sure it was a history composed of banal
+mental shocks from which we could neither explain why the patient became
+afflicted with hysteria nor how the hysteria assumed the form of the
+painful abasia. It explained neither the causation nor the determination
+of the hysteria in question. We could perhaps assume that the patient
+had formed an association between her psychically painful impressions
+and bodily pains which she accidentally perceived simultaneously, and
+that now she made use in her memory of the physical sensation as a
+symbol for the psychic. What motive she had for this substitution and in
+what moment this came about remained unexplained. To be sure, these were
+questions whose nature was not familiar to the physicians. For it was
+customary to content one’s self with the information and to assume that
+the patient was constitutionally hysterical and that under the intensive
+pressure of any kind of excitement hysterical symptoms could develop.
+
+Even less than for the explanation did this confession offer for the
+treatment of the case. One could not conceive what beneficial influence
+Miss Elisabeth could derive from recounting sad familiar family
+experiences of the past years to a stranger who could give her in return
+only moderate sympathy, nor could we perceive any improvement after the
+confession. During the first period of the treatment the patient never
+failed to repeat to her physician: “I continue to feel ill, I have the
+same pains as before,” and when she accompanied this by a crafty and
+malicious glance, I could perhaps recall the words which old Mr. v. R.
+was wont to utter concerning his favorite daughter: “She is frequently
+pert and disputatious,” but after all I had to confess that she was
+right.
+
+Had I given up the patient at this stage of the psychic treatment the
+case of Miss Elisabeth v. R. would have been quite unimportant for the
+theory of hysteria. Nevertheless, I continued my analysis because I felt
+sure that an understanding of the causation as well as the determination
+of the hysterical symptoms could be gained from the deeper strata of
+consciousness.
+
+I therefore decided to put the direct question to the broadened
+consciousness of the patient, in order to find out with what psychic
+impression the origin of the pain in the legs was connected.
+
+For this purpose the patient should have been put in deep hypnosis. But
+unhappily I had to realize that all my procedures in that direction
+could put the patient in no other state of consciousness than that in
+which she gave me her confession. Still I was very pleased that this
+time she abstained from triumphantly remonstrating with the words: “You
+see, I really do not sleep, I cannot be hypnotized.” In such despair I
+conceived the idea of making use of the trick of pressing the head, the
+origin of which I have thoroughly discussed in the preceding
+contribution concerning Miss Lucy. This was done by requesting the
+patient to unfailingly inform me of what came before her mind’s eye or
+passed through her memory at the moment of the pressure. For a long time
+she was silent, and then admitted that on my pressure she thought of an
+evening in which a young man had accompanied her home from some social
+affair. She also thought of the conversation that passed between them,
+and her feelings on returning home to nurse her father.
+
+With this first mention of the young man a new shaft was opened, the
+content of which I now gradually brought out. We dealt here rather with
+a secret, for with the exception of a mutual friend, no one knew
+anything of the relation and the hopes connected with it. It concerned
+the son of an old friend who was formerly one of their neighbors. The
+young man having become an orphan attached himself with great devotion
+to her father; he was guided in his career by his advice, and this
+veneration for the father was extended to the ladies of the family.
+Numerous reminiscences of repeated joint readings, exchange of thoughts
+and utterances on his side marked the gradual growth of her conviction
+that he loved and understood her and that a marriage with him would not
+impose the sacrifice that she feared. Unhappily he was but little older
+than she and as yet was far from being independent. She however firmly
+resolved to wait for him.
+
+With the serious illness of her father, and the necessity of her nursing
+him their relations became less frequent. The evening which she at first
+recalled marked the height of her feeling, but even then there was no
+exchange of ideas between them on the subject. It was only at the urging
+of her family that she consented to leave the sick bed that evening and
+go to an affair where she was to meet him. She wished to hasten home
+early but was forced to remain, only yielding on his promising to
+accompany her home. At no time had she entertained such a tender regard
+for him as during this walk, but after returning home at a late hour in
+this blissful state and finding the condition of her father aggravated
+she bitterly reproached herself for having sacrificed so much time for
+her own amusement. It was the last time that she left her sick father
+for a whole evening; her friend she saw but seldom after this. After the
+death of her father he seemed to hold himself aloof out of respect for
+her sorrow and then business affairs drew him into other spheres.
+Gradually she came to the realization that his interest in her was
+suppressed by other feelings and that he was lost to her. This failure
+of her first love pained her as often as she thought of it.
+
+In this relationship and in the scene caused by it, I was to seek the
+causation of the first hysterical pain. A conflict, or a state of
+incompatibility arose through the contrast between the happiness which
+she had not at that time denied herself and the sad condition in which
+she found her father upon her arrival home. As a result of this conflict
+the erotic presentations were repressed from the associations, and the
+affect connected with them was made use of in aggravating or reviving a
+simultaneously (or somewhat previously) existing physical pain. It was
+therefore the mechanism of a conversion for the purpose of defense as I
+have shown circumstantially in another place.[17]
+
+To be sure, we have room here for all kinds of observations. I must
+assert that I was unsuccessful in demonstrating from her memory that the
+conversion took place in the moment of her returning home. I therefore
+investigated for similar experiences which might have occurred while she
+was nursing her father, and I evoked a number of scenes, among which was
+one during which she had to jump out of bed with bare feet in a cold
+room to respond to the repeated calls of her father. I was inclined to
+attribute to this moment a certain significance, for in addition to
+complaining of pain in her legs she also complained of tormenting
+sensations of coldness. Nevertheless, here, too I could not with
+certainty lay hold of the scene which could be indicated as the scene of
+conversion. This led me to admit that there was here some gap, when I
+recalled the fact that the hysterical pains in the legs were really not
+present at the time she nursed her father. From her memory she recalled
+only a single attack of pain lasting a few days to which at that time
+she paid no attention. I then directed my attention to the first
+appearance of the pains. In this respect I was successful in awakening a
+perfect memory. They came on just at the time of a relative’s visit whom
+she could not receive because she was ill in bed, and who had the
+misfortune to find her ill in bed on another occasion two years later.
+But the search for the psychic motive of these first pains failed as
+often as repeated. I believed that I could assume that these first pains
+were due to a slight rheumatic attack and really had no psychic basis,
+and I also discovered that this organic trouble was the model for the
+later hysterical imitation, at all events that it occurred before the
+scene of being accompanied home. That these mild organic pains could
+continue for some time without her paying much attention to them is
+quite possible when we consider the nature of the disease. The obscurity
+resulting from this, namely, that the analysis pointed to a conversion
+of psychic excitement into bodily pain at a time when such pain was
+certainly not perceived and not recalled—this problem I hope to be able
+to solve in later considerations and by other examples.[18]
+
+With the discovery of the motive for the first conversion we began a
+second more fruitful period of the treatment. In the first place very
+soon afterward the patient surprised me with the statement that she now
+knew why the pains always radiated from that definite location on the
+right thigh and were most painful there. This is really the place upon
+which her father’s leg rested every morning while she changed the
+bandages of his badly swollen leg. That occurred hundreds of times, and
+strange to say she did not think of this connection until today. She
+thus gave me the desired explanation of the origin of an atypical
+hysterogenic zone. Furthermore during our analysis her painful legs
+always commenced to “join in the discussion.” I mean the following
+remarkable state of affairs: The patient was as a rule free from pain
+when we began our work, but as soon as I evoked some recollection by
+question or by pressure of the head she at first reported some pain
+usually of a very vivid nature, and then winced and placed her hand on
+the painful area. This awakened pain remained constant as long as the
+patient was controlled by the recollection, reaching its height when she
+was about to utter the essential and critical part of her communication,
+and disappearing with the last words of the statement. I gradually
+learned to use this awakened pain as a compass. Whenever she was moody
+or claimed to have pains I knew that she had not told me everything, and
+urged a continuation of the confession until the pain was “spoken away.”
+Then only did I awaken a new recollection.
+
+During this period of ab-reaction, the patient’s condition showed such a
+striking improvement both somatically and psychically that I used to
+remark half jokingly that during each treatment I carried away a certain
+number of pain motives, and that when I had cleaned them all out she
+would be well. She soon reached a stage during which she had no pain
+much of the time; she consented to walk a great deal and to give up her
+hitherto condition of isolation. During the analysis I followed up now
+the spontaneous fluctuations of her condition and now some fragments of
+her sorrowful tale which in my opinion I had not sufficiently exhausted.
+In this work I made some interesting discoveries the principles of which
+I could later verify in other patients.
+
+In the first place it was found that the spontaneous fluctuations never
+occurred unless provoked associatively by the events of the day. On one
+occasion she heard of an illness in the circle of her acquaintances
+which recalled to her a detail in the illness of her father. On another
+occasion the child of her deceased sister visited her and its
+resemblance to its mother recalled many painful incidents. On still
+another occasion it was a letter from her absent sister showing
+distinctly the influence of the inconsiderate brother-in-law, and this
+awakened a pain causing the reproduction of a family scene heretofore
+not reported.
+
+As she never reproduced the same pain motives twice we were justified in
+the expectation that the stock would in time become exhausted. I never
+prevented her from merging into a situation tending to evoke new
+memories which had not as yet come to the surface. Thus for example I
+sent her to the grave of her sister, or I urged her to go in society
+where she was apt to meet her youthful friend who happened to be in the
+city.
+
+In this manner I obtained an insight into the mode of origin of a
+hysteria which could be designated as monosymptomatic. I found, for
+example, that the right leg became painful during our hypnosis when we
+dealt with memories relating to the nursing of her father, to her young
+friend, and to other memories occurring during the first period of the
+pathogenic term; while the pain in the left leg came on as soon as I
+evoked the memory of her lost sister, of both brothers-in-law, in brief
+of any impression relating to the second half of the history. My
+attention having been called to that by this constant behavior I went
+further in my investigations and gained the impression that perhaps
+detailization went still further and that every new psychic cause of
+painful feeling might have some connection with a differently located
+painful area in the legs. The original painful location on the right
+thigh referred to the nursing of her father, and as the result of new
+traumas the painful area then grew by apposition so that strictly
+speaking we had here not one single physical symptom connected with a
+multiform psychic memory complex but a multiplicity of similar symptoms
+which on superficial examination seemed to be fused into one. To be sure
+I have not followed out the demarcations of the individual psychic
+causes corresponding to the pain zones for I found that the patient’s
+attention was turned away from these relations.
+
+Notwithstanding this I directed further interest to the mode of
+construction of the whole symptom-complex of the abasia upon this
+painful zone, and with this view in mind I asked such questions as this:
+“What is the origin of the pains in walking and standing, or on lying?”
+She answered these questions partially uninfluenced, partially under the
+pressure of my hand. We thus obtained two results. In the first place
+she grouped all scenes connected with painful impressions according to
+their occurrence, sitting, standing, etc. Thus, for example, she stood
+at the door when her father was brought home with his cardiac attack and
+in her fright remained as though rooted to the spot. To this first
+quotation “fright while standing” she connected more recollections up to
+the overwhelming scene when she again stood as if pinned near the death
+bed of her sister. The whole chain of reminiscences should justify the
+connection of the pain with standing up, and could also serve as an
+association proof, only one had to bear in mind the fact that in all
+these occasions we must demonstrate another moment which had served to
+direct the attention—and as a further result the conversion—just on the
+standing, walking, sitting, etc. The explanation for this direction of
+attention could hardly be sought in other connections than in the fact
+that walking, standing, and lying are connected with capabilities and
+conditions of those members which here bore the painful zones; namely,
+the legs. We could then easily understand the connection between the
+astasia-abasia and the first scene of conversion in this history.
+
+Among the scenes which in consequence of this review had made the
+walking painful one which referred to a walk she had taken in company,
+at the watering place, which apparently lasted too long, stood out most
+prominently. The deeper circumstances of this occurrence revealed
+themselves only hesitatingly and left many a riddle unsolved. She was in
+an especially good humor and gladly joined the circle of friendly
+persons; it was a lovely day, not too warm, her mother remained at home;
+her older sister had already departed, the younger one felt indisposed
+but did not wish to mar her pleasure. The husband of the second sister
+at first declared that he would remain at home with his wife, but
+finally went along for her (Elisabeth’s) sake. This scene seemed to have
+a great deal to do with the first appearance of the pains, for she
+recalled that she returned home from the walk very fatigued and with
+severe pains, she could not however say definitely whether she had
+perceived the pains before this. I took for granted that if she had
+suffered any pain she would have hardly resolved to enter upon this long
+walk. On being questioned whence the pains originated on this walk she
+answered rather indefinitely saying that the contrast between her
+solitude and the married happiness of her sick sister, of which she was
+constantly reminded by the behavior of her brother-in-law, was painful
+to her.
+
+Another closely related scene played a part in the connection of the
+pain with sitting. It was a few days later, her sister and
+brother-in-law had already departed and she found herself in an
+excitable longing mood. She arose in the morning and ascended a small
+hill which they were wont to visit together and which afforded the only
+pretty view. There she sat down on a stone bench giving free play to her
+thoughts. Her thoughts again concerned her lonesomeness, the fate of her
+family, and she now frankly admitted that she entertained the eager wish
+to become as happy as her sister. After this morning’s meditation she
+returned home with severe pains. In the evening of the same day she took
+the bath, after which the pains definitely appeared and continued
+persistently.
+
+We could further ascertain with great certainty that the pains on
+walking and standing diminished in the beginning on lying down. Only
+after hearing of her sister’s illness and on leaving Gastein in the
+evening, spending a sleepless night in the sleeping car, and being
+tormented simultaneously by the worries concerning her sister and
+violent pains, it was only then that the pains appeared for the first
+time while she was lying down, and throughout that time lying down was
+even more painful than walking or standing.
+
+Thus the painful sphere grew by apposition first because every new
+pathogenically affecting theme occupied a new region of the legs,
+second, every one of the impressionable scenes left a trace because it
+produced a lasting, always more cumulative, “occupation” of the
+different functions of the legs, thus connecting these functions with
+the sensations of pain. There was unmistakably, however, still a third
+mechanism which furthered the production of astasia-abasia. When the
+patient finished the recitation of a whole series of events with the
+plaint that she then perceived pain in “standing alone,” and when in
+another series referring to the unfortunate attempt of bringing about
+new conditions in the family she was not tired of repeating that the
+painful in that was the feeling of her helplessness, the sensation that
+she “could make no headway,” I had to admit that her reflections
+influenced the formation of the abasia, and had to assume that she
+directly sought a symbolic expression for her painfully accentuated
+thoughts and had found it in the aggravation of her pains. That somatic
+symptoms of hysteria could originate through such symbolization we have
+already asserted in our Preliminary Communication, and in the epicrisis
+to this history. I will give some examples of conclusive evidence. In
+Miss Elisabeth v. R. the psychic mechanism of the symbolization was not
+in the foreground, it had not produced the abasia, but everything
+pointed to the fact that the already existing abasia had in this way
+undergone a considerable reinforcement. Accordingly this abasia as I met
+it in the stage of development was not only to be compared to a
+psychically associative paralysis of function but also to a symbolic
+paralysis of function.
+
+Before I continue with the history of my patient I will add something
+about her behavior during the second period of the treatment. Throughout
+this whole analysis I made use of the method of evoking pictures and
+ideas by pressing the head, a method therefore, which would be
+inapplicable without the full cooperation and voluntary attention of the
+patient. At times it was really surprising how promptly and how
+infallibly the individual scenes belonging to one theme succeeded each
+other in chronological order. It was as if she read from a long picture
+book the pages of which passed in review before her eyes. At other times
+there seemed to be inhibitions, of what kind I could not at that time
+surmise. When I exerted some pressure she maintained that nothing came
+into her mind. I repeated the pressure and told her to wait, but still
+nothing would come. At first when such obstinacy manifested itself I
+determined to discontinue the work and to try again, as the day seemed
+unpropitious. Two observations, however, caused me to change my
+procedure. Firstly, because such failure of this method only occurred
+when I found Elisabeth cheerful and free from pain and never when she
+had a bad day; secondly, because she frequently made assertions of
+seeing nothing after the lapse of a long pause during which her tense
+and occupied mind betrayed to me some psychic process within. I
+therefore decided to assume that the method had never failed, that under
+the pressure of my hands Elisabeth had each time perceived some idea or
+had seen some picture but that she was not always ready to inform me of
+it and attempted to repress the thing evoked. I could think of two
+motives for such concealment; either Elisabeth subjected the idea that
+came to her mind to a criticism to which she was not entitled, thinking
+it not sufficiently important and unfit as an answer to the question, or
+she feared to say it because that statement was too disagreeable to her.
+I therefore proceeded as if I were perfectly convinced of the
+reliability of my technique. Whenever she asserted that nothing came
+into her mind, I did not let that pass. I assured her that something
+must have come to her but that perhaps she was not attentive enough,
+that I was quite willing to repeat the pressure. I also told her not to
+entertain any doubts concerning the correctness of the idea presenting
+itself to her mind, that that was not any of her concern; that it was
+her duty to remain perfectly objective and to tell whatever came into
+her mind, be it suitable or not, and I ended by saying that I knew well
+that something did come which she concealed from me and that as long as
+she would continue to do so she would not get rid of her pains. After
+such urging I found that there was really no pressure that remained
+unsuccessful. I then had to assume that I correctly recognized the state
+of affairs, and indeed I won through this analysis perfect confidence in
+my technique. It often happened that only after the third pressure did
+she make a statement then added “Why I could have told you that the
+first time”—“Indeed why did you not say it”—“I thought that it was not
+correct:” or “I thought that I could avoid it, but it recurred each
+time.” During this difficult work I began to attach a profounder
+significance to the resistance which the patient showed in the
+reproduction of her recollections, and I carefully compared those
+occasions in which it was especially striking.
+
+I now come to the description of the third period of our treatment. The
+patient felt better, she was psychically unburdened and more capable,
+but the pains were manifestly not removed, reappearing from time to time
+with the old severity. The imperfect cure went hand in hand with the
+imperfect analysis, as yet I did not know in what moment and through
+what mechanisms the pains originated. During the reproduction of the
+most manifold scenes of the second period and the observation of the
+patient’s resistance towards the reproduction, I formed a definite
+suspicion which I did not then dare to use as a basis for my action. An
+accidental observation turned the issue. While working with the patient
+one day I heard the steps of a man in the adjacent room and a rather
+pleasant voice asking some questions. My patient immediately arose
+requesting me to discontinue the treatment for the day because she heard
+her brother-in-law who just arrived asking for her. Before this
+disturbance she was free from pains, but thereafter she betrayed by her
+mien and gait the sudden appearance of violent pains. This strengthened
+my suspicion and I decided to elicit the decisive explanation.
+
+I questioned her concerning the circumstances and causes of the first
+appearance of the pains. Her thoughts were directed to the summer resort
+in that watering place where she had been before taking the journey to
+Gastein. A number of scenes were reproduced which had already been
+treated less exhaustively. They recalled her frame of mind at that time,
+the exhaustion following the worriment about her mother’s vision and the
+nursing of her mother during the time of the operation and her final
+despair at being unable as a lonesome girl to enjoy life or to
+accomplish anything in life. Until then she felt strong enough to
+dispense with the help of a man, but now she was controlled by a feeling
+of her womanly weakness, a yearning for love in which, to put it in her
+own words, “her obdurate self began to soften.” In such humor the happy
+marriage of her younger sister made the profoundest impression on her.
+She thought how affectionately he cared for her, how they understood
+each other with a mere glance, and how sure they seemed to be of each
+other. It was truly regrettable that the second pregnancy followed so
+quickly the first and her sister knew that this was the cause of her
+suffering but how willingly she endured it and all because he was the
+cause of it. The brother-in-law did not at first wish to participate in
+the walk which was so intimately connected with Elisabeth’s pain; he
+preferred to remain home with his sick wife, but the latter urged him
+with a glance to go because she thought that would give Elisabeth
+pleasure. Elisabeth remained with him throughout the whole walk; they
+spoke about the most varied and intimate things; she found herself in
+thorough accord with all he said, and she became overwhelmed with the
+desire to possess a man like him. This was followed by a scene a few
+days later, when, on the morning after their departure, she visited the
+point commanding the beautiful view which had been their favorite walk.
+There she seated herself upon a stone and again dreamed of her sister’s
+happiness and of a man like her brother-in-law who could engage her
+affections. When she arose she had pains which again disappeared, and
+only in the afternoon after having taken the warm bath did they
+reappear, remaining ever since. I attempted to investigate the thoughts
+which occupied her mind while taking the bath, but all I could obtain
+was that the bath house recalled her absent sister because she had lived
+in the same house.
+
+For some time the state of affairs was clear to me. Absorbed in
+painfully sweet recollections she was wholly unconscious of the drift of
+her thoughts and continued to reproduce her reminiscences, the time in
+Gastein, the worry connected with the expectations of the letter,
+finally the information of her sister’s illness, the long wait until the
+evening when she could first leave Gastein, the journey with its
+tormenting uncertainties during a sleepless night—all these moments were
+accompanied by a violent aggravation of the pain. I asked her if during
+the journey she thought of the sad possibility which she afterward found
+realized. She answered that she carefully avoided the thought but that
+in her opinion her mother expected the worst from the very beginning.
+This was followed by the reminiscences of her arrival in Vienna—the
+impressions which she received from the relatives at the station, the
+short journey from Vienna to the neighboring summer resort where her
+sister lived, the arrival in the evening, the hasty walk through the
+garden to the door of the little garden pavilion—a silence in the house,
+the oppressive darkness, the fact of not having been received by the
+brother-in-law. She then recalled standing before the bed seeing the
+deceased, and in the moment of the awful certainty that the beloved
+sister had died without having taken leave of them and without having
+her last days eased through their nursing—in that very moment another
+thought flashed through Elisabeth’s brain which now peremptorily
+repeated itself. The thought which flashed like dazzling lightning
+through the darkness was, “Now he is free again, and I can become his
+wife.”
+
+Of course, now everything was clear. The analyzer’s effort was richly
+repaid. The ideas of the “defense” (abwehr) against an unbearable
+presentation, the origin of hysterical symptoms through conversion of
+psychic into physical excitement, the formation of a separate psychic
+group by an arbitrary act, leading to the defense—all these were in that
+moment palpably presented before my eyes. Thus and thus alone did things
+happen here. This girl entertained an affectionate regard for her
+brother-in-law against the acceptance of which into her consciousness
+her whole moral being struggled. She succeeded in sparing herself the
+painful consciousness that she was in love with her sister’s husband by
+creating for herself instead bodily pains, and in the moment when this
+certainty wished to thrust itself into her consciousness (while she
+walked with him, during that morning reverie, in the bath, and before
+her sister’s bed) her pains originated by means of a successful
+conversion into the somatic. When she came under my care there was
+already a complete isolation from her consciousness of the presentation
+group referring to this love, else, I believe that she would never have
+agreed to such a treatment. The resistance which she repeatedly brought
+forth during the reproduction of traumatically produced scenes really
+corresponded to the energy with which the unbearable presentation had
+been crowded out from the association.
+
+For the therapeutist there now came a sorry time. The effect of the
+resumption of that repressed presentation was a crushing one for the
+poor child. When I summed up the whole situation with these prosaic
+words: “you were really for a long time in love with your
+brother-in-law,” she complained of the most horrible pains at that
+moment; she made another despairing effort to reject the explanation,
+saying that it was not true, that I suggested it to her, it could not
+be, she was incapable of such baseness, and that she would never forgive
+herself for it. It was quite easy to prove to her that her own
+information allowed no other interpretation, but it took a long time
+before the two reasons that I offered for consolation, namely, that one
+is not responsible for one’s feelings and that her behavior, her
+sickness under those circumstances was sufficient proof of her moral
+nature—I say it took a long time before these consolations made an
+impression on her. I was now forced to pursue more than one course in
+order to calm the patient. In the first place I wished to give her the
+opportunity to rid herself by ab-reaction of the material long since
+accumulated. We investigated the first impressions of the relations with
+her brother-in-law, the beginning of those unconsciously kept
+affectionate regards. We found here all those little indications and
+forebodings which on a retrospective view showed a fully developed
+passion. On his first visit to the house he mistook her for his destined
+bride and greeted her before he greeted her older and homely sister. One
+evening they entertained each other so vivaciously and seemed to
+understand each other so well that the bride interrupted them with this
+half serious remark: “You two, indeed, would have suited each other very
+nicely.” On another occasion while in a gathering who were ignorant of
+the engagement the conversation drifted to the young man, and a young
+lady indiscreetly remarked about a blemish in his shape, a juvenile
+joint affliction. The bride herself remained calm while Elisabeth flew
+into a passion, and with an ardor which even she herself could not
+afterward understand she defended the straight form of her future
+brother-in-law. While we worked our way through these reminiscences it
+became clear to Elisabeth that her affection for her brother-in-law had
+slumbered in her for a long time, perhaps since the beginning of their
+relations, and had concealed itself so long under the mask of a mere
+kinsmanlike affection as only her very delicate family feeling would
+allow.
+
+This ab-reaction benefited her much but I was able to give her still
+more relief by taking a friendly interest in her present state of
+affairs. With this object in view I sought an interview with Mrs. v. R.
+whom I found to be an intelligent and refined lady whose courage to face
+life, however, was somewhat lessened through the last misfortune. From
+her I learned that the accusation of rude extortion which the older
+brother-in-law had brought against the widower, and which was so painful
+to Elisabeth, had to be retracted on closer investigation. The character
+of the young man remained untarnished, it was merely a misunderstanding,
+an easily conceived difference of opinion concerning the valuation of
+money that could arise between the merchant, to whom money is only a
+working tool, and the official—that is all there was to this seemingly
+so painful incident. I begged the mother to give Elisabeth all
+explanations that she might hereafter need, and to offer her in the
+future that opportunity for unburdening her mind to which I had
+accustomed her.
+
+Naturally I was also anxious to know what chance there was for the
+fulfilment of the girl’s present conscious wish. Here things were less
+favorable! The mother stated that for some time she had had an inkling
+of Elisabeth’s affection for her brother-in-law, of course she did not
+know that it existed during the lifetime of her sister. Whoever saw them
+both in friendly intercourse—of late, to be sure, only seldom—could
+entertain no doubt of the girl’s anxiety to please him. However, neither
+she, her mother, nor the advisers of the family showed any particular
+inclination to bring about a matrimonial union between the two. The
+health of the young man had not been very good and had received a
+setback through the death of his beloved wife, and it was not at all
+certain that he had sufficiently recovered from the shock to enter into
+a new matrimony. It was quite probable that this was the reason for his
+reserve, perhaps also because he was not sure of his position, and
+wished to avoid all obvious gossip. With such a reserve on both sides
+the solution for which Elisabeth was yearning was likely to fail.
+
+I informed the girl of everything that I had heard from her mother and
+had the satisfaction of seeing her benefited by the explanation
+concerning the money affair. On the other hand, I expected her to bear
+calmly the uncertainties of her future which could not be set aside. The
+advancing summer compelled us to bring the treatment to an end. She now
+felt better, and since we had discussed the causes to which the pain
+could be traced she no longer complained of pain. We both felt that the
+work was done, although I thought that the ab-reaction of the suppressed
+love was really not as complete as it should have been. I regarded her
+as cured and urged her to continue independently the solution after the
+way had been cleared, to which she agreed. She left with her mother for
+a summer resort where they were to join the older sister and her family.
+
+I still have something more to report about the further course of Miss
+Elisabeth v. R.’s disease. A few weeks after our parting I received a
+despairing letter from her mother informing me that at the first attempt
+to draw Elisabeth into a conversation about her love affairs she became
+very excited and refused to talk, and since then had suffered from
+violent pains. She was very indignant at my having betrayed her
+confidence and was perfectly inaccessible so that the treatment seemed a
+complete failure. She wished to know what was to be done, for of me she
+would hear nothing. I made no reply. It was to be expected that after
+she was relieved from my discipline she would make another attempt to
+reject her mother’s interference and return to her inaccessibility. I
+was, however, quite certain that everything would adjust itself and that
+my efforts had not been in vain. Two months later they returned to
+Vienna and the colleague to whom I was grateful for the case informed me
+that Elisabeth was perfectly well, and that her behavior was normal
+although occasionally she had slight pains. Since then she has
+repeatedly sent me similar messages, each time promising to visit me,
+which she has never done. This is quite characteristic of the personal
+relationship formed during such treatment. My colleague then assured me
+that she could be considered cured. The relation of the brother-in-law
+to the family underwent no change.
+
+In the spring of 1894 I was informed that she would be present at a
+private ball to which I could gain access. I did not let the opportunity
+escape me and saw my former patient gliding along in a rapid dance.
+Since then, following her own inclination, she has married a stranger.
+
+
+ EPICRISIS.
+
+I was not always a psychotherapist but like other neuropathologists I
+was educated to the use of focal diagnosis and electrical prognosis so
+that even I myself am struck by the fact that the histories of the
+diseases which I write read like novels and, as it were, dispense with
+the serious features of the scientific character. Yet I must console
+myself with the fact that the nature of the subject is apparently more
+responsible for this issue than my own predilection. Focal diagnosis and
+electrical reactions are really not important in the study of hysteria,
+whereas a detailed discussion of the psychic processes, as one is wont
+to receive it from the poet, and the application of a few psychological
+formulæ, allows one to gain an insight into the course of events of
+hysteria. Such histories should be considered like psychiatrical ones,
+but they have the advantage over the latter in the fact that they give
+the intimate connection between the history of the disease and the
+morbid symptoms, a thing for which we still look in vain in the
+biographies of other psychoses.
+
+With the description of the treatment I endeavored to interweave the
+explanations which I gave about the case of Miss Elisabeth v. R. and it
+will perhaps be superfluous to summarize here the essential features. I
+have discussed the character of the patient and the features which
+repeat themselves in so many hysterics, and which we really can not
+consider as degenerative. I mentioned the talent, the ambition, the
+moral sensitiveness, the immense yearning for love which found its
+gratification in the family, the independence of her nature reaching
+beyond the womanly ideal which manifested itself largely by obstinacy,
+readiness for fight, and inaccessibility. According to the information
+of my colleague no hereditary taints could be shown on either side of
+the family. Her mother, to be sure, suffered for years from some
+indefinite neurotic depression, but her brothers and sisters, her father
+and his family belonged to the even-tempered and not to the nervous.
+There was no serious case of neuropsychosis in the nearest relatives.
+
+This nature was acted upon by painful emotions, the foremost of which
+was the debilitating influence of a long attendance upon her beloved
+sick father.
+
+That nursing of the sick plays such a significant rôle in the histories
+of hysterias has its good reasons. A number of effective moments which
+are found here are quite obvious, namely, the disturbance of the
+physical health through interrupted sleep, neglect of nourishment, and
+the reaction of a constantly gnawing worriment on the vegetative
+functions; but the most important factor, however, is, in my estimation,
+to be found elsewhere. He whose mind is occupied with the hundred
+different tasks of nursing which succeed each other continuously for
+weeks and months, becomes accustomed, on the one hand, to suppress all
+signs of his own emotions, and on the other, his attention is soon
+turned away from his own impressions because he has neither the time nor
+strength to do them justice. Thus the nurse accumulates for himself an
+over abundance of affective impressions which he barely perceived
+clearly enough, at any rate they were not weakened by ab-reaction, that
+is, he creates for himself the material for a retention hysteria. If the
+patient recovers these impressions naturally become reduced in value,
+but if he dies and the period of mourning comes during which only that
+which refers to the deceased seems of value, the impressions waiting for
+discharge appear in turn, and after a brief pause of exhaustion the
+hysteria, the germ of which originated during the nursing, bursts forth.
+
+The same subsequent discharge of traumas accumulated during nursing is
+occasionally encountered where the general impression of the disease
+does not ensue, and yet the mechanism of hysteria can be noticed. Thus,
+I know a highly gifted but slightly nervous lady whose whole personality
+suggests the hysteric though she never became a burden to the doctor and
+was never obliged to interrupt the exercise of her duties. This lady had
+nursed three or four of her beloved ones until their death, causing her
+each time complete physical exhaustion, yet these sad duties never made
+her ill. However, shortly after the death of the patient she began the
+work of reproduction, bringing again to her view the scenes of the
+disease and death. Each day—one might say at her leisure—she went over
+again every impression, crying and consoling herself. Such adjustment
+she passed through daily in conjunction with her usual duties, without,
+however confusing the two activities. Everything passed before her
+chronologically. Whether the memory work of one day precisely
+corresponded to a day of the past I am unable to say. I presume that it
+depended on the leisure which was allowed to her by the current affairs
+of the household.
+
+Aside from this “subsequent tear” which attached itself to these deaths
+at short intervals, this lady periodically observed annual anniversaries
+representing the time of the various catastrophes, and here her vivid
+visual reproduction and her affective manifestations followed faithfully
+the date. Thus, for example, I found her in tears, and on sympathetic
+inquiry as to what occurred that day, she half irritably remarked,
+“Nothing on that day except that Professor N. was again here and gave us
+to understand that things were hopeless—at that time I had no time to
+cry.” She referred to the last illness of her husband who died three
+years before. It would have been very interesting to know whether she
+always repeated the same scenes on these recurring anniversaries, or
+whether as I suppose in the interest of my theory other details
+presented themselves each time for ab-reaction. I was however, unable to
+find anything definite about that; the wise and courageous woman was
+ashamed of the intensity with which those reminiscences acted upon
+her.[19]
+
+I again repeat that this woman was not sick, that subsequent
+ab-reaction, despite all resemblance, is still not a hysterical process;
+one may ask why, after one nursing there results a hysteria and after
+another none. It cannot lie in personal predisposition for the lady that
+I have in mind showed it very remarkably.
+
+I now return to Miss Elisabeth v. R. While nursing her father there
+occurred for the first time an hysterical symptom in the form of a pain
+in a definite location on the right thigh. The mechanism of this symptom
+is fully explained on an analytical basis. It occurred in a moment
+during which the ideas of her duties towards her sick father came into
+conflict with the content of her erotic yearning which she then
+entertained. Under vivid self reproach she decided in favor of the
+former and created for herself the hysterical pain. According to the
+conception explained by the theory of conversion in hysteria, the
+process could be described as follows: She repressed the erotic idea
+from her consciousness and changed the sum of the affect into somatic
+sensations of pain. Whether this first conflict occurred only once, or
+repeated itself is not clear. The latter is more probable. Quite a
+similar conflict—of a higher moral significance, and even better
+demonstrated by the analysis—repeated itself after years and led to the
+aggravation of the same pain and to its dissemination beyond its
+original limits. Again, it was an erotic idea which came into conflict
+with all her moral conceptions, for her affection for her
+brother-in-law, both during the life and after the death of her sister,
+and the thought that she should yearn just for this man, was to her very
+disagreeable. This analysis gives detailed information about this
+conflict which represents the pivotal point in the history of her
+malady. The patient’s affection for her brother-in-law might have begun
+to germinate long ago, but in favor of its development was the physical
+exhaustion through the recent nursing, and her moral exhaustion through
+years of disillusionment which then began to break down her reserve and
+she confessed to herself the need of the love of a man. During a
+friendly intercourse continuing for weeks (in the summer resort) this
+erotic inclination reached its full development simultaneously with the
+pain. The analysis shows a special psychic condition of the patient at
+that time, which in connection with her inclination and the pain, seems
+to afford an understanding of the process in the sense of the conversion
+theory.
+
+I place reliance on the opinion that the patient’s affection for her
+brother-in-law, intensive as it was, was not clearly known to her except
+on certain rare occasions and then only momentarily. If that were not so
+she would have become conscious of the inconsistency between this
+fondness and her moral ideas and would have had to endure the same
+mental agony which I saw her suffer after the analysis. Her
+reminiscences gave us no information concerning such suffering. These
+she spared herself and as a result the love itself did not become clear
+to her. At that time, as well as during the analysis, her love for her
+brother-in-law existed in the form of a foreign body in her
+consciousness without entering into any relationship with her other
+ideation. In reference to this love there existed the peculiar condition
+of knowing and simultaneously not knowing, it was the condition of the
+split off psychic group. When we assert that this love was not “clearly
+known” to her we mean exactly what we say. We do not mean a lower
+quality or a lesser degree of consciousness, but a separation of the
+free associative thinking process from the rest of ideation.
+
+How does it come about that such an intensively accentuated presentation
+group should be kept so isolated? As a rule the rôle played by an idea
+in the association really increases with the sum of its affect.
+
+This question can be answered if we bear in mind two facts which we can
+make use of as a safeguard: (1) That the hysterical pains originated
+simultaneously with the formation of these separate psychic groups, (2)
+that the patient exerted great resistance against the attempt to bring
+about the association between the separate psychic groups and the rest
+of the content of consciousness, and when the union was finally effected
+she perceived excessive psychic pain. Our conception of hysteria brings
+together these two moments with the fact of the splitting of
+consciousness, for (2) contains the indication for the motive for the
+splitting of consciousness while (1) shows the mechanism of the same.
+The motive was that of defense, it was the striving of the whole ego to
+agree with this presentation group and the mechanism was that of
+conversion, that is, instead of psychic pains which she spared herself
+there appeared physical pains. Thus a transformation occurred through
+which gain the patient had escaped an unbearable psychic state, though
+it was at the cost of a psychic anomaly in the form of a splitting of
+consciousness and a physical suffering, pains, upon which an
+astasia-abasia was constructed.
+
+To be sure I can give no instruction as to how one can bring about such
+a conversion. It is not apparently done as one intentionally does an
+arbitrary action, it is a process which is executed in the individual
+under the impulse of the motive of defense if an adaptation for it
+exists in his organization or is brought about by temporary
+modification.
+
+One has the right to attack the theory more closely by asking what it is
+that is transformed into physical pains. The cautious reply will be
+something out of which psychic pains could have and should have been
+formed. If we wish to venture further and attempt a kind of algebraic
+formulation of the presentation mechanism we may attribute to the
+presentation complex of this unconsciously remaining love a certain
+amount of affect and designate the latter quantity as the thing
+converted. Direct deduction of this conception would be the fact that
+the “unconscious love” has through such conversion forfeited so much of
+its intensity that it was reduced to a weak idea. Its existence as a
+separate psychic group would only be made possible through such
+weakening. Yet this present case is not suitable to afford us any
+clearness in this delicate matter. It probably corresponds to an
+imperfect conversion only. From other cases it seems quite probable that
+perfect conversions also occur and that in these the unbearable idea
+actually becomes repressed as only an idea of very little intensity
+could be repressed. After an associative union has been consummated the
+patients assure us that since the origin of the hysterical symptoms
+their unbearable thoughts never occupied their minds.
+
+I have stated above that on certain occasions, though only transitorily,
+the patient consciously recognized the love for her brother-in-law. Such
+a moment occurred when for example, at the death bed of her sister the
+thought flashed through her mind, “Now he is free and I can become his
+wife.” I must discuss the significance of these moments for the
+conception of the whole neurosis. However, I think that the assumption
+of a defense hysteria (abwehr hysterie) includes the requisite that at
+least one such moment has already occurred. For consciousness does not
+know in advance when such an unbearable idea will present itself. The
+unbearable idea which with its appendix is later excluded for the
+formation of a separate psychic group must have been originally in the
+mind, otherwise no conflict would have resulted leading to its
+exclusion.[20] Just such moments should be designated as “traumatic.” It
+is in them that the conversion takes place which results in the
+splitting of consciousness and the hysterical symptoms. Everything tends
+to show that in Miss Elisabeth v. R. there were a number of such moments
+(the scenes of the walking, morning meditation, bath, and at the bed of
+her sister) and perhaps new moments of this kind occurred during the
+treatment. The multiplicity of such traumatic moments is made possible
+by the fact that an experience similar to the one which at first
+initiated the unbearable idea, introduces new emotions to the separated
+psychic groups and thus transitorily abolishes the success of the
+conversion. The ego is forced to occupy itself with this suddenly
+enforced and lighted-up idea, and then to restore the former state by
+means of new conversions. Miss Elisabeth who was in constant relation
+with her brother-in-law must have been particularly exposed to the
+appearance of new traumas.
+
+I must now occupy myself with the point which I have designated as a
+difficulty for the understanding of the afore mentioned history. On the
+analytical basis I assume that the first conversion took place in the
+patient while she nursed her father, at the time when her duties as
+nurse came into conflict with her erotic yearnings, and that this
+process was the prototype for the later ones which led to the outbreak
+of the disease in the Alpine watering place. But then we have it from
+the patient’s statement that at the time of nursing and the period
+following which I designated as the “first period” she had not suffered
+at all from the pains and weakness. To be sure, during the illness of
+her father she was once bedridden for a few days with pains in her legs,
+but it is doubtful whether this attack already belonged to the hysteria.
+A causal relation between these first pains and any psychic impressions
+could not be demonstrated by analysis; it is possible, even probable,
+that at that time we dealt with a common rheumatic muscular pain. Even
+if we should assume that this first attack of pain was the result of a
+hysterical conversion in consequence of the rejection of the erotic
+thoughts then existing, the fact nevertheless remains that the pains
+disappeared after a few days so that the patient actually behaved
+differently than she did during the analysis. During the reproduction of
+the so called first period all her statements concerning the illness and
+death of her father, the impressions relating to her first
+brother-in-law, etc., all these were accompanied by manifestations of
+pain, while at the time she really experienced these impressions she
+perceived no pains. Is this not a contradiction tending to considerably
+diminish the confidence in the explanatory value of such an analysis?
+
+I believe that I can explain the contradiction by assuming that the
+pains—the product of the conversion—did not originate while the patient
+experienced the impressions during the first period, but subsequently,
+that is in the second period when the patient reproduced these
+impressions in her mind. The conversion did not follow the fresh
+impressions but the memories of them. I even believe that such a process
+is not at all unusual in hysteria and regularly participates in creating
+hysterical symptoms. Nevertheless, as such an assertion does not seem
+plausible I shall attempt to make it more credible by citing other
+experiences.
+
+It once happened to me during a similar analysis that a new hysterical
+symptom was formed during the treatment so that I could attempt its
+removal on the day after its origin.
+
+I will describe the essential features of the history of this patient.
+They are simple but not without interest.
+
+Miss Rosalia H., twenty-three years old, who for a number of years made
+great effort to educate herself as a singer, complained that her
+beautiful voice did not obey her in certain notes. There appeared
+choking and tightening sensations in the throat so that the tones
+sounded strained, and her teacher could therefore not allow her to
+appear in public. Although this imperfection affected only her middle
+notes it could not be explained to be due to a defect of her vocal
+organs, for at times this disturbance was absent and her teacher was
+very pleased with her, but at other times the slightest excitement,
+seemingly without any provocation, evoked the choking sensation, and
+prevented free expansion of the voice. It was not difficult to recognize
+in this annoying sensation an hysterical conversion. Whether there
+really appeared a contracture of certain muscles of the vocal chords I
+have not verified.[21] In the hypnotic analysis which I undertook with
+this girl I found out the following concerning her vicissitudes and her
+ailments occasioned through them. She became an orphan at an early age
+and was brought up at the house of an aunt who had many children of her
+own, and she thus shared the life of a most unfortunate family. The
+husband of this aunt, seemingly a pathological personality, abused his
+wife and children in the most brutal manner and especially pained her by
+his sexual preference for the servant girl in the house. This became
+even more obnoxious as the children grew older. When the aunt died
+Rosalia became the protectress of the orphaned children who were
+harassed by their father. She took her duties seriously, fought through
+all conflicts and had to exert her greatest efforts to suppress the
+manifestations of her contempt for her uncle. It was then that the
+choking sensation in her throat originated. Whenever she was compelled
+to swallow an affront, whenever she had to remain silent on hearing a
+provoking accusation she perceived a scratching in her throat, the
+tightening and failure of her voice, in brief she had all the localized
+sensations in her larynx and pharynx which now disturbed her in singing.
+It was conceivable that she sought the possibility of making herself
+independent in order to escape the excitement and painful impressions
+which were daily occurrences in her uncle’s house. An efficient music
+teacher took an unselfish interest in her, assuring her that her voice
+entitled her to choose the profession of singing. She began secretly to
+take lessons of him and because she often went for her lessons with the
+choking sensation in her throat following some violent scene in the
+house, a connection was formed between the singing and the hysterical
+paresthesia for which a way was prepared by the sensitiveness of the
+organ during singing. The apparatus of which she should have had free
+control was filled with the remnants of innervation after those numerous
+scenes of repressed excitement. Since then she has left the house of her
+uncle, having moved to another city so as to be away from the family,
+but her ailments were not benefited by it. No other hysterical symptoms
+were discovered in this pretty and unusually bright girl.
+
+I endeavored to cure this “retention hysteria” by a reproduction of all
+the exciting impressions and by subsequent ab-reaction. I afforded her
+the opportunity of railing against her uncle in long speeches and of
+telling him the bare truth to his face, etc. The treatment benefited
+her, but unfortunately she lived here under quite unfavorable
+conditions. She had no luck with her relatives. She was the guest of
+another uncle who treated her with friendliness, but just for that
+reason she incurred the displeasure of her aunt. The latter believed
+that her husband evinced too marked an interest in his niece and made it
+a point of opposing the girl’s stay in Vienna. She herself in her youth
+was obliged to relinquish a desire of becoming an artist and was now
+jealous of her niece because she had the opportunity to develop her
+talent not considering that it was not mere desire but a wish to become
+independent which led her niece to take this step. Rosalia felt so
+uncomfortable in the house that she for instance, did not dare to sing
+or play the piano when her aunt was within hearing distance, and
+carefully avoided either singing or playing anything for her aged
+uncle—brother of her mother—whenever her aunt was home. While I was
+endeavoring to efface the traces of the old excitements, new ones
+originated through these relations with her host and finally interfered
+with the success of my treatment and prematurely interrupted the cure.
+
+One day the patient came to me with a new symptom hardly twenty-four
+hours old. She complained of a disagreeable prickling sensation in the
+fingertips which had manifested itself every few hours since the day
+before and forced her to make very peculiar jerky movements with the
+fingers. I could not see the attack, otherwise I would have guessed its
+meaning on seeing the finger movements but I immediately endeavored to
+trace through hypnotic analysis the causation of this symptom (it was
+really a minor hysterical attack). As the whole thing only existed for a
+short time I hoped to be able to explain it and quickly remove it. To my
+surprise without any hesitation she reproduced in chronological order a
+whole row of scenes beginning in her early childhood. All these had
+perhaps the same characteristics in the fact that she had suffered an
+injustice without defense, something which could make her fingers jerk,
+for example, scenes like the one of being forced to hold out her hand in
+school while her teacher struck it with a ruler. But they were all banal
+causes the right of which to enter into the etiology of an hysterical
+symptom I have already opposed. It was different, however, with one
+scene of her early girlhood which was connected with the others. The bad
+uncle who suffered from rheumatism asked her to massage his back. She
+did not dare refuse him. He was in bed while she was doing it and
+suddenly threw off the covers, jumped up, attempting to get hold of her
+and throw her down. Naturally she stopped the massage and in a moment
+escaped and locked herself within her own room. She evidently did not
+like to recall this experience and could not say whether she had seen
+anything when the man suddenly exposed himself. The sensations of the
+fingers could be explained as due to the suppressed impulse to punish
+him, or it might simply have originated from the fact that she was at
+that time massaging him. Only after this scene did she begin to talk
+about the one experienced yesterday after which the sensitiveness and
+jerkiness of the fingers appeared as a recurring memory symbol. The
+uncle with whom she now lived begged her to play something for him. She
+sat at the piano and accompanied herself singing, believing that her
+aunt was out. Suddenly she appeared in the doorway, Rosalie jumped up,
+closed the piano, and flung away the sheet of music. We can guess what
+memories came to her mind, and the train of thought which she tried to
+ward off at that moment, for the exasperation brought on by the unjust
+accusation should have really urged her to leave the house, but on
+account of her illness she was forced to remain in Vienna and had no
+other shelter. The movement of the fingers which I saw during the
+reproduction of this scene resembled a continuous jerking as if one
+literally and figuratively would reject something like throwing away a
+sheet of music or rejecting an unreasonable demand.
+
+She was quite positive in her assurance that she did not perceive the
+symptom before, that it was not caused by the scenes previously related.
+Was there anything else to be assumed except that the scene experienced
+yesterday had in the first place awakened the recollection of a former
+similar content and that then the formation of a memory symbol for the
+whole group of recollections took place? The conversion was on the one
+hand furnished with newly experienced affects, on the other with
+recollected affects.
+
+When we consider this state of affairs we must admit that in the origin
+of hysterical symptoms such a process is the rule rather than the
+exception. Whenever I seek for the determinants of such states I
+frequently find not a single but a group of similar traumatic motives.
+In some cases it could be ascertained that this particular symptom had
+already existed for a short time after the first trauma and then
+subsided, but reappeared after the next trauma and become fixed. Yet no
+real distinction can be made between the temporary appearance and the
+latency after the first motives. In a large majority of cases it was
+also found that the first traumas had left no symptoms, while a later
+trauma of the same kind produced a symptom for the origin of which the
+cooperation of the former motives could not be dispensed with and for
+the solution of which it really required a consideration of all the
+motives. Translating this into the language of the conversion theory we
+will say that this undeniable fact of the summation of the traumas and
+the erstwhile latency of the symptoms simply means that the conversion
+can be brought about from a fresh as well as from a remembered affect,
+and this assumption fully explains the contradiction which seems to
+exist in the history and analysis of Miss Elisabeth v. R.
+
+There is no question that normal persons carry in their consciousness in
+considerable numbers the continuation of ideas with unadjusted affects.
+The theory which I just asserted merely approximates the behavior of
+hysteria to the normal. It is apparently reduced to a quantitative
+moment; it is simply a question of how many such affective strains an
+organization can endure. Even a hysterical person will be able to retain
+a certain amount in an unadjusted state, but if through a summation of
+similar motives it increases beyond the individual’s endurance, the
+impetus for conversion is formed. It is therefore no singular theory but
+almost a postulate to say that the formation of hysterical symptoms may
+also be brought about at the cost of recollected affects.
+
+I have now occupied myself with the motive and mechanism of this case of
+hysteria, it still remains to discuss the determination of the
+hysterical symptoms. Why should just the pains in the legs be selected
+to represent the psychic pains? The circumstances of the case point to
+the fact that this somatic pain was not created by the neurosis but was
+merely utilized, aggravated, and retained by it. I will add that in most
+of the cases of hysterical algias into which I have been able to gain an
+insight the conditions were similar, that is, there was to begin with
+always a real organically founded pain. It is always the most common,
+the most widespread pains of humanity that seem to be most frequently
+called upon to play a part in hysteria. Among the most common are the
+periosteal and neuralgic pains of the teeth, headaches which originate
+from so many different sources, and not in a lesser degree the so often
+mistaken rheumatic pains of the muscles. The first attack of pain which
+Miss Elisabeth v. R. had while she nursed her father, I consider to have
+been organically determined, for I received no information when I
+investigated for its psychic motive, and I admit that I am inclined to
+attribute differential diagnostic significance to my methods of evoking
+hidden memories if they are carefully applied. This original rheumatic
+pain[22] became in the patient the memory symbol for her painful psychic
+emotions, and as far as I can see, for more than one reason. First and
+principally because it existed in consciousness almost simultaneously
+with the other excitements, and second because it was or could be
+connected in many ways with the ideation of that time. At all events it
+was perhaps a remote consequence of the nursing, of her want of
+exercise, and the poor nutrition entailed by her duties as nurse. But
+this hardly became clear to the patient and what is more important is
+the fact that she had to perceive it during significant moments of the
+nursing, as for example, when she jumped out of bed in the cold room to
+respond to her father’s call. Even more decisive for the direction taken
+by the conversion must have been the other manner of associative
+connection, namely, the fact that for many days one of her painful legs
+came in contact with the swollen leg of her father during the changing
+of bandages. The location on the right leg distinguished by this contact
+remained henceforth the focus and starting point of the pains, an
+artificial hysterogenic zone the origin of which can be plainly seen in
+this case.
+
+If any one should be surprised at the associative connection between
+physical pain and psychic affect, thinking it to be too manifold and
+artificial, I should answer that such surprise is just as unfair as to
+be surprised over the fact “that just the richest in the world possess
+most money.” Where prolific connections do not exist there is naturally
+no formation of hysterical symptoms, and conversion does not find its
+way. I can also state that in reference to determinations the case of
+Miss Elisabeth v. R. belongs to the simpler ones. In the case of Mrs.
+Cäcilie M.[23] particularly, I had to solve the most intricate knots of
+this kind.
+
+I have already discussed in the history of the case how the
+astasia-abasia of our patient was built up on those pains after the
+conversion had taken definite direction. But there, too, I have
+expressed the opinion that the patient has created or aggravated the
+disturbance of function through symbolization. For her dependence and
+helplessness to change anything in the circumstances she found a somatic
+expression in the astasia-abasia, and the expressions “to make no
+headway,” “to have no support,” etc., formed the bridge for this new act
+of conversion. I will endeavor to support this conception by other
+examples.
+
+Conversion on the basis of coincidence in otherwise existing associative
+connections seems to exert the slightest claims on the hysterical
+predisposition; on the other hand conversion through symbolization seems
+to require a higher grade of hysterical modification, a fact also
+demonstrated in Miss Elisabeth in the later stages of her hysteria. The
+prettiest examples of symbolization I have observed in Mrs. Cäcilie
+M.,[24] whom I can call my most difficult and most instructive case. I
+have already mentioned that this history does not unfortunately lend
+itself to detailed reproduction.
+
+Among other things Mrs. Cäcilie also suffered from a most violent facial
+neuralgia which appeared suddenly two or three times during the year and
+persisted for from five to ten days, resisting every remedy, and ceased
+as if cut off. It limited itself to the second and third branches of the
+trigeminus, and as there was undoubtedly an excess of urates in the
+urine, and as a not very “clear acute rheumatism” played a certain part
+in the patient’s history it was reasonable to assume that we dealt with
+a gouty neuralgia. This opinion was also shared by the consulting
+physicians who saw every attack. The neuralgia was treated with the
+methods in vogue, such as electric pencilling, alkaline waters and
+purgatives, but it always remained uninfluenced until it was convenient
+to make room for another symptom. In former years—the neuralgia was
+fifteen years old—the teeth were accused of preserving it and were
+condemned to extraction, and one fine morning under narcosis the
+execution of seven of the culprits took place. That did not run so
+smoothly as the teeth were so firm that most of the roots were left
+behind. This cruel operation was followed by neither temporary nor
+permanent relief. At that time the neuralgia raged for months. Even
+while under my care whenever she had neuralgia the dentist was called
+and he always declared he found diseased roots. He commenced to get
+ready for such work but usually he was soon interrupted, for the
+neuralgia suddenly ceased and with it the desire for the dentist. During
+the intervals the teeth did not ache at all. One day just while another
+attack was raging I put the patient into a hypnotic condition and placed
+an energetic interdiction on the pains, and from that moment they
+ceased. I then began to doubt the genuineness of this neuralgia.
+
+About a year after this hypnotic remedial success the condition of Mrs.
+Cäcilie M. took a new and surprising turn. There suddenly appeared other
+states than those that had been characteristic of the last years, but
+after some reflection the patient declared that all these conditions had
+existed in her before and were really scattered over the long period of
+her disease (thirty years). Indeed a surprising abundance of hysterical
+incidents were unrolled which the patient was able to localize correctly
+in the past and soon the frequently very entangled thought connections
+which determined the sequence of these incidents became recognizable. It
+was like a series of pictures with an explanatory text. Pitres, on
+describing his délire ecmnésique must have had in mind a similar case.
+The way such a hysterical condition belonging to the past was reproduced
+was most remarkable. In the first place while the patient was in the
+best of condition there appeared a pathological mood of special coloring
+which was regularly mistaken by the patient and was referred to a banal
+occurrence of the last hours. This increasing obnubilation of
+consciousness was followed by hysterical symptoms, such as
+hallucinations, pains, convulsions, and long declamations, and finally
+an event of the past attached itself to this hallucinatory manifestation
+which could explain the initial mood and determine the occasional
+symptoms. With this last part of the attack lucidity returned, the
+ailments disappeared as if by magic and good health again existed—until
+the next attack which was half a day later. Usually I was called at the
+height of this condition. I produced hypnosis, evoked a reproduction of
+the traumatic events, and by artificial aid I curtailed the attack.
+Having gone through with the patient many hundreds of such cycles, I
+obtained the most instructive explanations concerning the determinants
+of hysterical symptoms. The joint observation with Breuer of this
+remarkable case was also the chief motive for the publication of our
+“Preliminary Communication.”
+
+In this connection it finally came to the reproduction of the facial
+neuralgia which I myself had still treated as actual attacks. I was
+desirous of knowing whether we would find here a psychic causation. When
+I attempted to evoke the traumatic scene, the patient soon imagined
+herself in a period during which she felt marked psychic sensitiveness
+against her husband. She related a conversation with him and a remark
+that he made which aggravated her very much. She then suddenly grasped
+her cheek, crying aloud with pain, and said, “That was like a slap in
+the face”—with this both the attack and the pain came to an end. There
+is no doubt that here, too, we dealt with a symbolization. She had felt
+as if she really received a slap in the face. Now everybody will ask how
+the sensation of “a slap in the face” can lead to the manifestations of
+a trigeminal neuralgia, to its limiting itself to the second and third
+branch, and to its being aggravated on opening the mouth and mastication
+(not by talking!).
+
+The following day the neuralgia reappeared, but this time it could be
+solved by the reproduction of another scene the content of which equally
+showed a supposed insult. This process continued for nine days; from the
+result it seemed that for years, aggravations, especially through words,
+produced new attacks of this facial neuralgia by way of symbolization.
+
+But finally we also succeeded in reproducing the first attack of the
+neuralgia which occurred more than fifteen years before. Here there was
+no symbolization but a conversion through coincidence. It was a painful
+sight which recalled to her mind a reproach and this caused her to
+repress another series of thoughts. We have here, then, a case of
+conflict and defense, and the origin of the neuralgia in this moment
+could not be explained if we do not wish to assume that she then
+suffered from slight toothache or facial pains, a thing not improbable,
+as she was then in the first months of pregnancy.
+
+The result of the explanation showed that this neuralgia became the mark
+of a definite psychic excitement through the usual road of conversion
+but that afterward it could be awakened through associative
+reminiscences of thoughts and symbolic conversions. It was really the
+same procedure as encountered in Miss Elisabeth v. R.
+
+I will now introduce another example which will illustrate the efficacy
+of symbolization under other determinants. On one occasion Mrs. Cäcilie
+M. was tormented by a violent pain in her right heel, experiencing
+stinging sensations which made walking impossible. The analysis
+conducted us to a time when the patient was in a foreign institution.
+For eight days she lay in her room, and for the first time the house
+physician was to take her to the dining room. The pain came on while the
+patient took the physician’s arm on leaving the room. It disappeared
+during the reproduction of this scene while she remarked that at that
+time she feared lest she would not make the “proper impression” on this
+strange society[25] (“rechte Auftreten”).
+
+This seems a striking, almost comical example for the origin of
+hysterical symptoms through symbolization by means of an expression of
+speech. But a closer investigation of the circumstances of that moment
+will favor another conception. The patient at that time suffered from
+pain in her feet on account of which she remained in bed, and we can
+only assume that the fear which obsessed her on taking the first steps
+produced from the simultaneously existing pains the one symbolically
+appropriate symptom in the right heel so as to form it into a psychic
+algia and to particularly fit it for long duration.
+
+Notwithstanding the fact that the mechanism of symbolization in these
+examples seems to be crowded to second rank, that which certainly
+corresponds to the rule, I have still other examples at my disposal
+which seem to demonstrate the origin of hysterical symptoms through
+symbolization only. One of the best is the following example which again
+refers to Mrs. Cäcilie M. At the age of fifteen she once lay in bed
+watched by her austere grandmother. The girl suddenly cried out
+complaining of having perceived a pain in the forehead between the eyes
+which thereafter continued for weeks. On analyzing this pain, which was
+reproduced after almost thirty years, she stated that her grandmother
+gazed at her so “piercingly” that it seemed as if her look penetrated
+deeply into her brain. She was really afraid of being looked upon
+suspiciously by this old lady. On reproducing this thought she burst
+into loud laughter and the pain ceased. Here I find nothing other than
+the mechanism of symbolization which in a way stands midway between the
+mechanism of auto-suggestion and that of conversion.
+
+The study of Mrs. Cäcilie M. gave me the opportunity to gather a
+collection of such symbolizations. A whole series of physical sensations
+which were otherwise looked upon as organically determined were of a
+psychic origin, or at least furnished with a psychic interpretation. A
+certain number of her experiences were accompanied by a piercing
+sensation in the region of the heart (“I felt a stitch in my heart”).
+The piercing headache of hysteria was undoubtedly, in her case, to be
+interpreted as thought pains (“something sticks in my head”), and it
+disappeared each time when the problem in question was solved. The
+sensation of the hysterical aura in the throat, when it manifested
+itself during an aggravation, ran parallel with the thought, “I have to
+swallow that.” There was a whole series of parallel running sensations
+and ideas in which it was now the sensation evoking the idea as an
+interpretation and now the idea which produced the sensation by
+symbolization, and not seldom it remained obscure which was the primary
+element of the two.
+
+In no other patient was I able to find such a prolific application of
+symbolization. To be sure, Mrs. Cäcilie M. was a person of quite unusual
+and of a special artistic temperament whose highly developed sense for
+form manifested itself in very beautiful poems. I maintain, however,
+that if a hysteria creates through symbolization a somatic sensation for
+the emotionally accentuated presentation, it is due less to individual
+and arbitrary things than one supposes. When during an offending
+harangue she takes literally such phrases as “stitch in the heart” or
+“slap in the face,” and perceives them as real occurrences she practices
+no facetious misuse but only revives the sensations to which this phrase
+thanks its existence. For how does it happen that in speaking of an
+aggrieved person we use such expressions as “he experienced a ‘stitch in
+his heart,’” if the mortification was not actually accompanied by a
+precordial sensation that could be so interpreted and recognized? Is it
+not probable that the phrase “to swallow something” applied to an
+unreturned insult really originates from the sensation of innervation
+appearing in the pharynx when one forces back his speech thus preventing
+a reaction to the insult? All these sensations and innervations belong
+to the “expression of the emotions,” which as Darwin taught us,
+originally consisted of sensible and expedient actions; at present most
+of them may be so weakened that their expression in speech seems to us
+like a figurative transformation, but very probably all this was once
+meant literally, and hysteria is justified in reconstructing the
+original literal sense for its stronger innervation. Indeed, perhaps it
+is improper to say that it creates such sensations through
+symbolization, perhaps it has not taken the usage of speech as a model,
+but both originated from a common source.[26]
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ THE PSYCHOTHERAPY OF HYSTERIA.
+
+
+In our “Preliminary Communication” we have stated that while
+investigating the etiology of hysterical symptoms we have also
+discovered a therapeutic method which we consider of practical
+significance. “We found, at first to our very greatest surprise, that
+the individual hysterical symptoms immediately disappeared without
+returning if we succeeded in thoroughly awakening the memories of the
+causal process with its accompanying affect, and if the patient
+circumstantially discussed the process giving free play to the affect”
+(p. 4).
+
+We furthermore attempted to explain how our psychotherapeutic method
+acts. “It does away with the effects of the original not ab-reacted to
+ideas by affording an outlet to the suppressed affect through speech. It
+brings it into associative correction by drawing it into normal
+consciousness (in mild hypnosis), or it is done away with through the
+physician’s suggestion just as happens in somnambulism with amnesia” (p.
+13).
+
+Although the essential features of this method have been enumerated in
+the preceding pages, a repetition is unavoidable, and I shall now
+attempt to show connectedly how far reaching this method is, its
+superiority over others, its technique, and its difficulties.
+
+
+ I.
+
+I, for my part, may state that I can adhere to the “Preliminary
+Communication,” but I must confess that after continuous occupation for
+years with the problems therein touched, I was confronted with new
+views, as a result of which the former material underwent at least a
+partial change in grouping and conception. It would be unjust to impute
+too much of the responsibility for this development to my honored
+friend, J. Breuer. I therefore take the weight of responsibility upon
+myself.
+
+In attempting to use Breuer’s method of treating hysterical symptoms in
+a great number of patients by investigation and ab-reaction in hypnosis,
+I encountered two obstacles, the pursuit of which led me to change the
+technique as well as the conception. (1) Not all persons were
+hypnotizable who undoubtedly showed hysterical symptoms, and in whom
+there most probably existed the same psychic mechanism. (2) I had to
+question what essentially characterizes hysteria, and in what it differs
+from other neuroses.
+
+How I overcame the first difficulty, and what it taught me, I will show
+later. I will first state what position I have taken in my daily
+practice towards the second problem. It is very difficult to examine a
+case of neurosis before it has been subjected to a thorough analysis,
+such as would result only through the application of Breuer’s method.
+But before we have such a thorough knowledge we are obliged to decide
+upon the diagnosis and kind of treatment. Hence the only thing remaining
+for me was to select such cases for the cathartic method which could,
+for the time being, be diagnosed as hysteria, and which showed some or
+many stigmata, or the characteristic symptoms of hysteria. Yet it
+sometimes happened that in spite of the diagnosis of hysteria the
+therapeutic results were very poor, and even the analysis revealed
+nothing of importance. At other times I attempted to treat cases which
+no one took for hysteria by Breuer’s method, and I found that I could
+influence them, and even cure them. Such, for example, was my experience
+with obsessions, the real obsessions of Westphal’s type, cases which did
+not show a single feature of hysteria. Thus the psychic mechanism
+revealed in the “Preliminary Communication” could not be pathognomonic
+of hysteria. Nor could I for the sake of this mechanism throw so many
+neuroses into the same pot with hysteria. From all the investigated
+doubts I finally seized upon a plan to treat all the other neuroses in
+question just like hysteria, to investigate the etiology and the form of
+psychic mechanisms, and to leave the diagnosis of hysteria to be
+dependent upon the result of this investigation.
+
+It thus happened that, proceeding from Breuer’s methods, I occupied
+myself mostly with the etiology and the mechanism of the neuroses. After
+a relatively brief period I was fortunate in obtaining useful results. I
+then became cognizant of the fact that if we may speak of a reason for
+the acquirement of neuroses the etiology must be sought for in the
+sexual moments. This agrees with the fact that, generally speaking,
+various sexual moments may also produce various pictures of neurotic
+disease. Similarly we now venture to employ the etiology for the
+characteristics of the neuroses, and build up a sharp line of
+demarcation between the morbid pictures of the neuroses. If the
+etiological characters constantly agreed with the clinical ones, this
+was justified.
+
+In this way it was found that neurasthenia really corresponds to a
+monotonous morbid picture in which, as shown by the analysis, “psychic
+mechanisms” play no part. From neurasthenia we sharply distinguished the
+compulsion neurosis (Zwangsneurose), [obsessions, doubts, impulses], the
+neurosis of the genuine obsessions, in which we can recognize a
+complicated psychic mechanism, an etiology resembling the one of
+hysteria, and a far reaching possibility of an involution by
+psychotherapy. On the other hand it seemed to me undoubtedly imperative
+to separate from neurasthenia a neurotic symptom-complex which depends
+on a totally divergent, strictly speaking, on a contrary etiology. The
+partial symptoms of this complex have been recognized by E. Hecker[27]
+as having a common character. They are either symptoms, or equivalents,
+or rudiments of anxiety manifestations, and it is for that reason that
+this complex, so different from neurasthenia, was called by me anxiety
+neurosis. I maintain that it originates from an accumulation of physical
+tension which is in turn of a sexual origin. This neurosis, too, has no
+psychic mechanism, but regularly influences the psychic life, so that
+among its regular manifestations we have anxious expectation, phobias,
+hyperesthesias to pain, and other symptoms. This anxiety neurosis, as I
+take it, certainly corresponds in part to the neurosis called
+hypochondria, which in some features resembles hysteria and
+neurasthenia. Yet in none of the earlier works can I consider the
+demarcation of this neurosis as correct, and moreover, I find that the
+usefulness of the name hypochondria is impaired by its close relation to
+the symptom of “nosophobia.”
+
+After I had thus constructed for myself the simple picture of
+neurasthenia, anxiety neuroses, and obsessions, I turned my attention to
+the commonly occurring cases of neuroses which enter into the diagnosis
+of hysteria. I now said to myself that it would not do to mark a
+neurosis as hysterical on the whole, merely because its symptom complex
+evinced some hysterical signs. I could readily explain this practice by
+the fact that hysteria is the oldest, the most familiar, and the most
+striking neurosis under consideration, but still it was an abuse which
+allowed the placing of many features of perversion and degeneration
+under the caption of hysteria. Whenever a hysterical symptom, such as
+anesthesia or a characteristic attack, could be discovered in a
+complicated case of psychic degeneration, the whole thing was called
+“hysteria,” and hence one could naturally find united under this same
+trade mark the worst and most contradictory features. As certain as this
+diagnosis was incorrect it is also certain that our classification must
+be made from the neurotic standpoint, and as we know neurasthenia,
+anxiety neurosis, and similar conditions in the pure state, there is no
+need of overlooking them in combination.
+
+It seemed therefore that the following conception was more warrantable.
+The neuroses usually occurring are generally to be designated as
+“mixed.” Neurasthenia and anxiety neurosis can be found without effort
+in pure forms, and most frequently in young persons. Pure cases of
+hysteria and compulsion neurosis “Zwangsneurose” (obsessions, doubts,
+impulses) are rare, they are usually combined with an anxiety neurosis.
+This frequent occurrence of mixed neuroses is due to the fact that their
+etiological moments are frequently mixed, now only accidentally, and now
+in consequence of a causal relation between the processes which give
+rise to the etiological moments of the neuroses. This can be sustained
+and proven in the individual cases without any difficulty. But it
+follows from this that it is hardly possible to take hysteria out of
+connection with the sexual neuroses, that hysteria as a rule presents
+only one side, one aspect of the complicated neurotic case, and that
+only, as it were, in the borderline case can it be found and treated as
+an isolated neurosis. In a series of cases we can perhaps say a potiori
+fit denominatio.
+
+I shall now examine the cases reported to see whether they speak in
+favor of my conception of the clinical dependence of hysteria. Breuer’s
+patient, Anna O.,[28] seems to contradict this and exemplifies a pure
+hysterical disease. Yet this case which became so fruitful for the
+knowledge of hysteria was never considered by its observer under the
+guise of a sexual neurosis, and hence cannot at present be utilized as
+such. When I began to analyze the second patient, Mrs. Emmy v. N., the
+idea of a sexual neurosis on a hysterical basis was far from my mind. I
+had just returned from the Charcot school, and considered the connection
+of hysteria with the sexual theme as a sort of insult—just as my
+patients were wont to do. But when I today review my notes on this case
+there is absolutely no doubt that I have to consider it as a severe case
+of anxiety neurosis with anxious expectations and phobias, which was due
+to sexual abstinence and was combined with hysteria.
+
+The third case, Miss Lucy R., could perhaps be called the first
+borderline case of pure hysteria. It is a short episodic hysteria based
+on an unmistakably sexual etiology. It corresponds to an anxiety
+neurosis in an over-ripe, amorous girl, whose love was too rapidly
+awakened through a misunderstanding. Yet the anxiety neurosis could
+either not be demonstrated or had escaped me. Case IV, Katharina,[29] is
+really a model of what I have called virginal anxiety; it is a
+combination of an anxiety neurosis and hysteria, the former produces the
+symptoms, while the latter repeats them and works with them. At all
+events, it is a typical case of many juvenile neuroses called
+“hysteria.” Case V, Miss Elisabeth v. R., was again not investigated as
+a sexual neurosis. I could only suspect that there was a spinal
+neurasthenia at its basis but I could not confirm it. I must, however,
+add that since then pure hysterias have become still rarer in my
+experience. That in grouping together these four cases of hysteria I
+could disregard in the discussion the decisive factors of sexual
+neuroses was due to the fact that they were older cases in which I had
+not as yet carried out the purposed and urgent investigation for the
+neurotic sexual subsoil. Moreover the reason for my reporting four
+instead of twelve cases of hysteria, the analysis of which would have
+confirmed our claims of psychic mechanism for hysterical phenomena, is
+due to one circumstance, namely that the analysis of these cases would
+have simultaneously revealed them as sexual neuroses, though surely no
+diagnostician would have denied them the name “hysteria.” However, the
+discussion of such sexual neuroses would have overstepped the limits of
+our joint publication.
+
+I do not wish to be misunderstood and give the impression that I refuse
+to accept hysteria as an independent neurotic affection, that I conceive
+it only as a psychic manifestation of the anxiety neurosis, that I
+ascribe to it “ideogenous” symptoms only, and that I attribute the
+somatic symptoms, like hysterogenic points and anesthesias, to the
+anxiety neurosis. None of these statements are true. I believe that
+hysteria, purified of all admixtures, can be treated independently in
+every respect except in therapy. For in the treatment we deal with a
+practical purpose, namely, we have to do away with the whole diseased
+state, and even if the hysteria occurs in most cases as a component of a
+mixed neurosis, the case merely resembles a mixed infection where the
+task is to preserve life, and not merely to combat the effect of one
+inciting cause of the disease.
+
+I, therefore, find it important to separate the hysterical part in the
+pictures of the mixed neuroses from neurasthenia, anxiety neurosis,
+etc., for after this separation I can express concisely the therapeutic
+value of the cathartic method. I would venture to assert
+that—principally—it can readily dispose of any hysterical symptom,
+whereas, as can be easily understood, it is perfectly powerless in the
+presence of neurasthenic phenomena, and can only seldom, and through
+detours, influence the psychic results of the anxiety neurosis. Its
+therapeutic efficacy in the individual case will depend on whether or
+not the hysterical components of the morbid picture can claim a
+practical and significant position in comparison to the other neurotic
+components.
+
+Another limitation placed on the efficacy of the cathartic method we
+have already mentioned in our “Preliminary Communication.” It does not
+influence the causal determinations of hysteria, and hence it can not
+prevent the origin of new symptoms in the place of those removed. Hence,
+on the whole, I must claim a prominent place for our therapeutic method
+in the realm of the therapy of neuroses, but I would caution against
+attaching any importance to it, or putting it into practice outside of
+this connection. As I am unable to give here a “Therapy of Neuroses” as
+would be required by the practicing physician, the preceding statements
+are put on a level with the deferred reference to a later communication;
+still, for purposes of discussion and elucidation, I can add the
+following remarks:
+
+1. I do not claim that I have actually removed all the hysterical
+symptoms which I have undertaken to influence by the cathartic method,
+but I believe that the obstacles were due to the personal circumstances
+of the cases, and not to the general principles. In passing sentence,
+these cases of failure may be left out of consideration, just as the
+surgeon puts aside all cases who die as a result of narcosis,
+hemorrhage, accidental sepsis, etc., when deciding upon a new technique.
+I will again consider the failures of such origin in my later
+discussions on the difficulties and drawbacks of this method.
+
+2. The cathartic method does not become valueless simply because it is
+symptomatic and not causal. For a causal therapy is really in most cases
+only prophylactic; it stops the further progress of the injury, but it
+does not necessarily remove the products which have already resulted
+from it. To do this it requires, as a rule, a second agent, and in cases
+of hysteria the cathartic method is really unsurpassable for such
+purposes.
+
+3. Where the period of hysterical production, or the acute hysterical
+paroxysm, has subsided, and the only remnant manifestations left are
+hysterical symptoms, the cathartic method fulfills all indications, and
+achieves a full and lasting success. Such a favorable constellation for
+the therapy does not seldom result on the basis of the sexual life, in
+consequence of the marked fluctuations in the intensity of the sexual
+desire and the complications of the required determination for a sexual
+trauma. Here the cathartic method accomplishes all that is required of
+it, for the physician can not resolve to change a hysterical
+constitution. He must rest content if he can remove the disease for
+which such a constitution shows a tendency, and which can arise through
+the assistance of external determinants. He must be satisfied if the
+patient will again become capacitated. Moreover, he can have some hopes
+for the future, if the possibility of a relapse be considered, for he
+knows the main character of the etiology of the neuroses, namely, that
+their origin is mostly over-determined, and that many moments must unite
+to produce this result. He can hope that this union will not take place
+very soon, if individual etiological moments remain in force.
+
+It may be argued that in such subsided cases of hysteria the remaining
+symptoms would spontaneously disappear without anything else, but this
+can be answered by the fact that such spontaneous cures very often
+terminate neither rapidly nor fully, and that the cure will be
+extraordinarily advanced by the treatment. Whether the cathartic
+treatment cures only that which is capable of spontaneous recovery, or
+incidentally also, that which would not cease spontaneously, that
+question may surely be left open for the present.
+
+4. Where we encounter an acute hysteria during the most acute production
+of hysterical symptoms, and the consecutive overwhelming of the ego by
+the morbid products (hysterical psychosis), even the cathartic method
+will change little the expression and course of the disease. One finds
+himself in the same position to the neurosis as the doctor to an acute
+infectious disease. For some time past, now beyond the reach of
+influence, the etiological moments exerted a sufficient amount of
+effect, which becomes manifest after overcoming the interval of
+incubation. The affection can not be warded off, it has to run its
+course, but meanwhile one must bring about the most favorable conditions
+for the patient. If during such an acute period one can remove the
+morbid products, the newly formed hysterical symptoms, it may be
+expected that their places will be taken by new ones. The physician will
+not be spared the depressing impression of fruitless effort, the
+enormous expenditure of exertion, and the disappointment of the
+relatives, to whom the idea of the necessary duration of time of an
+acute neurosis is hardly as familiar as in the analogous case of an
+acute infectious disease; these, and many other things, will probably
+make most impossible the consequent application of the cathartic method
+in the assumed case. Nevertheless, it still remains to be considered
+whether, even in an acute hysteria, the frequent removal of the morbid
+products does not exercise a curative influence by supporting the normal
+ego which is occupied with the defense, and thus preventing it from
+merging into a psychosis or into ultimate confusion.
+
+That the cathartic method can accomplish something, even in an acute
+hysteria, and that it can even reduce the new productions of the morbid
+symptoms quite practically and noticeably, is undoubtedly evident from
+the case of Anna O., in which Breuer first learned to exercise this
+process.[30]
+
+5. Where we deal with chronic progressive hysterias with moderate or
+continued productions of hysterical symptoms, we learn to regret the
+lack of a causally effective therapy, but we also learn to value the
+indications of the cathartic method as a symptomatic remedy. We then
+deal with an injury produced by an etiology which continues to act
+chronically. We have to strengthen the capacity for resistance of the
+nervous system of our patient, and we must bear in mind that the
+existence of an hysterical symptom signifies a weakening of resistance
+of the nervous system, and represents a predisposing moment. From the
+mechanism of monosymptomatic hysteria we know that a new hysterical
+symptom generally originates as an addition to and as an analogy of one
+already in existence. The location once penetrated represents the weak
+spot which can be penetrated again. The split off psychic group plays
+the part of the provoking crystal from which a formerly omitted
+crystallization emerges with great facility. To remove the already
+existing symptoms, to do away with the psychic alterations lying at
+their basis, is the return to the patients the full measure of their
+resistance capacity, with which they are successfully able to resist the
+noxious influences. One can do a great deal for the patient by such long
+continued watchfulness and occasional “chimney-sweeping.”
+
+6. I still have to mention the apparent contradiction arising between
+the admission that not all hysterical symptoms are psychogenic, and the
+assertion that they can all be removed by psychotherapeutic procedures.
+The solution lies in the fact that some of these non-psychogenic
+symptoms, though they represent morbid symptoms, as, for instance, the
+stigmata, should nevertheless not be designated as affections, and hence
+it cannot be practically noticed even if they remain after the treatment
+is finished. Other symptoms of a similar nature seem to be taken along
+indirectly by the psychogenic symptoms, for indirectly they really
+depend on some psychic causation.
+
+
+I shall now mention those difficulties and inconveniences of our
+therapeutic method which are not evident from the preceding histories,
+or from the following remarks concerning the technique of the method.—I
+will rather enumerate and indicate than carry them out. The process is
+toilsome and wearisome for the physician, it presupposes a profound
+interest for psychological incidents, as well as a personal sympathy for
+the patient. I could not conceive myself entering deeply into the
+psychic mechanism of a hysteria in a person who appeared to me common
+and disagreeable, and who would not, on closer acquaintanceship, be able
+to awaken in me human sympathy; whereas I can well treat a tabetic or a
+rheumatic patient regardless of such personal liking. Not less are the
+requisites on the patient’s side. The process is especially inapplicable
+below a certain niveau of intelligence. It is rendered extremely
+difficult wherever there is any tinge of weakmindedness. It requires the
+full consent and the attention of the patients, but, above all, their
+confidence, for the analysis regularly leads to the inmost and most
+secretly guarded psychic processes. A large proportion of the patients
+suitable for such treatment withdraw from the physician as soon as they
+become cognizant whither his investigations tend; to them the physician
+remains a stranger. In others who have determined to give themselves up
+to the physician and bestow their confidence upon him, something usually
+voluntarily given but never demanded, in all those, I say, it is hardly
+avoidable that the personal relation to the physician should not become
+unduly prominent, at least for some time. Indeed, it seems as if such an
+influence exerted by the physician is a condition under which alone a
+solution of the problem is made possible. I do not believe that it makes
+any essential difference in this condition whether we make use of
+hypnosis or have to avoid or substitute it. Yet fairness demands that we
+emphasize the fact that although these inconveniences are inseparable
+from our method, they, nevertheless, cannot be charged to it. It is much
+more evident that they are formed in the preliminary states of the
+neurosis to be cured, and that they then attach themselves to every
+medical activity which intensively concerns itself with the patient, and
+produce in him a psychic change. I could see no harm or danger in the
+application of hypnosis even in those cases where it was used
+excessively. The causes for the harm produced lay elsewhere and deeper.
+When I review the therapeutic efforts of those years since the
+communications of my honored teacher and friend, J. Breuer, gave me the
+cathartic method, I believe that I have more often produced good than
+harm, and brought about some things which could not have been produced
+by any other therapeutic means. On the whole it was, as expressed in the
+“Preliminary Communication,” “a distinct therapeutic gain.”
+
+I must mention still another gain in the application of this method. No
+severe case of complicated neurosis, with either an excessive or slight
+tinge of hysteria can better be explained than by subjecting it to an
+analysis by Breuer’s method. In making this analysis I find that
+whatever shows the hysterical mechanism disappears first, while the rest
+of the manifestations I meanwhile learn to interpret and refer to their
+etiology. I thereby gained the essential factors indicated by the
+instrument of the therapy of the neurosis in question. When I think of
+the usual differences between my opinion of a case of neurosis before
+and after such an analysis, I am almost tempted to maintain that the
+analysis is indispensable for the knowledge of a neurotic disease. I
+have furthermore made it a practice of applying the cathartic
+psychotherapy in conjunction with a rest cure, which when required is
+changed to a full Weir-Mitchell treatment. This advantage lies in the
+fact that, on the one side I avoid the very disturbing intrusion of new
+psychic impressions produced during psychotherapy; on the other hand, I
+exclude the monotony of the Weir-Mitchell treatment, during which the
+patient not seldom merges into harmful reveries. One might expect that
+the very considerable psychic labor often imposed upon the patient
+during the cathartic cure, and the excitement resulting from the
+reproduction of traumatic events, would run counter to the sense of the
+Weir-Mitchell rest cure, and would prevent the successes which one is
+wont to obtain from it. But the contrary happens; through the
+combination of the Breuer and the Weir-Mitchell therapy, we obtain all
+the physical improvements which we expect from the latter, and such
+marked psychic improvement as never occurs in the rest cure without
+psychotherapy.
+
+
+ II.
+
+I will now add to my former observations that in attempting to use
+Breuer’s method in greater latitude I met this difficulty—although the
+diagnosis was hysteria, and the probabilities spoke in favor of the
+prevalence of the psychic mechanism described by us, yet a number of
+patients could not be put into the hypnotic state. The hypnosis was
+necessary to broaden consciousness so as to find the pathogenic
+reminiscences which do not exist in the ordinary consciousness. I,
+therefore, was forced to either give up such patients, or to bring about
+this broadening by other means.
+
+The reason why one person is hypnotizable and another not I could no
+more explain than others, and hence I could not start on a causal way
+towards the removal of the difficulties. I also observed that in some
+patients the obstacle was still more marked, as they even refused to
+submit to hypnosis. The idea then occurred to me that both cases might
+be identical, and that in both it might merely be an unwillingness.
+Those who entertain a psychic inhibition against hypnotism are not
+hypnotizable, it makes no difference whether they utter their
+unwillingness or not. It is not fully clear to me whether I can firmly
+adhere to this conception or not.
+
+It was, therefore, important to avoid hypnotism and yet to obtain the
+pathogenic reminiscences. This I attained in the following manner:
+
+On asking my patients during our first interview whether they remembered
+the first motive for the symptom in question, some said that they knew
+nothing, while others thought of something which they designated as an
+indistinct recollection, yet were unable to pursue it. I then followed
+Bernheim’s example of awakening the apparently forgotten impressions
+obtained during somnambulism (see the case of Miss Lucy). I urged them
+by assuring them that they did know it, and that they will recall it,
+etc., and thus some thought of something, while in others the
+recollections went further. I became still more pressing, I ordered the
+patient to lie down and voluntarily shut his eyes so as to “concentrate”
+his mind, causing thereby at least a certain similarity to hypnosis, and
+I then discovered that without any hypnosis there emerged new and
+retrospective reminiscences which probably belonged to our theme.
+Through such experiences I gained the impression that through urging
+alone it would really be possible to bring to light the definitely
+existing pathogenic series of ideas; and as this urging necessitated
+much exertion on my part, and showed me that I had to overcome a
+resistance, I, therefore, formulated this whole state of affairs into
+the following theory: _Through my psychic work I had to overcome a
+psychic force in the patient which opposed the pathogenic idea from
+becoming conscious_ (remembered). It then became clear to me that this
+must really be the same psychic force which assisted in the origin of
+the hysterical symptom, and at that time prevented the pathogenic idea
+from becoming conscious. What kind of effective force could here be
+assumed, and what motive could have brought it into activity? I could
+easily formulate an opinion, for I already had some complete analyses at
+my disposal in which I found examples of pathogenic, forgotten, and
+repressed ideas. From these I could judge the general character of such
+ideas. They were altogether of a painful nature, adapted to provoke the
+affects of shame, reproach, of psychic pain, and the feeling of injury;
+they were altogether of that kind which one would not like to experience
+and prefers to forget.
+
+From all these the thought of defense resulted as if simultaneously.
+Indeed, it is generally admitted by all psychologists that the
+assumption of a new idea (assumption in the sense of belief, judgment of
+reality), depends on the mode and drift of the ideas already united in
+the ego. For the process of the censor, to which the newly formed ideas
+are subjected, special technical names have been created. An idea
+entered into the ego of the patient which proved to be unbearable and
+evoked a power of repulsion on the part of the ego, the purpose of which
+was a defense against this unbearable idea. This defense actually
+succeeded, and the idea concerned was crowded out of consciousness and
+out of the memory, so that its psychic trace could not apparently be
+found. Yet this trace must have existed. When I made the effort to
+direct the attention to it, I perceived as a resistance the same force
+which showed itself as repulsion in the genesis of the symptom. If I
+could now make it probable that the idea became pathogenic in
+consequence of the exclusion and repression, the chain would seem
+complete. In many epicrises of our histories, and in a small work
+concerning the defense neuropsychoses (1894), I have attempted to
+indicate the psychological hypotheses with the help of which this
+connection also—the fact of conversion—can be made clear.
+
+Hence, a psychic force, the repugnance of the ego, has originally
+crowded the pathogenic idea from the association, and now opposes its
+return into the memory. The not knowing of the hysterics was really
+a—more or less conscious—not willing to know, and the task of the
+therapeutist was to overpower this resistance of association by psychic
+labor. Such accomplishment is, above all, brought about by “urging,”
+that is, by applying a psychic force in order to direct the attention of
+the patient on the desired traces of ideas. It does not, however, stop
+here, but as I will show, it assumes new forms in the course of the
+analysis, and calls to aid more psychic forces.
+
+I shall, above all, still linger at “the urging.” One cannot go very far
+with such simple assurances as, “You do know it, just say it,” or “It
+will soon come to your mind.” After a few sentences the thread breaks,
+even in the patient who is in a state of concentration. We must not,
+however, forget that we deal everywhere here with a quantitative
+comparison, with the struggle between motives of diverse force and
+intensity. The urging of the strange and inexperienced physician does
+not suffice for the “association resistance” in a grave hysteria. One
+must resort to more forceful means.
+
+In the first place I make use of a small technical artifice. I inform
+the patient that I will in the next moment exert pressure on his
+forehead, I assure him that during this pressure he will see some
+reminiscence in the form of a picture, or some thought will occur to
+him, and I oblige him to communicate to me this picture or this thought,
+no matter what it may be. He is not supposed to hold it back because he
+may perhaps think that it is not the desired or the right thing, or
+because it is too disagreeable to say. There should be neither criticism
+nor reserve on account of affect or disregard. Only thus could we find
+the things desired, and only thus have we unfailingly found them. I then
+exert pressure for a few seconds on the forehead of the patient lying in
+front of me, and after stopping the pressure, I ask in a calm tone, as
+if any disappointment is out of the question, “What have you seen?” or,
+“What occurred to your mind?”
+
+This method[31] taught me a great deal and led me to the goal every
+time. Of course I know that I can substitute this pressure on the
+forehead by any other sign, or any other physical influence, but as the
+patient lies before me the pressure on the forehead, or the grasping of
+his head between my two hands, is the most suggestive and most
+convenient thing that I could undertake for this end. To explain the
+efficacy of this artifice, I may perhaps say that it corresponds to a
+“momentary reinforced hypnosis”; but the mechanism of hypnosis is so
+enigmatical to me that I would not like to refer to it as an
+explanation. I rather think that the advantage of the process lies in
+the fact that through it I dissociate the attention of the patient from
+his conscious quest and reflection, in brief, from everything upon which
+his will can manifest itself. This resembles the process of staring at a
+crystal globe, etc. The fact, that under the pressure of my hand there
+always appears that which I am looking for, teaches that the supposedly
+forgotten pathogenic ideas always lie ready, “close by,” being
+attainable through easily approachable associations, and all that is
+necessary is to clear away some obstacle. This obstacle again seems to
+be the person’s will, and different persons learn to discard their
+premeditations, and to assume a perfectly objective attitude toward the
+psychic processes within them.
+
+It is not always a “forgotten” reminiscence which comes to the surface
+under the pressure of the hand; in the rarest cases the real pathogenic
+reminiscences can be superficially discovered. More frequently an idea
+comes to the surface which is a link between the starting idea and the
+desired pathogenic one of the association chain, or it is an idea
+forming the starting point of a new series of thoughts and
+reminiscences, at the end of which the pathogenic idea exists. The
+pressure, therefore, has really not revealed the pathogenic idea, which,
+if torn from its connections without any preparation, would be
+incomprehensible; but it has shown the way to it, and indicated the
+direction towards which the investigation must proceed. The idea which
+is at first awakened through the pressure may correspond to a familiar
+reminiscence which was never repressed. If the connection becomes torn
+on the road to the pathogenic idea, all that is necessary for the
+reproduction of a new orientation and connection is a repetition of the
+procedure, that is, of the pressure.
+
+In still other cases the pressure of the hand awakens a reminiscence
+well known to the patient, which appearance, however, causes him
+surprise because he had forgotten its relation to the starting idea. In
+the further course of the analysis this relation becomes clear. From all
+these results of the pressure one receives a delusive impression of a
+superior intelligence external to the patient’s consciousness, which
+systematically holds a large psychic material for definite purposes, and
+has provided an ingenious arrangement for its return into consciousness.
+I presume, however, that this unconscious second intelligence is really
+only apparent.
+
+In every complicated analysis one works repeatedly, nay continuously,
+with the help of this procedure (pressure on the forehead), which leads
+us from the place where the patient’s conscious reconductions become
+interrupted, showing us the way over reminiscences which remained known,
+and calling our attention to connections which have merged into
+forgetfulness. It also evokes and connects memories which have for years
+been withdrawn from the association, but can still be recognized as
+memories; and finally, as the highest performance of reproduction, it
+causes the appearance of thoughts which the patient never wishes to
+recognize as his own, which he does not remember, although he admits
+that they are inexorably demanded by the connection, and is convinced
+that just these ideas cause the termination of the analysis and the
+cessation of the symptoms.
+
+I will now attempt to give a series of examples showing the excellent
+achievements of this procedure. I treated a young lady who suffered for
+six years from an intolerable and protracted nervous cough, which
+apparently was nurtured by every common catarrh, but must have had its
+strong psychic motives. Every other remedy had long since shown itself
+to be powerless, and I therefore attempted to remove the symptom by
+psychoanalysis. All that she could remember was that the nervous cough
+began at the age of fourteen while she boarded with her aunt. She
+remembered absolutely no psychic excitement during that time, and did
+not believe that there was a motive for her suffering. Under the
+pressure of my hand, she at first recalled a large dog. She then
+recognized the memory picture; it was her aunt’s dog which was attached
+to her, and used to accompany her everywhere, and without any further
+aid it occurred to her that this dog died and that the children buried
+it solemnly; and on the return from this funeral her cough appeared. I
+asked her why she began to cough, and after helping her with the
+pressure, the following thought occurred to her: “Now I am all alone in
+this world; no one loves me here; this animal was my only friend, and
+now I have lost it.” She then continued her story. “The cough
+disappeared when I left my aunt, but reappeared a year and a half
+later.”—“What was the reason for it?”—“I do not know.”—I again exerted
+some pressure on the forehead, and she recalled the news of her uncle’s
+death during which the cough again manifested itself, and also recalled
+a train of thought similar to the former. The uncle was apparently the
+only one in the family who sympathized with and loved her. That was,
+therefore, the pathogenic idea: “People do not love her; everybody else
+is preferred; she really does not deserve to be loved,” etc. To the idea
+of love there clung something which caused a marked resistance to the
+communication. The analysis was interrupted before this explanation.
+
+
+Some time ago I attempted to relieve an elderly lady of her anxiety
+attacks, which considering their characteristic qualities, were hardly
+adapted to such influence. Since her menopause she had become extremely
+religious, and always received me as if I were the Devil. She was always
+armed with a small ivory crucifix which she hid in her hand. Her attacks
+of anxiety, which bore the hysterical character, could be traced to her
+early girlhood, and were supposed to have originated from the
+application of an iodine preparation used to reduce a moderate swelling
+of the thyroid. I naturally repudiated this origin, and sought to
+substitute it by another which was in better harmony with my views
+concerning the etiology of neurotic symptoms. To the first question for
+an impression of her youth which would stand in causal connection to the
+attacks of anxiety, there appeared under the pressure of my hand the
+reminiscence of reading a so called devotional book wherein piously
+enough there was some mention of the sexual processes. The passage in
+question made an impression on this girl, which was contrary to the
+intention of the author. She burst into tears and flung the book away.
+That was before the first attack of anxiety. A second pressure on the
+forehead of the patient evoked the next reminiscence, it referred to her
+brother’s teacher who showed her great respect, and for whom she
+entertained a warmer feeling. This reminiscence culminated in the
+reproduction of an evening in her parents’ home, during which they all
+sat around the table with the young man, and delightfully enjoyed
+themselves in a lively conversation. During the night following this
+evening she was awakened by the first attack of anxiety which surely had
+more to do with some resistance against a sensual feeling than perhaps
+with the coincidently used iodine. In what other way could I have
+succeeded in revealing in this obstinate patient, prejudiced against me
+and every worldly remedy, such a connection contrary to her own opinion
+and assertion?
+
+
+On another occasion I had to deal with a young happily married woman,
+who as early as in the first years of her girlhood, was found every
+morning for some time in a state of lethargy, with rigid members, opened
+mouth, and protruding tongue. Similar attacks, though not so marked,
+recurred at the present time on awakening. A deep hypnosis could not be
+produced, so that I began my investigation in a state of concentration,
+and assured her during the first pressure that she would see something
+that would be directly connected with the cause of her condition during
+her childhood. She acted calmly and willingly, she again saw the
+residence in which she had passed her early girlhood, her room, the
+position of her bed, the grandmother who lived with them at the time,
+and one of her governesses whom she dearly loved. There was then a
+succession of small, quite indifferent scenes, in these rooms, and among
+these persons, the conclusion of which was the leave taking of the
+governess who married from the home. I did not know what to start with
+these reminiscences; I could not bring about any connection between them
+and the etiology of the attacks. To be sure the various circumstances
+were recognized as having occurred at the same time at which the attacks
+first appeared.
+
+Before I could continue the analysis, I had occasion to talk to a
+colleague, who, in former years, was my patient’s family physician. From
+him I obtained the following explanation: At the time that he treated
+the mature and physically very well developed girl for these first
+attacks, he was struck by the excessive affection in the relations
+between her and her governess. He became suspicious and caused the
+grandmother to watch these relations. After a short while the old lady
+informed him that the governess was wont to pay nightly visits to the
+child’s bed, and that quite regularly after such visits the child was
+found in the morning in an attack. She did not hesitate to bring about
+the quiet removal of this corruptress of youth. The children, as well as
+the mother, were made to believe that the governess left the house in
+order to get married.
+
+The treatment, which was above all successful, consisted in informing
+the young woman of the explanations given to me.
+
+
+Occasionally the explanations, which one obtains by the pressure
+procedure, follow in very remarkable form, and under circumstances which
+make the assumption of an unconscious intelligence appear even more
+alluring. Thus I recall a lady who suffered for years from obsessions
+and phobias, and who referred the origin of her trouble to her
+childhood, but could mention nothing to which it could have been
+attributed. She was frank and intelligent, and evinced only a very
+slight conscious resistance. I will add here that the psychic mechanism
+of obsessions is very closely related to that of hysterical symptoms,
+and that the technique of the analysis in both is the same.
+
+On asking the lady whether she had seen or recalled anything under the
+pressure of my hand, she answered, “Neither, but a word suddenly
+occurred to me.”—“A single word?”—“Yes, but it is too foolish.”—“Just
+tell it.”—“Teacher.”—“Nothing more?”—“No.” I exerted pressure a second
+time, and again a single word flashed through her mind: “Shirt.”—I now
+observed that we have dealt with a new mode of replying, and by repeated
+pressure I evoked the following apparently senseless series of words:
+Teacher—shirt—bed—city—wagon. I asked, “What does all that mean?” She
+reflected for a moment, and it then occurred to her that “it can only
+refer to this one incident which now comes to my mind. When I was ten
+years old my older sister of twelve had an attack of frenzy one night,
+and had to be bound, put in a wagon and taken to the city. I remember
+distinctly that it was the teacher who overpowered her and accompanied
+her to the asylum.”—We then continued this manner of investigation, and
+received from our oracle another series of words which, though we could
+not altogether interpret, could nevertheless be used as a continuation
+of this story, and as an appendix to a second. The significance of this
+reminiscence was soon clear. The reason why her sister’s illness made
+such an impression on her was because they both shared a common secret.
+They slept in the same room, and one night they both submitted to a
+sexual assault by a certain man. In discovering this sexual trauma of
+early youth, we revealed not only the origin of the first obsession but
+also the trauma which later acted pathogenically.—The peculiarity of
+this case lies only in the appearance of single catch words which we had
+to elaborate into sentences, for the irrelevance and incoherence found
+in these oracle like uttered words adhere to all ideas and scenes which
+generally occur as a result of pressure. On further investigation it is
+regularly found that the seemingly disconnected reminiscences are
+connected by close streams of thought, and that they lead quite directly
+to the desired pathogenic moment.
+
+With pleasure do I therefore recall a case of analysis in which my
+confidence in the results of pressure was splendidly justified. A very
+intelligent, and apparently very happy, young woman consulted me for
+persistent pain in her abdomen which yielded to no treatment. I found
+that the pain was situated in the abdominal wall and was due to palpable
+muscular hardening, and I ordered local treatment.
+
+After months I again saw the patient who said that “the former pain
+disappeared after following the treatment and remained away a long time,
+but now it has reappeared as a nervous pain. I recognize it by the fact
+that I do not perceive it now on motion as before, but only during
+certain hours, as for example, in the morning on awakening, and during
+certain excitements.” The patient’s diagnosis was quite correct. It was
+now important to discover the cause of this pain, but in this she could
+not assist me in her uninfluenced state. When, in a state of
+concentration and under the pressure of my hand, I asked her whether
+anything occurred to her, or whether she saw anything, she began to
+describe her visual pictures. She saw something like a sun with rays,
+which I naturally had to assume to be a phosphene produced by pressure
+on the eyes. I expected that the useful pictures would follow, but she
+continued to see stars of a peculiar pale blue light, like moonlight,
+etc., and I believed that she merely saw glittering, shining, and
+twinkling spots before the eyes. I was already prepared to add this
+attempt to the failures, and I was thinking how I could quietly withdraw
+from this affair, when my attention was called to one of the
+manifestations which she described. She saw a big black cross which was
+inclined, the edges of which were surrounded by a subdued moonlike light
+in which all the pictures thus far seen were shining, and upon the arm
+there flickered a little flame that was apparently no longer a
+phosphene. I continued to listen. She saw numerous pictures in the same
+light, peculiar signs resembling somewhat sanscrit. She also saw figures
+like triangles, among which there was one big triangle, and again the
+cross. I now thought of an allegorical interpretation, and asked, “What
+does this cross mean?”—“It is probably meant to interpret pain,” she
+answered. I argued, saying, that “by cross one usually understands a
+moral burden,” and asked her what was hidden behind that pain. She could
+not explain that and continued looking. She saw a sun with golden rays
+which she interpreted as God, the primitive force; she then saw a
+gigantic lizard which she examined quizzically but without fear; then a
+heap of snakes, then another sun but with mild silvery rays, and in
+front of it, between her own person and this source of light, there was
+a barrier which concealed from her the center of the sun.
+
+I knew for some time that we dealt here with allegories, and I
+immediately asked for an explanation of the last picture. Without
+reflecting she answered: “The sun is perfection, the ideal, and the
+barrier represents my weaknesses and failings which stand between me and
+the ideal.”—“Indeed, do you reproach yourself? Are you dissatisfied with
+yourself?”—“Yes.”—“Since when?”—“Since I became a member of the
+Theosophical Society and read the writings edited by it. I have always
+had a poor opinion of myself.” “What was it that made the last strongest
+impression upon you?”—“A translation from the sanscrit which now appears
+in serial numbers.” A minute later I was initiated into her mental
+conflicts, and into her self reproaches. She related a slight incident
+which gave occasion for a reproach, and in which, as a result of an
+inciting conversion, the former organic pain at first appeared.—The
+pictures which I had at first taken for phosphenes were symbols of
+occultistic streams of thought, perhaps plain emblems from the title
+pages of occultistic books.
+
+
+I have thus far so warmly praised the achievements of the pressure
+procedure, and have so entirely neglected the aspect of the defense or
+the resistance, that I certainly must have given the impression that by
+means of this small artifice one is placed in position to become master
+of the psychic resistances against the cathartic cure. But to believe
+this would be a gross mistake. Such advantages do not exist in the
+treatment so far as I can see; here, as everywhere else, great change
+requires much effort. The pressure procedure is nothing but a trick
+serving to surprise for awhile the defensive ego, which in all graver
+cases recalls its intentions and continues its resistance.
+
+I need only recall the various forms in which this resistance manifested
+itself. In the first place, the pressure experiment usually fails the
+first or second time. The patient then expresses himself disappointed,
+saying, “I believed that some idea would occur to me, but I only thought
+so; as attentive as I was nothing came.” Such attitudes assumed by the
+patient are not yet to be counted as a resistance; we usually answer to
+that, “You were really too anxious, the second time things will come.”
+And they really come. It is remarkable how completely the patients—even
+the most tractable and the most intelligent—can forget the agreement
+which they have previously entered into. They have promised to tell
+everything that occurs to them under the pressure of the hand, be it
+closely related to them or not, and whether it is agreeable to them to
+say it or not; that is, they are to tell everything without any choice,
+or influence by critique or affect. Yet they do not keep their promise,
+it is apparently beyond their powers. The work repeatedly stops, they
+continue to assert that this time nothing came to their mind. One needs
+not believe them, and one must always assume, and also say, that they
+hold back something because they believe it to be unimportant, or
+perceive it as painful. One must insist, repeat the pressure, and assume
+an assured attitude until one really hears something. The patient then
+adds, “I could have told you that the first time.”—“Why did you not say
+it?”—“I could not believe that that could be it. Only after it returned
+repeatedly have I decided to tell it;” or, “I had hoped that it would
+not be just that, that I could spare myself from saying it, but only
+after it could not be repressed have I noticed that I could not avoid
+it.”—Thus the patient subsequently betrays the motives of a resistance
+which he did not at first wish to admit. He apparently could not help
+offering resistances.
+
+It is remarkable under what subterfuges these resistances are frequently
+hidden. “I am distracted today”; “the clock or the piano playing in the
+next room disturbs me,” they say. I became accustomed to answer to that,
+“Not at all, you simply struck against something that you do not
+willingly wish to say. That does not help you at all. Just stick to
+it.”—The longer the pause between the pressure of my hand and the
+utterance of the patient, the more suspicious I become, and the more is
+it to be feared that the patient arranges what comes to his mind, and
+distorts it in the reproduction. The most important explanations are
+frequently ushered in as superfluous accessories, just as the princes of
+the opera who are dressed as beggars. “Something now occurred to me, but
+it has nothing to do with it. I only tell it to you because you wish to
+know everything.” With this introduction we usually obtain the long
+desired solution. I always listen when I hear a patient talk so lightly
+of an idea. That the pathogenic idea should appear of so little
+importance on its reappearance is a sign of the successful defense. One
+can infer from this of what the process of defense consisted. Its object
+was to make a weak out of a strong idea, that is, to rob it of its
+affect.
+
+Among other signs the pathogenic memories can also be recognized by the
+fact that they are designated by the patient as unessential, and yet are
+only uttered with resistance. There are also cases where the patient
+seeks to disavow the recollections, even while they are being
+reproduced, with such remarks as these: “Now something occurred to me,
+but apparently you talked it into me;” or, “I know what you expect to
+this question, you surely think that I thought of this and that.” An
+especially clever way of shifting is found in the following expression:
+“Now something really occurred to me, but it seems to me as if I added
+it, and that it is not a reproduced thought.”—In all these cases I
+remain inflexibly firm, I admit none of these distinctions, but explain
+to the patient that these are only forms and subterfuges of the
+resistance against the reproduction of a recollection which in spite of
+all we are forced to recognize.
+
+One generally experiences less trouble in the reproduction of pictures
+than thoughts. Hysterical patients who are usually visual are easier to
+manage than patients suffering from obsessions. Once the picture emerges
+from the memory we can hear the patient state that as he proceeds to
+describe it, it proportionately fades away and becomes indistinct; the
+patient wears it out, so to speak, by transforming, it into words. We
+then orient ourselves through the memory picture itself in order to find
+the direction towards which the work should be continued. We say to the
+patient, “Just look again at the picture, has it disappeared?”—“As a
+whole, yes, but I still see this detail.”—“Then this must have some
+meaning, you will either see something new, or this remnant will remind
+you of something.” When the work is finished the visual field becomes
+free again, and a new picture can be called forth; but at other times
+such a picture, in spite of its having been described, remains
+persistently before the inner eye of the patient, and I take this as a
+sign that he still has something important to tell me concerning its
+theme. As soon as this has been accomplished, the picture disappears
+like a wandering spirit returning to rest.
+
+It is naturally of great value for the progress of the analysis to carry
+our point with the patient, otherwise we have to depend on what he
+thinks is proper to impart. It, therefore, will be pleasant to hear that
+the pressure procedure never failed except in a single case which I
+shall discuss later, but which I can now characterize by the fact that
+there was a special motive for the resistance. To be sure, it may happen
+under certain conditions that the procedure may be applied without
+bringing anything to light; as, for example, we may ask for the further
+etiology of a symptom when the same has already been exhausted; or, we
+may investigate for the psychic genealogy of a symptom, perhaps a pain,
+which really was of somatic origin. In these cases the patient equally
+insists that nothing occurred to him, and he is right. We should strive
+to avoid doing an injustice to the patient by making it a general rule
+not to lose sight of his features while he calmly lies before us during
+the analysis. One can then learn to distinguish, without any difficulty,
+the psychic calm in the real non appearance of a reminiscence from the
+tension and emotional signs under which the patient labors in trying to
+disavow the emerging reminiscences for the purpose of defense. The
+differential diagnostic application of the pressure procedure is really
+based on such experiences.
+
+We can see, therefore, that even with the help of the pressure procedure
+the task is not an easy one. The only advantage gained is the fact that
+we have learned from the results of this method in what direction to
+investigate, and what things we have to force upon the patient. For some
+cases that suffices, for the question is really to find the secret, and
+tell it to the patient, so that he is usually then forced to relinquish
+his resistance. In other cases more is necessary; here the surviving
+resistance of the patient manifests itself by the fact that the
+connections become torn, the solutions do not appear, and the recalled
+pictures come indistinctly and incompletely. On reviewing, at a later
+period, the earlier results of an analysis, we are often surprised at
+the distorted aspects of all the occurrences and scenes which we have
+snatched from the patient by the pressure procedure. It usually lacks
+the essential part, the relations to the person or to the theme, and for
+that reason the picture remained incomprehensible. I will now give one
+or two examples showing the effects of such a censoring during the first
+appearance of the pathogenic memories. The patient sees the upper part
+of a female body on which a loose covering fits carelessly, only much
+later he adds to this torso the head, and thereby betrays a person and a
+relationship. Or, he relates a reminiscence of his childhood about two
+boys whose forms are very indistinct, and to whom a certain
+mischievousness was attributed. It required many months and considerable
+progress in the course of the analysis before he again saw this
+reminiscence and recognized one of the children as himself and the other
+as his brother. What means have we now at our disposal to overcome this
+continued resistance?
+
+We have but few, yet we have almost all those by which one person exerts
+a psychic influence on the other. In the first place we must remember
+that psychic resistance, especially of long continuance, can only be
+broken slowly, gradually, and with much patience. We can also count on
+the intellectual interest which manifests itself in the patient after a
+brief period of the analysis. On explaining and imparting to him the
+knowledge of the marvelous world of psychic processes, which we have
+gained only through such analysis, we obtain his collaboration, causing
+him to view himself with the objective interest of the investigator, and
+we thus drive back the resistance which rests on an affective basis. But
+finally—and this remains the strongest motive force—after the motives
+for the defense have been discovered, we must make the attempt to reduce
+or even substitute them by stronger ones. Here the possibility of
+expressing the therapeutic activity in formulæ ceases. One does as well
+as he can as an explainer where ignorance has produced timorousness, as
+a teacher, as a representative of a freer and more superior
+world-conception, and as confessor, who through the continuance of his
+sympathy and his respect, imparts, so to say, absolution after the
+confession. One endeavors to do something humane for the patient in so
+far as the range of one’s own personality and the measure of sympathy
+which one can set apart for the case allows. It is an indispensable
+prerequisite for such psychic activities to have approximately
+discovered the nature of the case and the motives of the defense here
+effective. Fortunately the technique of the urging and the pressure
+procedure take us just so far. The more we have solved such enigmas the
+easier will we discover new ones, and the earlier will we be able to
+manage the actual curative psychic work. For it is well to bear in mind
+that although the patient can rid himself of an hysterical symptom only
+after reproducing and uttering under emotion its causal pathogenic
+impressions, yet the therapeutic task merely consists in inducing him to
+do it, and once the task has been accomplished there remains nothing for
+the doctor to correct or abolish. All the contrary suggestions necessary
+have already been employed during the struggle carried on against the
+resistance. The case may be compared to the unlocking of a closed door,
+where, as soon as the door knob has been pressed downward, no other
+difficulties are encountered in opening the door.
+
+Among the intellectual motives employed for the overcoming of the
+resistance one can hardly dispense with one affective moment, that is,
+the personal equation of the doctor, and in a number of cases, this
+alone will be able to break the resistance. The conditions here do not
+differ from those found in any other branch of medicine, and one should
+not expect any therapeutic method to fully disclaim the assistance of
+this personal moment.
+
+
+ III.
+
+In view of the discussions in the preceding section concerning the
+difficulty of my technique, which I have unreservedly exposed,—I have
+really collected them from my most difficult cases, though it will often
+be easier work—in view then of this state of affairs everybody will wish
+to ask whether it would not be more suitable, instead of all these
+tortures, to apply oneself more energetically to hypnosis, or to limit
+the application of the cathartic method to only such cases as can be
+placed in deep hypnosis. To the latter proposition I should have to
+answer that the number of patients available for my skill would shrink
+considerably; but to the former advice I will advance the supposition
+that even where hypnosis could be produced the resistance would not be
+very much lessened. My experiences in this respect are not particularly
+extensive, so that I am unable to go beyond this supposition, but
+wherever I achieved a cathartic cure in the hypnotic state I found that
+the work devolved upon me was not less than in the state of
+concentration. I have only recently finished such a treatment during
+which course I caused the disappearance of a hysterical paralysis of the
+legs. The patient merged into a state, psychically very different from
+the conscious, and somatically distinguished by the fact that she was
+unable to open her eyes or rise without my ordering her to do so; and
+still I never had a case showing greater resistance than this one. I
+placed no value on these physical signs, and toward the end of the ten
+months’ treatment they really became imperceptible. The condition of the
+patient during our work has therefore lost nothing of its psychic
+peculiarities, such as the ability to recall the unconscious and its
+very peculiar relation to the person of the physician. To be sure, in
+the history of Mrs. Emmy v. N. I have described an example of a
+cathartic cure accomplished in a profound somnambulism in which the
+resistance played almost no part. But nothing that I obtained from this
+woman would have required any special effort; I obtained nothing that
+she could not have told me in her waking state after a longer
+acquaintanceship and some esteem. The real causes of her disease, which
+were surely identical with the causes of her relapses after my
+treatment, I have never found—it was my first attempt in this
+therapy—and when I once asked her accidentally for a reminiscence which
+contained a fragment of the erotic, I found her just as resistant and
+unreliable in her statements as any one of my later non-somnambulic
+patients. This patient’s resistance, even in the somnambulic state,
+against other requirements and exactions I have already discussed in her
+history. Since I have witnessed cases who, even in deep somnambulism
+were absolutely refractory therapeutically despite their obedience in
+everything else, I really became skeptical as to the value of hypnosis
+for the facilitation of the cathartic treatment. A case of this kind I
+have reported in brief,[32] and could still add others.
+
+
+In our discussion thus far, the idea of resistance has thrust itself to
+the foreground. I have shown how, in the therapeutic work, one is led to
+the conception that hysteria originates through the repression of an
+unbearable idea from a motive of defense, that the repressed idea
+remains as a weak (mildly intensive) reminiscence, and that the affect
+snatched from it is used for a somatic innervation, that is, conversion
+of the excitement. By virtue of its repression the idea becomes the
+cause of morbid symptoms, that is pathogenic. A hysteria showing this
+psychic mechanism may be designated by the name of “defense hysteria,”
+but both Breuer and myself have repeatedly spoken of two other kinds of
+hysterias which we have named hypnoid and retention hysteria. The first
+to reveal itself to us was really the hypnoid-hysteria, for which I can
+mention no better example than Breuer’s case of Miss Anna O.[33] For
+this form of hysteria Breuer gives an essentially different psychic
+mechanism than for the form which is characterized by conversion. Here
+the idea becomes pathogenic through the fact that it is conceived in a
+peculiar psychic state, having remained from the very beginning external
+to the ego. It therefore needs no psychic force to keep it away from the
+ego, and it need not awaken any resistance when, with the help of the
+somnambulic psychic authority, it is initiated into the ego. The history
+of Anna O. really shows no such resistance.
+
+I held this distinction as so essential that it has readily induced me
+to adhere to the formation of the hypnoid-hysteria. It is however
+remarkable that in my own experience I encountered no genuine
+hypnoid-hysteria, whatever I treated changed itself into a defense
+hysteria. Not that I have never dealt with symptoms which manifestly
+originated in separated conscious states, and therefore were excluded
+from being accepted into the ego. I found this also in my own cases, but
+I could show that the so called hypnoid state owed its separation to the
+fact that a split off psychic group originated before, through defense.
+In brief, I cannot suppress the suspicion that hypnoid and defense
+hysteria meet somewhere at their roots, and that the defense is the
+primary thing; but I know nothing about it.
+
+Equally uncertain is at present my opinion concerning the retention
+hysteria in which the therapeutic work is also supposed to follow
+without any resistance. I had a case which I took for a typical
+retention hysteria, and I was pleased over the anticipation of an easy
+and certain success; but this success did not come as easy as the work
+really was. I therefore presume, and again with all caution appropriate
+to ignorance, that in retention hysteria, too, we can find at its basis
+a fragment of defense which has thrust the whole process into hysteria.
+Let us hope that new experiences will soon decide whether I am running
+into the danger of one-sidedness and error in my tendency to spread the
+conception of defense for the whole of hysteria.
+
+
+Thus far I have dealt with the difficulties and technique of the
+cathartic method, I would now like to add a few indications showing how
+one makes an analysis with technique. For me this is a very interesting
+theme, but I do not expect that it will excite similar interest in
+others who have not practiced such analyses. Properly speaking we shall
+again deal with the technique, but this time with those difficulties
+concerning which the patient cannot be held responsible, and which must
+in part be the same in a hypnoid and a retention hysteria as well as in
+the defense hysteria which I have in mind as a model. I start on this
+last fragment of discussion with the expectation that the psychic
+peculiarities revealed here might sometime attain a certain value as raw
+material for an intellectual dynamics.
+
+The first and strongest impression which one gains through such an
+analysis is surely the fact that the pathogenic psychic material,
+apparently forgotten and not at the disposal of the ego, playing no rôle
+in the association and in memory, still lies ready in some manner and in
+proper and good order. All that is necessary is to remove the
+resistances blocking the way. Barring that, everything is known as we
+know anything else, the proper connections of the individual ideas among
+themselves and with the nonpathogenic are frequently recalled and are
+present; they have been produced in their time and retained in memory.
+The pathogenic psychic material appears as the property of an
+intelligence which is not necessarily inferior to the normal ego. The
+semblance of a second personality is often most delusively produced.
+Whether this impression is justified, whether the arrangements of the
+psychic material resulting after the adjustment is not transferred back
+into the time of the disease, these are questions which I do not like to
+consider in this place. One cannot easily and intuitively describe the
+experiences resulting from these analyses as if he placed himself in the
+position, which one can only take a survey of after their disappearance.
+
+The condition is usually not so simple as one represents it in special
+cases, as, for example, in a single case in which a symptom originates
+through a serious trauma. We frequently deal not with a single
+hysterical symptom but with a number of the same which are partially
+independent of one another and partially connected. We must not expect a
+single traumatic reminiscence whose nucleus is a single pathogenic idea,
+but we must be ready to assume a series of partial traumas and a
+concatenation of pathogenic streams of thought. The monosymptomatic
+traumatic hysteria is, as it were, an elementary organism, it is a
+single being in comparison to the complicated structure of a grave
+hysterical neurosis as is generally encountered.
+
+The psychic material of such hysteria presents itself as a
+multidimensional formation of at least triple stratification. I hope to
+be able to soon justify this figurative expression. First of all there
+is a nucleus of such reminiscences (either experiences or streams of
+thought) in which the traumatic moment culminated, or in which the
+pathogenic idea has found its purest formation. Around this nucleus we
+often find an incredibly rich mass of other memory material which we
+have to elaborate by the analysis in the triple arrangement mentioned
+before. In the first place, there is an unmistakable linear
+chronological arrangement which takes place within every individual
+theme. As an example of this I can only cite the arrangements in
+Breuer’s analysis of Anna O. The theme is that of becoming deaf, of not
+hearing,[34] which then becomes differentiated according to seven
+determinants, and under each heading there were from ten to one hundred
+single reminiscences in chronological order. It was as if one should
+take up an orderly kept record. In the analysis of my patient, Emmy v.
+N., there were similar if not so many memory sub-divisions; they formed
+quite a general event in every analysis. They always occurred in a
+chronological order which was as definitely reliable as the serial
+sequences of the days of the week or the names of the months in
+psychically normal individuals. They increased the work of the analysis
+through the peculiarity of reversing the series of their origin in the
+reproduction; the freshest and the most recent occurrence of the
+accumulation occurred first as a “wrapper,” and that with which the
+series really began gave the impression of the conclusion.
+
+The grouping of similar reminiscences in a multiplicity of linear
+stratifications, as represented in a bundle of documents, in a package,
+etc., I have designated as the formation of a theme. These themes now
+show a second form of arrangement. I cannot express it differently than
+by saying that they are concentrically stratified around the pathogenic
+nucleus. It is not difficult to say what determines these strata, and
+according to what decreasing or increasing magnitude this arrangement
+follows. They are layers of equal resistance tending towards the
+nucleus, accompanied by zones of similar alteration of consciousness
+into which the individual themes extend. The most peripheral layers
+contain those reminiscences (or fascicles) of the different themes which
+can readily be recalled and were always perfectly conscious. The deeper
+one penetrates the more difficult it becomes to recognize the emerging
+reminiscences until one strikes those near the nucleus which the patient
+disavows, even at the reproduction.
+
+As we shall hear later it is the peculiarity of the concentric
+stratification of the pathogenic psychic material which gives to the
+course of such an analysis its characteristic features. We must now
+mention the third and most essential arrangement concerning which a
+general statement can hardly be made. It is the arrangement according to
+the content of thought, the connection through the logical thread
+reaching to the nucleus which might in each case correspond to a
+special, irregular, and manifoldly devious road. This arrangement has a
+dynamic character in contradistinction to both morphological
+stratifications mentioned before. Whereas, in a spacially formed scheme
+the latter would be represented by rigid, arched, and straight lines,
+the course of the logical concatenation would have to be followed with a
+wand, over the most tortuous route, from the superficial into the deep
+layers and back, generally, however, progressing from the peripheral to
+the central nucleus, and touching thereby all stations; that is, its
+movement is similar to the zigzag movement of the knight in the solution
+of a chess problem.
+
+I will still adhere for a moment to the last comparison in order to call
+attention to a point in which it does not do justice to the qualities of
+the thing compared. The logical connection corresponds not only to a
+zigzag-like devious line, but rather to a ramifying and especially to a
+converging system of lines. It has a junction in which two or more
+threads meet only to proceed thence united, and, as a rule, many threads
+running independently, or here and there connected by by-paths, open
+into the nucleus. To put it in different words, it is very remarkable
+how frequently a symptom is manifoldly determined, that is,
+over-determined.
+
+I will introduce one more complication, and then my effort to illustrate
+the organization of the pathogenic psychic material will be achieved. It
+can happen that we may deal with more than one single nucleus in the
+pathogenic material, as, for example, when we have to analyze a second
+hysterical outbreak having its own etiology but which is still connected
+with the first outbreak of an acute hysteria which has been overcome
+years before. It can readily be imagined what strata and streams of
+thought must be added in order to produce a connection between the two
+pathogenic nuclei.
+
+I will still add a few observations to the picture obtained of the
+organization of the pathogenic material. We have said of this material
+that it behaves like a foreign body, and that the therapy also acts like
+the removal of a foreign body from the living tissues. We are now in
+position to consider the shortcomings of this comparison. A foreign body
+does not enter into any connection with the layers of tissue surrounding
+it, although it changes them and produces in them a reactive
+inflammation. On the other hand, our pathogenic psychic group does not
+allow itself to be cleanly shelled out from the ego, its outer layers
+radiate in all directions into the parts of the normal ego, and really
+belong to the latter as much as to the pathogenic organization. The
+boundaries between both become purely conventional in the analysis,
+being placed now here, now there, and in certain locations no
+demarcation is possible. The inner layers become more and more estranged
+from the ego without showing a visible beginning of the pathogenic
+boundaries. The pathogenic organization really does not behave like a
+foreign body, but rather like an infiltration. The infiltrate must, in
+this comparison, be assumed to be the resistance. Indeed, the therapy
+does not consist in extirpating something—psychotherapy cannot do that
+at present—but it causes a melting of the resistance, and thus opens the
+way for the circulation into a hitherto closed territory.
+
+(I make use here of a series of comparisons all of which have only a
+very limited resemblance to my theme, and do not even agree among
+themselves. I am aware of that, and I am not in danger of
+over-estimating their value; but, as it is my intention to illustrate
+the many sides of a most complicated and not as yet depicted idea, I
+therefore take the liberty of dealing also in the following pages with
+comparisons which are not altogether free from objections.)
+
+If, after a thorough adjustment, one could show to a third party the
+pathogenic material in its present recognized, complicated and
+multidimensional organization, he would justly propound the question,
+“How could such a camel go through the needle’s eye?” Indeed, one does
+not speak unjustly of a “narrowing of consciousness.” The term gains in
+sense and freshness for the physician who accomplishes such an analysis.
+Only one single reminiscence can enter into the ego consciousness; the
+patient occupied in working his way through this one sees nothing of
+that which follows, and forgets everything that has already wedged its
+way through. If the conquest of this one pathogenic reminiscence strikes
+against impediments, as for example, if the patient does not yield the
+resistance against it, but wishes to repress or distort it, the strait
+is, so to speak, blocked; the work comes to a standstill, it cannot
+advance, and the one reminiscence in the breach confronts the patient
+until he takes it up into the breadth of his ego. The whole spacially
+extended mass of the pathogenic material is thus drawn through a narrow
+fissure and reaches consciousness as if disjointed into fragments or
+strips, and it is the task of the psychotherapist to recompose it into
+the conjectured organization. He who desires still more comparisons may
+think here of a Chinese puzzle.
+
+If one is about to begin an analysis in which one may expect such an
+organization of the pathogenic material, the following results of
+experience may be useful: _It is perfectly hopeless to attempt to make
+any direct headway towards the nucleus of the pathogenic organization._
+Even if it could be guessed the patient would still not know what to
+start with the explanation given to him, nor would it change him
+psychically.
+
+There is nothing left to do but follow up the periphery of the
+pathogenic psychic formation. One begins by allowing the patient to
+relate and recall what he knows, during which one can already direct his
+attention, and through the application of the pressure procedure slight
+resistances may be overcome. Whenever a new way is opened through
+pressure it can be expected that the patient will continue it for some
+distance without any new resistance.
+
+After having worked for a while in such manner a coöperating activity is
+usually manifested in the patient. A number of reminiscences now occur
+to him without any need of questioning or setting him a task. A way has
+thus been opened into an inner strata, within which the patient now
+spontaneously disposes of the material of equal resistance. It is well
+to allow him to reproduce for a while without being influenced; of
+course, he is unable to reveal important connections, but he may be
+allowed to clear things within the same stratum. The things which he
+thus reproduces often seem disconnected, but they give up the material
+which is later revived by the recognized connections.
+
+One has to guard here in general against two things. If the patient is
+checked in the reproduction of the inflowing ideas, something is apt to
+be “buried” which must be uncovered later with great effort. On the
+other hand one must not overestimate his “unconscious intelligence,” and
+one must not allow it to direct the whole work. If I should wish to
+schematize the mode of labor, I could perhaps say that one should
+himself undertake the opening of the inner strata and the advancement in
+the radial direction, while the patient should take care of the
+peripheral extension.
+
+The advancement is brought about by the fact that the resistance is
+overcome in the manner indicated above. As a rule, however, one must at
+first solve another problem. One must obtain a piece of a logical thread
+by which direction alone one can hope to penetrate into the interior.
+One should not expect that the voluntary information of the patient, the
+material which is mostly in the superficial strata, will make it easy
+for the analyzer to recognize the locations where it enters into the
+deep, and to which points the desired connections of thought are
+attached. On the contrary, just this is cautiously concealed, the
+assertion of the patient sounds perfect and fixed in itself. One is at
+first confronted, as it were, by a wall which shuts off every view, and
+gives no suggestion of anything hidden behind it.
+
+If, however, one views with a critical eye the assertion obtained from
+the patient without much effort and resistance, one will unmistakably
+discover in it gaps and injuries. Here the connection is manifestly
+interrupted and is scantily completed by the patient by an expression
+conveying quite insufficient information. Here one strikes against a
+motive which in a normal person would be designated as flimsy. The
+patient refuses to recognize these gaps when his attention is called to
+them. The physician, however, does well to seek under these weak points
+access to the material of the deeper layers and to hope to discover just
+here the threads of the connections which he traces by the pressure
+procedure. One, therefore, tells the patient, “You are mistaken, what
+you assert can have nothing to do with the thing in question; here we
+will have to strike against something which will occur to you under the
+pressure of my hand.”
+
+The hysterical stream of thought, even if it reaches into the
+unconscious, may be expected to show the same logical connections and
+sufficient causations as those that would be formed in a normal
+individual. A looseness of these relationships does not lie within the
+sphere of influence of the neurosis. If the association of ideas of
+neurotics, and especially of hysterics, makes a different impression, if
+the relation of the intensities of different ideas does not seem to be
+explainable here on psychological determinants alone, we know that such
+manifestations are due to the existence of concealed unconscious
+motives. Such secret motives may be expected wherever such a deviation
+in the connection, or a transgression from the normally justified
+causations can be demonstrated.
+
+To be sure one must free himself from the theoretical prejudice that one
+has to deal with abnormal brains of dégénerés and deséquilibrés, in whom
+the freedom of overthrowing the common psychological laws of the
+association of ideas is a stigma, or in whom a preferred idea without
+any motive may grow intensively excessive, and another without
+psychological motives may remain indestructible. Experience shows the
+contrary in hysteria; as soon as the hidden—often unconsciously
+remaining—motives have been revealed and brought to account there
+remains nothing in the hysterical thought connection that is enigmatical
+and anomalous.
+
+Thus by tracing the breaches in the first statements of the patient,
+which are often hidden by “false connections,” one gets hold of a part
+of the logical thread at the periphery, and thereafter continues the
+route by the pressure procedure.
+
+Very seldom do we succeed in working our way into the inner strata by
+the same thread, usually it breaks on the way when the pressure fails,
+giving up either no experience, or one which cannot be explained or be
+continued despite all efforts. In such a case we soon learn how to
+protect ourselves from the obvious confusion. The expression of the
+patient must decide whether one really reached an end or encountered a
+case needing no psychic explanation, or whether it is the enormous
+resistance that halts the work. If the latter cannot soon be overcome,
+it may be assumed that the thread has been followed into a strata which
+is as yet impenetrable. One lets it fall in order to grasp another
+thread which may, perhaps, be followed up just as far. If one has
+followed all the threads into this strata, if the knottings have been
+reached through which no single isolated thread can be followed, it is
+well to think of seizing anew the resistances on hand.
+
+One can readily imagine how complicated such a work may become. By
+constantly overcoming the resistance, one pushes his way into the inner
+strata, gaining knowledge concerning the accumulative themes and passing
+threads found in this layer; one examines as far as he can advance with
+the means at hand, and by means of the pressure procedure he gains first
+information concerning the content of the next strata.
+
+The threads are dropped, taken up again, and followed up until they
+reach the juncture; they are always retrieved, and by following a memory
+fascicle one reaches some by-way which finally opens again. In this
+manner it is possible to leave the work, layer by layer, and advance
+directly on the main road to the nucleus of the pathogenic organization.
+Thus the fight is won but not finished. One has to follow up the other
+threads and exhaust the material; but now the patient helps again
+energetically, for his resistance has mostly been broken.
+
+In these later stages of the work it is of advantage if one can surmise
+the connection and tell it to the patient before it has been revealed.
+If the conjecture is correct the course of the analysis is accelerated,
+but even an incorrect hypothesis helps, for it urges the patient to
+participate and elicits from him energetic refutation, thus revealing
+that he surely knows better.
+
+One, thereby, becomes astonishingly convinced, _that it is not possible
+to press upon the patient things which he apparently does not know, or
+to influence the results of the analysis by exciting his expectations_.
+I have not succeeded a single time in altering or falsifying the
+reproductions of memory or the connections of events by my predictions;
+had I succeeded it surely would have been revealed in the end by a
+contradiction in the construction. If anything occurred as I predicted,
+the correctness of my conjecture was always attested by numerous
+trustworthy reminiscences. Hence, one must not fear to express his
+opinion to the patient concerning the connections which are to follow;
+it does no harm.
+
+Another manifestation which can be repeatedly observed refers to the
+patient’s independent reproductions. It can be asserted that not a
+single reminiscence comes to the surface during such an analysis which
+has no significance. An interposition of irrelevant memory pictures
+having no connection with the important associations does not really
+occur. An exception not contrary to the rule may be postulated for those
+reminiscences which, though in themselves unimportant, are indispensable
+as intercalations, since the associations between two related
+reminiscences passed through them only.—As mentioned above, the period
+during which a reminiscence abides in the pass of the patient’s
+consciousness is directly proportionate to its significance. A picture
+which does not disappear requires further consideration; a thought which
+cannot be abolished must be followed further. A reminiscence never
+recurs if it has been adjusted, a picture spoken away cannot be seen
+again. However, if that does happen it can be definitely expected that
+the second time the picture will be joined by a new content of thought,
+that the idea will contain a new inference which will show that no
+perfect adjustment has taken place. On the other hand, a recurrence of
+different intensities, at first vaguely then quite plainly, often
+occurs, but it does not, however, contradict the assertion just
+advanced.
+
+If the object of the analysis is to remove a symptom (pains, symptoms
+like vomiting, sensations and contractures) which is capable of
+aggravation or recurrence, the symptom shows during the work the
+interesting and not undesirable phenomenon of “joining in the
+discussion.” The symptom in question reappears, or appears with greater
+intensity, as soon as one penetrates into the region of the pathogenic
+organization containing the etiology of this symptom, and it continues
+to accompany the work with characteristic and instructive fluctuations.
+The intensity of the same (let us say of a nausea) increases the deeper
+one penetrates into its pathogenic reminiscence; it reaches its height
+shortly before the latter has been expressed, and suddenly subsides or
+disappears completely for a while after it has been fully expressed. If
+through resistance the patient delays the expression, the tension of the
+sensation of nausea becomes unbearable, and, if the expression cannot be
+forced, vomiting actually sets in. One thus gains a plastic impression
+of the fact that the vomiting takes the place of a psychic action (here
+that of speaking) just as was asserted in the conversion theory of
+hysteria.
+
+The fluctuation of intensity on the part of the hysterical symptom
+recurs as often as one of its new and pathogenic reminiscences is
+attacked; the symptom remains, as it were, all the time the order of the
+day. If it is necessary to drop for awhile the thread upon which this
+symptom hangs, the symptom, too, merges into obscurity in order to
+emerge again at a later period of the analysis. This play continues
+until, through the completion of the pathogenic material, there occurs a
+definite adjustment of this symptom.
+
+Strictly speaking the hysterical symptom does not behave here
+differently than a memory picture or a reproduced thought which is
+evoked by the pressure of the hand. Here, as there, the adjustment
+necessitates the same obsessing obstinacy of recurrence in the memory of
+the patient. The difference lies only in the apparent spontaneous
+appearance of the hysterical symptom, whereas one readily recalls having
+himself provoked the scenes and ideas. But in reality the memory symbols
+run in an uninterrupted series from the unchanged memory remnants of
+affectful experiences and thinking-acts to the hysterical symptoms.
+
+The phenomenon of “joining in the discussion” of the hysterical symptom
+during the analysis carries with it a practical inconvenience to which
+the patient should be reconciled. It is quite impossible to undertake
+the analysis of a symptom in one stretch or to divide the pauses in the
+work in such a manner as to precisely coincide with the resting point in
+the adjustment. Furthermore, the interruption which is categorically
+dictated by the accessory circumstances of the treatment, like the late
+hour, etc., often occurs in the most awkward locations, just when some
+critical point could be approached or when a new theme comes to light.
+These are the same inconveniences which every newspaper reader
+experiences in reading the daily fragments of his newspaper romance,
+when, immediately after the decisive speech of the heroine, or after the
+report of a shot, etc., he reads, “To be continued.” In our case the
+raked-up but unabolished theme, the at first strengthened but not yet
+explained symptom, remains in the patient’s psyche, and troubles him
+perhaps more than before.
+
+But the patient must understand this as it cannot be differently
+arranged. Indeed, there are patients who during such an analysis are
+unable to get rid of the theme once touched; they are obsessed by it
+even during the interval between the two treatments, and as they are
+unable to advance alone with the adjustment, they suffer more than
+before. Such patients, too, finally learn to wait for the doctor,
+postponing all interest which they have in the adjustment of the
+pathogenic material for the hours of the treatment, and they then begin
+to feel freer during the intervals.
+
+
+The general condition of the patient during such an analysis seems also
+worthy of consideration. For a while it remains uninfluenced by the
+treatment expressing the former effective factors. But then a moment
+comes in which the patient is seized, and his interest chained and from
+that time his general condition becomes more and more dependent on the
+condition of the work. Whenever a new explanation is gained and an
+important contribution in the chain of the analysis is reached, the
+patient feels relieved and experiences a presentiment of the approaching
+deliverance; but at each standstill of the work, at each threatening
+entanglement, the psychic burden which oppresses him grows, and the
+unhappy sensation of his incapacity increases. To be sure, both
+conditions are only temporary, for the analysis continues disdaining to
+boast of a moment of wellbeing, and continues regardlessly over the
+period of gloominess. One is generally pleased if it is possible to
+substitute the spontaneous fluctuations in the condition of the patient
+by such as one himself provokes and understands, just as one prefers to
+see in place of the spontaneous discharge of the symptoms that order of
+the day which corresponds to the condition of the analysis.
+
+Usually the deeper one penetrates into the above described layers of the
+psychic structure the more obscure and difficult the work will at first
+become. But once the nucleus is reached light ensues, and there is no
+more fear that a marked gloom will be cast over the condition of the
+patient. However, the reward of the labor, the cessation of the symptoms
+of the disease can only be expected when the full analysis of every
+individual symptom has been accomplished; indeed where the individual
+symptoms are connected through many junctures one is not even encouraged
+by partial successes during the work. By virtue of the great number of
+existing causal connections every unadjusted pathogenic idea acts as a
+motive for the complete creation of the neurosis, and only with the last
+word of the analysis does the whole picture of the disease disappear,
+just as happens in the behavior of the individual reproduced
+reminiscence.
+
+If a pathogenic reminiscence or a pathogenic connection which was
+previously withdrawn from the ego consciousness is revealed by the work
+of the analysis and inserted into the ego, one can observe in the
+psychic personality which was thus enriched the many ways in which it
+gives utterance to its gain. Especially does it frequently happen that
+after the patients have been painstakingly forced to a certain
+knowledge, they say: “Why I have known that all the time, I could have
+told you that before.” Those who have more insight recognize this
+afterwards as a self deception and accuse themselves of ungratefulness.
+In general the position that the ego takes towards the new acquisition
+depends upon the strata of the analysis from which the latter
+originates. Whatever belongs to the outermost layers is recognized
+without any difficulty, for it always remained in the possession of the
+ego, and the only thing that was new to the ego was its connection with
+the deeper layers of the pathogenic material. Whatever is brought to
+light from these deeper layers also finds appreciation and recognition,
+but frequently only after long hesitation and reflection. Of course,
+visual memory pictures are here more difficult to deny than
+reminiscences of mere streams of thought. Not very seldom the patient
+will at first say, “It is possible that I thought of that, but I cannot
+recall it,” and only after a longer familiarity with this supposition
+recognition will appear. He then recalls and even verifies by sight
+associations that he once really had this thought. During the analysis I
+make it a point of holding the value of an emerging reminiscence
+independent of the patient’s recognition. I am not tired of repeating
+that we are obliged to accept everything that we bring to light with our
+means. Should there be anything unreal or incorrect in the material thus
+revealed, the connection will later teach us to separate it. I may add
+that I rarely ever have occasion to subsequently withdraw the
+recognition from a reminiscence which I had preliminarily admitted. In
+spite of the deceptive appearance of an urgent contradiction, whatever
+came to the surface finally proved itself correct.
+
+Those ideas which originate in the deepest layer, and from the nucleus
+of the pathogenic organization, are only with the greatest difficulty
+recognized by the patient as reminiscences. Even after everything is
+accomplished, when the patients are overcome by the logical force and
+are convinced of the curative effect accompanying the emerging of this
+idea—I say even if the patients themselves assume that they have thought
+“so” and “so” they often add, “but to recall, that I have thought so, I
+cannot.” One readily comes to an understanding with them by saying that
+these were unconscious thoughts. But how should we note this state of
+affairs in our own psychological views? Should we pay no heed to the
+patient’s demurring recognition which has no motive after the work has
+been completed; should we assume that it was really a question of
+thoughts which never occurred, and for which there is only a possibility
+of existence so that the therapy would consist in the consummation of a
+psychic act which at that time never took place? It is obviously
+impossible to state anything about it, that is, to state anything
+concerning the condition of the pathogenic material previous to the
+analysis, before one has thoroughly explained his psychological views
+especially concerning the essence of consciousness. It is a fact worthy
+of reflection that in such analyses one can follow a stream of thought
+from the conscious into the unconscious (that is, absolutely not
+recognized as a reminiscence) thence draw it for some distance through
+the consciousness, and again see it end in the unconscious; and still
+this variation of the psychic elucidation would change nothing in it, in
+its logicalness, and in a single part of its connection. Should I then
+have this stream of thought freely before me, I could not conjecture
+what part was, and what part was not recognized by the patient as a
+reminiscence. In a measure I see only the points of the stream of
+thought merging into the unconscious, just the reverse of that which has
+been claimed for our normal psychic processes.
+
+
+I still have another theme to treat which plays an undesirably great
+part in the work of such a cathartic analysis. I have already admitted
+the possibility that the pressure procedure may fail and despite all
+assurance and urging it may evoke no reminiscences. I also stated that
+two possibilities are to be considered, there is really nothing to evoke
+in the place where we investigate—that can be recognized by the
+perfectly calm expression of the patient—or, we have struck against a
+resistance to be overcome only at some future time. We are confronted
+with a new layer into which we cannot as yet penetrate, and this can
+again be read from the drawn and psychic exertion of the patient’s
+expression. A third cause may be possible which also indicates an
+obstacle, not as to the purport, but externally. This cause occurs when
+the relation of the patient to the physician is disturbed, and signifies
+the worst obstacle that can be encountered. One may consider that in
+every more serious analysis.
+
+I have already alluded to the important rôle falling to the personality
+of the physician in the creation of motives which are to overcome the
+psychic force of the resistance. In not a few cases, especially in women
+and where we deal with the explanation of erotic streams of thought, the
+cooperation of the patient becomes a personal sacrifice which must be
+recompensed by some kind of a substitute of love. The great effort and
+the patient friendliness for the physician suffice as such substitutes.
+If this relation of the patient to the physician is disturbed the
+readiness of the patient fails; if the physician desires information
+concerning the next pathogenic idea, the patient is confronted by the
+consciousness of the unpleasantness which has accumulated in her against
+the physician. As far as I have discovered this obstacle occurs in three
+principal cases:
+
+1. In personal estrangement, if the patient believes herself slighted,
+disparaged and insulted, or if she hears unfavorable accounts concerning
+the physician and his methods of treatment. This is the least serious
+case. The obstacle can readily be overcome by discussion and
+explanation, although the sensitiveness and the suspicion of hysterics
+can occasionally manifest itself in unsuspected dimensions.
+
+2. If the patient is seized with the fear that she becomes too
+accustomed to her physician, that in his presence she loses her
+independence and could even become sexually dependent upon him; this
+case is more significant because it is less determined individually. The
+occasion for this obstacle lies in the nature of the therapeutic
+distress. The patient has now a new motive to resist which manifests
+itself, not only in a certain reminiscence but at each attempt of the
+treatment. Whenever the pressure procedure is started the patient
+usually complains of headache. Her new motive for the resistance remains
+to her for the most part unconscious, and she manifests it by a newly
+created hysterical symptom. The headache signifies the aversion towards
+being influenced.
+
+3. If the patient fears lest the painful ideas emerging from the content
+of the analysis would be transferred to the physician. This happens
+frequently, and, indeed, in many analyses it is a regular occurrence.
+The transference to the physician occurs through false connections.[35]
+I must here give an example. The origin of a certain hysterical symptom
+in one of my hysterical patients was the wish she entertained years ago
+which was immediately banished into the unconscious, that the man with
+whom she at that time conversed would heartily grasp her and force a
+kiss on her. After the ending of a session such a wish occurred to the
+patient in reference to me. She was horrified and spent a sleepless
+night, and at the next session, although she did not refuse the
+treatment she was totally unfit for the work. After I had discovered the
+obstacle and removed it, the work continued. The wish that so frightened
+the patient appeared as the next pathogenic reminiscence, that is, as
+the one now required by the logical connection. It came about in the
+following manner: The content of the wish at first appeared in the
+patient’s consciousness without the recollection of the accessory
+circumstances which would have transferred this wish into the past. By
+the associative force prevailing in consciousness the existing wish
+became connected with my own person, with which the patient could
+naturally occupy herself, and in this mesalliance—which I call a false
+connection—the same affect became reawakened which originally urged the
+patient to banish this clandestine wish. As soon as I discovered this I
+could presuppose every similar claim on my personality to be another
+transference and false connection. It is remarkable how the patient
+falls a victim to deception on every new occasion.
+
+No analysis can be brought to an end if one does not know how to meet
+the resistances resulting from the causes mentioned. The way can be
+found if one bears in mind that the new symptom produced after the old
+model should be treated like the old symptoms. In the first place it is
+necessary to make the patient conscious of the obstacle. In one of my
+patients, in whom the pressure symptoms suddenly failed and I had cause
+to assume an unconscious idea like the one mentioned in 2, I met it for
+the first time with an unexpected attack. I told her that there must
+have originated some obstacle against the continuation of the treatment
+and that the pressure procedure has at least the power to show her the
+obstacle, and then pressed her head. She then said, surprisingly, “I see
+you sitting here on the chair, but that is nonsense, what can that
+mean?”—But now I could explain it.
+
+In another patient the obstacle did not usually show itself directly on
+pressure, but I could always demonstrate it by taking the patient back
+to the moment in which it originated. The pressure procedure never
+failed to bring back this moment. By discovering and demonstrating the
+obstacle, the first difficulty was removed, but a greater one still
+remained. The difficulty lay in inducing the patient to give information
+where there was an obvious personal relation and where the third person
+coincided with the physician. At first I was very much annoyed about the
+increase of this psychic work until I had learned to see the lawful part
+of this whole process, and I then also noticed that such a transference
+does not cause any considerable increase in the work. The work of the
+patient remained the same, she perhaps had to overcome the painful
+affect of having entertained such a wish, and it seemed to be the same
+for the success whether she took this psychic repulsion as a theme of
+the work in the historical case or in the recent case with me. The
+patients also gradually learned to see that in such transferences to the
+person of the physician they generally dealt with a force or a deception
+which disappeared when the analysis was accomplished. I believe,
+however, that if I should have delayed in making clear to them the
+nature of the obstacle, I would have given them a new, though a milder,
+hysterical symptom for another spontaneously developed.
+
+
+I now believe that I have sufficiently indicated how such analyses
+should be executed, and the experiences connected with them. They
+perhaps make some things appear more complicated than they are, for many
+things really result by themselves during such work. I have not
+enumerated the difficulties of the work in order to give the impression
+that in view of such requirements it pays for the physician and patient
+to undertake a cathartic analysis only in the rarest cases. I allow my
+medical activities to be inflected by the contrary suppositions.—To be
+sure I am unable to formulate the most definite indications for the
+application of the here discussed therapeutic method without entering
+into the valuation of the more significant and more comprehensive theme
+of the therapy of the neuroses in general. I have often compared the
+cathartic psychotherapy to surgical measures, and designated my cures as
+psychotherapeutic operations; the analogies follow the opening of a pus
+pocket, the curetting of a carious location, etc. Such an analogy finds
+its justification, not so much in the removal of the morbid as in the
+production of better curative conditions for the issue of the process.
+
+When I promised my patients help and relief through the cathartic
+method, I was often obliged to hear the following objections: “You say,
+yourself, that my suffering has probably to do with my own relation and
+destinies. You cannot change any of that. In what manner, then, can you
+help me?” To this I could always answer: “I do not doubt at all that it
+would be easier for destiny than for me to remove your sufferings, but
+you will be convinced that much will be gained if we succeed in
+transforming your hysterical misery into everyday unhappiness, against
+which you will be better able to defend yourself with a restored nervous
+system.”
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+ THE DEFENSE NEURO-PSYCHOSES.
+A TENTATIVE PSYCHOLOGICAL THEORY OF ACQUIRED HYSTERIA, MANY PHOBIAS AND
+ OBSESSIONS, AND CERTAIN HALLUCINATORY PSYCHOSES.
+
+
+After an exhaustive study of many nervous patients afflicted with
+phobias and obsessions a tentative explanation of these symptoms urged
+itself upon me. This helped me afterwards happily to divine the origin
+of such morbid ideas in new and other cases, and I therefore believe it
+worthy of reporting and further examination. Simultaneously with this
+“psychological theory of phobias and obsessions,” the examination of
+these patients resulted in a contribution to the theory of hysteria, or
+rather in an alteration of the same, which seems to imply an important
+and common character to hysteria as well as the mentioned neuroses.
+Furthermore, I had the opportunity to look into the psychological
+mechanism of a form of indubitable psychic disease and found that my
+attempted observation shows an intelligible connection between these
+psychoses and the two neuroses mentioned. At the conclusion of this
+theme I will describe the supporting hypothesis which I have used in all
+three cases.
+
+
+ I.
+
+I am beginning with that alteration which seems to be necessary for the
+theory of the hysterical neuroses.
+
+That the symptom-complex of hysteria as far as it can be understood,
+justifies the assumption of a splitting of consciousness with the
+formation of separate psychic groups, has attained general recognition
+since P. Janet, J. Breuer, and others have given out their interesting
+work. Less understood are the opinions concerning the origin of this
+splitting of consciousness and concerning the rôle played by this
+character in the structure of the hysterical neuroses.
+
+According to Janet’s[36] theory, the splitting of consciousness is a
+primary feature of the hysterical alteration. It is due to a congenital
+weakness of the capacity for psychic synthesis, and to a narrowing of
+the “field of consciousness” (champ du conscience) which as a psychic
+stigma proves the degeneration of hysterical individuals.
+
+In contradistinction to Janet’s views, which in my opinion admit the
+most manifold objections, are those advocated by J. Breuer in our joint
+communication. According to Breuer, the “basis and determination” of
+hysteria is the occurrence of peculiar dream-like conscious states with
+a narrowed association capacity, for which he proposes the name “hypnoid
+states.” The splitting of consciousness is secondary and acquired, and
+originates because the ideas emerging in the hypnoid states are isolated
+from associative communication with the rest of consciousness.
+
+I can now demonstrate two other extreme forms of hysteria in which it is
+impossible to show that the splitting of consciousness is primary in the
+sense of Janet. In the first of these forms I could repeatedly show that
+the splitting of the content of consciousness was an arbitrary act of
+the patient, that is, it was initiated through an exertion of the will
+which motive can be stated. I naturally do not maintain that the patient
+intended to produce a splitting of his consciousness; the patient’s
+intention was different, but instead of attaining its aim it provoked a
+splitting of consciousness.
+
+In the third form of hysteria, as we have demonstrated by
+psychic-analysis of intelligent patients, the splitting of consciousness
+plays only an insignificant and perhaps really no rôle. This includes
+those cases in which there had been no reaction to the traumatic
+stimulus and which were then adjusted and cured by ab-reaction. They are
+the pure retention hysterias.
+
+In connection with the phobias and obsessions I have only to deal here
+with the second form of hysteria which for reasons to be presently
+explained I will designate as defense hysteria and thus distinguish it
+from the hypnoid and retention hysterias. Preliminarily I am able to
+call my cases of defense hysteria “acquired” hysterias for they show
+neither marked hereditary taints nor any degenerative disfigurements.
+
+In those patients whom I have analyzed there existed psychic health
+until the moment in which a case of incompatibility occurred in their
+ideation, that is, until there appeared an experience, idea, or feeling
+which evoked such a painful affect that the person decided to forget it
+because he did not trust his own ability to remove the resistance
+between the unbearable ideas and his ego.
+
+Such incompatible ideas originate in the feminine sex on the basis of
+sexual experiences and feelings. With all desired precision the patients
+recall their efforts of defense, their intention “to push it away,” not
+to think of it, to repress it. As appropriate examples I can easily cite
+the following cases from my own experience: A young lady reproached
+herself because, while nursing her sick father, she thought of a young
+man who made a slight erotic impression on her; a governess fell in love
+with her employer and decided to crowd it out of her mind because it was
+incompatible with her pride, etc.
+
+I am unable to maintain that the exertion of the will, in crowding such
+thoughts out of one’s mind, is a pathological act, nor am I able to
+state whether and how, the intentional forgetting succeeds in those
+persons who remain well under the same psychic influences. I only know
+that in the patients whom I analyzed such “forgetting” was unsuccessful
+and led to either a hysteria, obsession, or a hallucinatory psychosis.
+The ability to produce, by the exertion of the will one of these states
+all of which are connected with the splitting of consciousness, is to be
+considered as the expression of a pathological disposition, but it need
+not necessarily be identified with personal or hereditary
+“degeneration.”
+
+Over the road leading from the patient’s exertion of the will to the
+origin of a neurotic symptom I formed a conception which in the current
+psychological abstractions may be thus expressed: The task assumed by
+the defensive ego to treat the incompatible idea as “non arrivée” can
+not be directly accomplished. The memory trace as well as the affect
+adhering to the idea are here and can not be exterminated. The task can
+however, be brought to an approximate solution if it is possible to
+change the strong idea into a weak one and to take away the affect or
+sum of excitement which adheres to it. The weak idea will then exert
+almost no claims on the association work; but the separated sum of
+excitement must be utilized in another direction.
+
+Thus far the processes are the same in hysteria, in phobias and
+obsessions, but from now on their ways part. The unbearable idea in
+hysteria is rendered harmless because the sum of excitement is
+transformed into physical manifestations, a process for which I would
+like to propose the term conversion.
+
+The conversion may be total or partial, and follows that motor or
+sensory innervation which is either ultimately or more loosely connected
+with the traumatic experience. In this way the ego succeeds in freeing
+itself from opposition but instead it becomes burdened with a memory
+symbol which remains in consciousness as an unadjusted motor
+innervation, or as a constantly recurring hallucinatory sensation
+similar to a parasite. It thus remains fixed until a conversion takes
+place in the opposite direction. The memory symbol of the repressed idea
+does not perish, but from now on forms the nucleus for a second psychic
+group.
+
+I will follow up this view of the psycho-physical processes in hysteria
+with a few more words. If such a nucleus for an hysterical splitting is
+once formed in a “traumatic moment” it then increases in other moments
+which might be designated as “auxiliary traumatic” as soon as a newly
+formed similar impression succeeds in breaking through the barrier
+formed by the will and in adding new affects to the weakened idea, and
+in forcing for a while the associative union of both psychic groups
+until a new conversion produces defense. The condition thus attained in
+hysteria in regard to the distribution of the excitement, proves to be
+unstable in most cases. As shown by the familiar contrast of the attacks
+and the persistent symptoms, the excitement which was pushed on a false
+path (in the bodily innervation) now and then returns to the idea from
+which it was discharged and forces the person to associative elaboration
+or to adjustment in hysterical attacks. The effect of Breuer’s cathartic
+method consists in the fact that it consciously reconducts the
+excitement from the physical into the psychic spheres and then forces an
+adjustment of the contradiction through intellectual work, and a
+discharge of the excitement through speech.
+
+If the splitting of consciousness in acquired hysteria is due to an act
+of volition we can explain with surprising simplicity the remarkable
+fact that hypnosis regularly broadens the narrowed consciousness of
+hysteria, and causes the split off psychic groups to become accessible.
+For we know that it is peculiar to all sleep-like states to remove that
+distribution of excitement which depends on the “will” of the conscious
+personality.
+
+We accordingly recognize that the characteristic moment of hysteria is
+not the splitting of consciousness but the ability of conversion, and as
+an important part of the hitherto unknown disposition of hysteria we can
+mention the psycho-physical adaptation for the transference of a great
+sum of excitement into bodily innervation.
+
+The adaptation does not in itself exclude psychic health, and leads to
+hysteria only in event of a psychic incompatibility or accumulation of
+excitement. With this turn, we—Breuer and I—come near to the familiar
+definitions of hysteria of Oppenheim[37] and Strümpel,[38] and deviate
+from Janet,[39] who assigns to the splitting of consciousness too great
+a rôle in the characteristics of hysteria. The description here given
+can lay claim to the fact that it explains the connection between the
+conversion and the hysterical splitting of consciousness.
+
+
+ II
+
+In a predisposed person if there is no adaptation for conversion, and
+still for the purpose of defense a separation of the unbearable idea
+from its affect is undertaken, the affect must then remain in the
+psychic sphere. The weakened idea remains apart from all association in
+consciousness, but its freed affect attaches itself to other not in
+themselves unbearable ideas, which on account of this “false” connection
+become obsessions. This is in brief the psychological theory of the
+obsessions and phobias concerning which I have spoken above.
+
+I will now state what parts demanded in this theory can be directly
+demonstrated and what parts I have supplemented. Besides the end product
+of the process, the obsession, we can in the first place directly
+demonstrate the source from which the affect in the false connection
+originates. In all cases that I have analyzed it was the sexual life
+that has furnished a painful affect of precisely the same character as
+the one attached to the obsession. It is not theoretically excluded that
+this affect could not occasionally originate in other spheres, but I
+must say that thus far I have found no other origin. Moreover, one can
+readily understand that it is precisely the sexual life which furnishes
+the most manifold occasions for the appearance of unbearable ideas.
+
+Moreover, the exertion of the will, the attempt at defence, upon which
+this theory lays stress is demonstrated by the most unequivocal
+utterances of the patients. At least in a number of cases the patients
+themselves inform us that the phobia or obsession appeared only after
+the exertion of the will manifestly gained its point. “Something very
+disagreeable happened to me once and I have exerted all my power to push
+it away, not to think of it. When I have finally succeeded I have gotten
+the other thing instead, which I have not lost since.” With these words
+a patient verified the main points of the theory here developed.
+
+Not all who suffer from obsessions are so clear concerning the origin of
+the same. As a rule when we call the patient’s attention to the original
+idea of a sexual nature we receive the following answer: “It could not
+have come from that. Why I have not thought much about it. For a moment
+I was frightened, then I distracted myself and since then it has not
+bothered me.” In this, so frequent objection, we have the proof that the
+obsession represents a compensation or substitute for the unbearable
+sexual idea, and that it has taken its place in consciousness.
+
+Between the patient’s exertion of the will which succeeds in repressing
+the unacceptable sexual idea and the appearance of the obsession, which
+though in itself of little intensity, is here furnished with
+inconceivably strong affect, there is a yawning gap which the theory
+here developed will fill. The separation of the sexual idea from its
+affect and the connection of the latter with another suitable but not
+unbearable idea—these are processes which take place unconsciously which
+we can only presume but not prove by any clinico-psychological analysis.
+Perhaps it would be more correct to say that these are not really
+processes of a psychic nature but physical processes of which the
+psychic result so presents itself that the expressions “separation of
+the idea from its affect and false connection of the latter,” seem
+actual occurrences.
+
+Besides the cases evincing in turn the sexual unbearable idea and the
+obsession we find a series of others in which there are simultaneously
+obsessions and painfully accentuated sexual ideas. It will not do very
+well to call the latter “sexual obsessions”; they lack the essential
+character of obsessions in proving themselves fully justified, whereas
+the painfulness of the ordinary obsession is a problem for the doctor as
+well as the patient. From the amount of insight that could be obtained
+in such cases, it seems that we deal here with a continued defense
+against sexual ideas which are constantly renewed, a work heretofore not
+accomplished.
+
+As long as the patients are aware of the sexual origin of their
+obsessions they often conceal them. If they complain they generally
+express surprise that this affect underlies the symptoms, at being
+afraid, and at having certain impulses, etc. To the experienced
+physician, however, the affect appears justified and intelligible; he
+finds the striking part only in the connection of such an affect with an
+idea unworthy of it. In other words the affect of the obsession appears
+to him as one dislocated or transposed, and if he has accepted the
+observations here laid down he can in a great many cases of obsessions
+attempt a retranslation into the sexual.
+
+Any idea which either through its character may be combinable with an
+affect of such quality or which bears a certain relation to the
+unbearable by virtue of which it seems fit as a substitute for the same,
+may be used for the secondary connection of the freed affect. Thus, for
+example, freed anxiety, the sexual origin of which can not be recalled,
+attaches itself to the common primary phobias of man for animals,
+thunderstorms, darkness, etc., or to things which are unmistakably in
+some way associated with the sexual, such as urination, defecation,
+pollutions and infections.
+
+The advantage gained by the ego in the transposition of the affect for
+the purpose of defense is considerably less than in the hysterical
+conversion of psychic excitement into somatic innervation. The affect
+under which the ego has suffered remains now as ever unchanged and
+undiminished, but the unbearable idea is suppressed and excluded from
+memory. The repressed ideas again form the nucleus of a second psychic
+group which I believe can be accessible without having recourse to
+hypnotism. That in the phobias and obsessions there appear none of the
+striking symptoms which in hysteria accompany the formation of an
+independent psychic group, is due to the fact that in the former case
+the whole transformation remains in the psychic sphere and the somatic
+innervation experiences no change.
+
+What I have here said concerning obsessions I will explain by some
+examples which are probably of a typical nature:
+
+1. A young girl suffers from obsessive reproaches. If she reads anything
+in the journal about false coiners she conceives the thought that she
+too, made counterfeit money; if a murder was anywhere committed by an
+unknown assassin she anxiously asked herself whether she had not
+committed this crime. At the same time she is perfectly aware of the
+absurdity of these obsessive reproaches. For a time the consciousness of
+her guilt gained such a power over her that her judgment was suppressed,
+and she accused herself before her relatives and physician of having
+really committed all these crimes (Psychosis through simple
+aggravation—overwhelming psychosis—Uberwältigungspsychose). A thorough
+examination revealed the source of the origin of this guilty conscience.
+Accidentally incited by a sensual feeling she allowed herself to be
+allured by a friend to masturbate. She practiced it for years with the
+full consciousness of her wrong doing, and under the most violent but
+useless self reproaches.—The girl was cured after a few months’
+treatment and strict watching.
+
+2. Another girl suffered from the fear of getting sudden desires of
+micturition and of being forced to wet herself. This began after such a
+desire had really forced her to leave a concert hall during the
+performance. This phobia had gradually caused her to become quite
+incapable of any enjoyment and social relationship. She felt secure only
+when she knew that there was a toilet in the neighborhood to which she
+could repair unobserved. An organic suffering which might have justified
+this lack of confidence of the control of the bladder was excluded. At
+home among quiet surroundings and during the night there was no such
+desire to micturate. Detailed examination showed that the desire to
+micturate appeared for the first time under the following conditions: A
+gentleman to whom she was not indifferent took a seat in the concert
+hall not far from her. She began to think and to picture to herself how
+she would sit near him as his wife. In this erotic revery she
+experienced that physical feeling which must be compared to erection in
+the man, and which in her—I do not know whether it is general—ended in a
+slight desire to micturate. She now became extremely frightened over her
+otherwise accustomed sexual sensation because she had determined to
+overcome this as well as every desire, and in the next moment the affect
+transposed itself to the accompanying desire to micturate and forced her
+to leave the hall after a very painful struggle. In her life she was so
+prudish that she experienced an intensive horror for all things sexual,
+and could not conceive the thought of ever marrying; on the other hand
+she was sexually so hyperesthetic that during every erotic revery, which
+she gladly allowed herself, there appeared sensual feeling. The erection
+was always accompanied by the desire to micturate, and up to the time of
+the scene in the concert hall it had made no impression on her. The
+treatment led to an almost complete control of the phobia.
+
+3. A young woman who had only one child after five years of married life
+complained of obsessive impulses to throw herself from the window or
+balcony, and of fears lest at the sight of a sharp knife she might kill
+her child. She admitted that the marriage relations were seldom
+practised and then only with caution against conception; but she added
+that she did not miss this as she was not of a sensual nature. I then
+ventured to tell her that at the sight of a man she conceives erotic
+ideas, and that she therefore lost confidence in herself and imagined
+herself a depraved person fit for anything. The retranslation of the
+obsession into the sexual was successful; weeping, she soon admitted her
+long concealed marital misery, and then mentioned painful ideas of an
+unchanged sexual character such as the often recurring sensation of
+something forcing itself under her skirts.
+
+I have made use of such experiences in the therapy of phobias and
+obsessions, and despite the patient’s resistances I have redirected the
+attention to the repressed sexual ideas, and wherever feasible I have
+blocked the sources from which the same originated. To be sure I cannot
+maintain that all phobias and obsessions originate in the manner here
+revealed; first, my experience, in proportion to the abundance of these
+neuroses, embraces only a limited amount, and second, I, myself, know
+that these “psychasthenic” symptoms (according to Janet’s designation)
+are not all of the same value.[40] Thus, for instance, there are pure
+hysterical phobias. But I believe that the mechanism of the
+transposition of the affect will be demonstrated in the greater part of
+the phobias and obsessions, and I must assert that these neuroses, which
+are found just as often isolated as combined with hysteria and
+neurasthenia, are not to be thrown together with the ordinary
+neurasthenia for which fundamental symptom a psychic mechanism is not
+all to be assumed.
+
+
+ III.
+
+In both cases thus far considered the defense of the unbearable idea was
+brought about by the separation of the same from its affect; the idea
+though weakened and isolated remained in consciousness. There exists,
+however, a far more energetic and more successful form of defense
+wherein the ego misplaces the unbearable idea with its affect, and
+behaves as though the unbearable idea had never approached the ego. But
+at the moment when this is brought about the person suffers from a
+psychosis which can only be classified as an “hallucinatory confusion.”
+A single example will explain this assertion. A young girl gives her
+first impulsive love to a man who she firmly believed reciprocated her
+love. As a matter of fact she was mistaken; the young man had other
+motives for visiting her. It was not long before she was disappointed;
+at first she defended herself against it by converting hysterically the
+corresponding experience, and thus came to believe that he would come
+some day to ask her in marriage; but in consequence of the imperfect
+conversion and the constant pressure of new painful impressions, she
+felt unhappy and ill. She finally expects him with the greatest tension
+on a definite day, it is the day of a family reunion. The day passes but
+he does not come. After all the trains on which he could have come have
+passed she suddenly merged into an hallucinatory confusion. She thought
+that he did come, she heard his voice in the garden, and hastened down
+in her night gown to receive him. For two months after she lived in a
+happy dream, the content of which was that he was there, that he was
+always with her, and that everything was as before (before the time of
+the painfully defended disappointment). The hysteria and depression were
+thus conquered; during her sickness she never mentioned anything about
+the last period of doubt and suffering; she was happy as long as she was
+left undisturbed, and frenzied only when a regulation of her environment
+prevented her from accomplishing something which she thought quite
+natural as a result of her blissful dream. This psychosis,
+unintelligible as it was in its time, was revealed ten years later
+through hypnotic analysis.
+
+The fact to which I call attention is this: That the content of such an
+hallucinatory psychosis consists in directly bringing into prominence
+that idea which was threatened by the motive of the disease. One is
+therefore justified in saying that through its flight into the psychosis
+the ego defended the unbearable idea; the process through which this has
+been brought about withdraws itself from self perception as well as from
+the psychological-clinical analysis. It is to be considered as the
+expression of a higher grade of pathological disposition, and can
+perhaps be explained as follows: The ego tears itself away from the
+unbearable idea, but as it hangs inseparably together with a part of
+reality, the ego while accomplishing this performance also detaches
+itself wholly or partially from reality. The latter is, in my opinion
+the condition under which hallucinatory vividness is decreed to
+particular ideas, and hence after very successful defense the person
+finds himself in a hallucinatory confusion.
+
+I have but very few analyses of such psychoses at my disposal; but I
+believe that we deal with a very frequently employed type of psychic
+illness. For analogous examples such as the mother who becoming sick
+after the loss of her child continues to rock in her arms a piece of
+wood, or the jilted bride who in full dress expects her bridegroom, can
+be seen in every insane asylum.
+
+It will perhaps not be superfluous to mention that the three forms of
+defense here considered, and hence the three forms of disease to which
+this defense leads may be united in the same person. The simultaneous
+occurrence of phobias and hysterical symptoms, so frequently observed in
+praxis, really belongs to those moments which impede a pure separation
+of hysteria from other neuroses and urge the formation of the “mixed
+neuroses.” To be sure the hallucinatory confusion is not frequently
+compatible with the continuation of hysteria and not as a rule with
+obsessions; but on the other hand it is not rare that a defense
+psychosis should episodically break through the course of a hysteria or
+mixed neurosis.
+
+
+In conclusion I will mention in few words the subsidiary idea of which I
+have made use in this discussion of the defense neuroses. It is the idea
+that there is something to distinguish in all psychic functions (amount
+of affect, sum of excitement), that all qualities have a quantity though
+we have no means to measure the same—it is something that can be
+increased, diminished, displaced, and discharged, and that extends over
+the memory traces of the ideas perhaps like an electric charge over the
+surface of the body.
+
+This hypothesis, which also underlies our theory of “ab-reaction”
+(“Preliminary Communication”), can be used in the same sense as the
+physicist uses the assumption of the current of electric fluid. It is
+preliminarily justified through its usefulness in the comprehension and
+elucidation of diverse psychic states.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+ON THE RIGHT TO SEPARATE FROM NEURASTHENIA A DEFINITE SYMPTOM-COMPLEX AS
+ “ANXIETY NEUROSIS”
+ (ANGSTNEUROSE).
+
+
+It is difficult to assert anything of general validity concerning
+neurasthenia as long as this term is allowed to express all that for
+which Beard used it. I believe that neuropathology can only gain by an
+attempt to separate from the actual neurosis all those neurotic
+disturbances the symptoms of which are on the one hand more firmly
+connected among themselves than to the typical neurasthenic symptoms,
+such as headache, spinal irritation, dyspepsia with flatulence and
+constipation, and which on the other hand show essential differences
+from the typical neurasthenic neurosis in their etiology and mechanism.
+If we accept this plan we will soon gain quite a uniform picture of
+neurasthenia. We will soon be able to differentiate—sharper than we have
+hitherto succeeded—from the real neurasthenia the different
+pseudoneurasthenias, such as the organically determined nasal reflex
+neurosis, the neurotic disturbances of cachexias and arteriosclerosis,
+the early stages of progressive paralysis, and of some psychoses.
+Furthermore, following the proposition of Moebius, some status nervosi
+of hereditary degenerates will be set aside and we will also find
+reasons for ascribing some of the neuroses which are now called
+neurasthenia to melancholia, especially those of an intermittent or
+periodic nature. But we force the way into the most marked changes if we
+decide to separate from neurasthenia that symptom-complex which I shall
+hereafter describe and which especially fulfills the conditions
+formulated above. The symptoms of this complex are clinically more
+related to one another than to the real neurasthenic symptoms, that is,
+they frequently appear together and substitute one another in the course
+of the disease, and both the etiology as well as the mechanism of this
+neurosis differs basically from the etiology and the mechanism of the
+real neurasthenia which remains after such a separation.
+
+I call this symptom-complex “anxiety neurosis” (Angstneurose) because
+the sum of its components can be grouped around the main symptom of
+anxiety, because each individual symptom shows a definite relation to
+anxiety. I believed that I was original in this conception of the
+symptoms of anxiety neurosis until an interesting lecture by E.
+Hecker[41] fell into my hands. In this lecture I found the description
+of the same interpretation with all the desired clearness and
+completeness. To be sure, Hecker does not separate the equivalents or
+rudiments of the attack of anxiety from neurasthenia as I intend to do;
+but this is apparently due to the fact that neither here nor there has
+he taken into account the diversity of the etiological determinants.
+With the knowledge of the latter difference every obligation to
+designate the anxiety neurosis by the same name as the real neurasthenia
+disappears, for the only object of arbitrary naming is to facilitate the
+formulation of general assertions.
+
+
+ I. CLINICAL SYMPTOMATOLOGY OF ANXIETY NEUROSIS.
+
+What I call “anxiety neurosis” can be observed in complete or
+rudimentary development, either isolated or in combination with other
+neuroses. The cases which are in a measure complete, and at the same
+time isolated, are naturally those which especially corroborate the
+impression that the anxiety neurosis possesses clinical independence. In
+other cases we are confronted with the task of selecting and separating
+from a symptom-complex which corresponds to a “mixed neurosis,” all
+those symptoms which do not belong to neurasthenia, hysteria, etc., but
+to the anxiety neurosis.
+
+The clinical picture of the anxiety neurosis comprises the following
+symptoms:
+
+1. _General Irritability._—This is a frequent nervous symptom, common as
+such to many nervous states. I mention it here because it constantly
+occurs in the anxiety neurosis and is of theoretical significance. For
+increased irritability always points to an accumulation of excitement or
+to an inability to bear accumulation, hence to an absolute or relative
+accumulation of excitement. The expression of this increased
+irritability through an auditory hyperesthesia is especially worth
+mentioning; it is an over sensitiveness for noises, which symptom is
+certainly to be explained by the congenital intimate relationship
+between auditory impressions and fright. Auditory hyperesthesia is
+frequently found as a cause of insomnia, of which more than one form
+belongs to anxiety neurosis.
+
+2. _Anxious Expectation._—I can not better explain the condition that I
+have in mind, than by this name and by some appended examples. A woman,
+for example, who suffers from anxious expectation thinks of
+influenza-pneumonia whenever her husband who is afflicted with a
+catarrhal condition has a coughing spell; and in her mind she sees a
+passing funeral procession. If on her way home she sees two persons
+standing together in front of her house she can not refrain from the
+thought that one of her children fell out of the window; if she hears
+the bell ring she thinks that someone is bringing her mournful tidings,
+etc.; yet in none of these cases is there any special reason for
+exaggerating a mere possibility.
+
+The anxious expectation naturally reflects itself constantly in the
+normal, and embraces all that is designated as “uneasiness and a
+tendency to a pessimistic conception of things,” but as often as
+possible it goes beyond such a plausible uneasiness, and it is
+frequently recognized as a part of constraint even by the patient
+himself. For one form of anxious expectation, namely, that which refers
+to one’s own health, we can reserve the old name of hypochondria.
+Hypochondria does not always run parallel with the height of the general
+anxious expectation; as a preliminary stipulation it requires the
+existence of paresthesias and annoying somatic sensations. Hypochondria
+is thus the form preferred by the genuine neurasthenics whenever they
+merge into the anxiety neurosis, a thing which frequently happens.
+
+As a further manifestation of anxious expectation we may mention the
+frequent tendency observed in morally sensitive persons to pangs of
+conscience, scrupulosity, and pedantry, which varies as it were, from
+the normal to its aggravation as doubting mania.
+
+Anxious expectation is the most essential symptom of the neurosis; it
+also clearly shows a part of its theory. It can perhaps be said that we
+have here a quantum of freely floating anxiety which controls the choice
+of ideas by expectation and is forever ready to unite itself with any
+suitable ideation.
+
+3. This is not the only way in which the anxiousness, usually latent but
+constantly lurking in consciousness, can manifest itself. On the
+contrary it can also suddenly break into consciousness without being
+aroused by the issue of an idea, and thus provoke an attack of anxiety.
+Such an attack of anxiety consists of either the anxious feeling alone
+without any associated idea, or of the nearest interpretation of the
+termination of life, such as the idea of “sudden death” or threatening
+insanity; or the feeling of anxiety becomes mixed with some paresthesia
+(similar to the hysterical aura); or finally the anxious feeling may be
+combined with a disturbance of one or many somatic functions, such as
+respiration, cardiac activity, the vasomotor innervation, and the
+glandular activity. From this combination the patient renders especially
+prominent now this and now the other moment. He complains of
+“heartspasms,” “heavy breathing,” “profuse perspiration,” “inordinate
+appetite,” etc., and in his description the feeling of anxiety is put to
+the background or it is rather vaguely described as “feeling badly,”
+“uncomfortably,” etc.
+
+4. What is interesting and of diagnostic significance is the fact that
+the amount of admixture of these elements in the attack of anxiety
+varies extraordinarily, and that almost any accompanying symptom can
+alone constitute the attack as well as the anxiety itself. Accordingly
+there are rudimentary attacks of anxiety, and equivalents for the attack
+of anxiety, probably all of equal significance in showing a profuse and
+hitherto little appreciated richness in forms. A more thorough study of
+these larvated states of anxiety (Hecker) and their diagnostic division
+from other attacks ought soon to become the necessary work for the
+neuropathologist.
+
+I now add a list of those forms of attacks of anxiety with which I am
+acquainted. There are attacks:
+
+(_a_) With disturbances of heart action, such as palpitation with
+transitory arrythmia, with longer continued tachycardia up to grave
+states of heart weakness, the differentiation of which from organic
+heart affection is not always easy; among such we have the pseudo-angina
+pectoris, a delicate diagnostic sphere!
+
+(_b_) With disturbances of respiration, many forms of nervous dyspnoea,
+asthma-like attacks, etc. I assert that even these attacks are not
+always accompanied by conscious anxiety;
+
+(_c_) Of profuse perspiration, often nocturnal;
+
+(_d_) Of trembling and shaking which may readily be mistaken for
+hysterical attacks;
+
+(_e_) Of inordinate appetite, often combined with dizziness;
+
+(_f_) Of attack-like appearing diarrhoea;
+
+(_g_) Of locomotor dizziness;
+
+(_h_) Of so called congestions, embracing all that was called vasomotor
+neurasthenia; and,
+
+(_i_) Of paresthesias (These are seldom without anxiety or a similar
+discomfort).
+
+5. Very frequently the nocturnal frights (pavor nocturnus of adults)
+usually combined with anxiety, dyspnoea, perspiration, etc., is nothing
+other than a variety of the attack of anxiety. This disturbance
+determines a second form of insomnia in the sphere of the anxiety
+neurosis. Moreover I became convinced that even the pavor nocturnus of
+children evinces a form belonging to the anxiety neurosis. The
+hysterical tinge and the connection of the fear with the reproduction of
+appropriate experience or dream, makes the pavor nocturnus of children
+appear as something peculiar, but it also occurs alone without a dream
+or a recurring hallucination.
+
+6. “_Vertigo._”—This in its lightest forms is better designated as
+“dizziness,” assumes a prominent place in the group of symptoms of
+anxiety neurosis. In its severer forms the “attack of vertigo,” with or
+without fear, belongs to the gravest symptoms of the neurosis. The
+vertigo of the anxiety neurosis is neither a rotatory dizziness nor is
+it confined to certain planes or lines like Menier’s vertigo. It belongs
+to the locomotor or coordinating vertigo, like the vertigo in paralysis
+of the ocular muscles; it consists in a specific feeling of discomfort
+which is accompanied by sensations of a heaving ground, sinking legs, of
+the impossibility to continue in an upright position, and at the same
+time there is a feeling that the legs are as heavy as lead, they shake,
+or give way. This vertigo never leads to falling. On the other hand, I
+would like to state that such an attack of vertigo may also be
+substituted by a profound attack of syncope. Other fainting-like states
+in the anxiety neurosis seem to depend on a cardiac collapse.
+
+The vertigo attack is frequently accompanied by the worst kind of
+anxiety and is often combined with cardiac and respiratory disturbances.
+Vertigo of elevations, mountains and precipices, can also be frequently
+observed in anxiety neurosis; moreover, I do not know whether we are
+still justified in recognizing a vertigo “a stomacho laeso.”
+
+7. On the basis of the chronic anxiousness (anxious expectation) on the
+one hand, and the tendency to vertiginous attacks of anxiety on the
+other, there develop two groups of typical phobias; the first refers to
+the general physiological menaces, while the second refers to
+locomotion. To the first group belong the fear for snakes,
+thunderstorms, darkness, vermin, etc., as well as the typical moral
+overscrupulousness, and the forms of doubting mania. Here the available
+fear is merely used to strengthen those aversions which are
+instinctively implanted in every man. But usually a compulsively acting
+phobia is formed only after a reminiscence is added to an experience in
+which this fear could manifest itself; as, for example, after the
+patient has experienced a storm in the open air. To attempt to explain
+such cases as mere continuations of strong impressions is incorrect.
+What makes these experiences significant and their reminiscences durable
+is after all only the fear which could at that time appear and can also
+appear today. In other words such impressions remain forceful only in
+persons with “anxious expectations.”
+
+The other group contains agoraphobia with all its accessory forms, all
+of which are characterized by their relation to locomotion. As a
+determination of the phobia we frequently find a precedent attack of
+vertigo; I do not think that it can always be postulated. Occasionally,
+after a first attack of vertigo without fear, we see that though
+locomotion is always accompanied by the sensation of vertigo, it remains
+possible without any restrictions, but as soon as fear attaches itself
+to the attack of vertigo, locomotion fails, under the conditions of
+being alone, narrow streets, etc.
+
+The relation of these phobias to the phobias of obsessions, which
+mechanism I discussed above,[42] is as follows: The agreement lies in
+the fact that here as there, an idea becomes obsessive through its
+connection with an available affect. The mechanism of transposition of
+the affect therefore holds true for both kinds of phobias. But in
+phobias of the anxiety neurosis this affect is (1) a monotonous one, it
+is always one of anxiety; (2) it does not originate from a repressed
+idea, and on psychological analysis it proves itself not further
+reducible, nor can it be attacked through psychotherapy. The mechanism
+of substitution does not therefore hold true for the phobias of anxiety
+neurosis.
+
+Both kinds of phobias (or obsessions) often occur side by side, though
+the atypical phobias which depend on obsessions need not necessarily
+develop on the basis of anxiety neurosis. A very frequent, ostensibly
+complicated mechanism appears if the content of an original simple
+phobia of anxiety neurosis is substituted by another idea, the
+substitution is then subsequently added to the phobia. The “protective
+measures” originally employed in combatting the phobia are most
+frequently used as substitutions. Thus, for example, from the effort to
+provide oneself with counter evidence that one is not crazy, contrary to
+the assertion of the hypochondriacal phobia, there results a reasoning
+mania. The hesitations, doubts, and the many repetitions of the folie du
+doute originate from the justified doubt concerning the certainty of
+one’s own stream of thoughts, for, through the compulsive like idea one
+is surely conscious of so obstinate a disturbance, etc. It may therefore
+be claimed that many syndromes of compulsion neurosis, like folie du
+doute and similar ones, can clinically, if not notionally be attributed
+to anxiety neurosis.[43]
+
+8. The digestive functions in anxiety neurosis are subject to very few
+but characteristic disturbances. Sensations like nausea and sickly
+feeling are not rare, and the symptom of inordinate appetite alone or
+with other congestions, may serve as a rudimentary attack of anxiety. As
+a chronic alteration analogous to the anxious expectations one finds a
+tendency to diarrhea which has occasioned the queerest diagnostic
+mistakes. If I am not mistaken it is this diarrhea to which Moebius[44]
+has recently called attention in a small article. I believe, moreover,
+that Peyer’s[45] reflex diarrhea which he attributes to a disease of the
+prostate is nothing other than the diarrhea of anxiety neurosis. The
+deceptive reflex relation is due to the fact that the same factors which
+are active in the origin of such prostatic affections also come into
+play in the etiology of anxiety neurosis.
+
+The behavior of the gastro-intestinal function in anxiety neurosis shows
+a sharp contrast to the influence of this same function in neurasthenia.
+Mixed cases often show the familiar “fluctuations between diarrhea and
+constipation.” The desire to urinate in anxiety neurosis is analogous to
+the diarrhea.
+
+9. The paresthesias which accompany the attack of vertigo or anxiety are
+interesting because they associate themselves into a firm sequence,
+similar to the sensations of the hysterical aura. But in contrast to the
+hysterical aura I find these associated sensations atypical and
+changeable. Another similarity to hysteria is shown by the fact that in
+anxiety neurosis a kind of conversion[46] into bodily sensations, as for
+example into rheumatic muscles, takes place which otherwise can be
+overlooked at one’s pleasure. A large number of so called rheumatics,
+who are moreover demonstrable as such, really suffer from an anxiety
+neurosis. Besides this aggravation of the sensation of pain I have
+observed in a number of cases of anxiety neurosis a tendency towards
+hallucinations which could not be explained as hysterical.
+
+10. Many of the so called symptoms which accompany or substitute the
+attack of anxiety also appear in a chronic manner. They are then still
+less discernible, for the anxious feeling accompanying them appears more
+indistinct than in the attack of anxiety. This especially holds true for
+the diarrhea, vertigo, and paresthesias. Just as the attack of vertigo
+can be substituted by an attack of syncope, so can the chronic vertigo
+be substituted by the continuous feeling of feebleness, lassitude, etc.
+
+
+ II. THE OCCURRENCE AND ETIOLOGY OF ANXIETY NEUROSIS.
+
+In some cases of anxiety neurosis no etiology can readily be
+ascertained. It is noteworthy that in such cases it is seldom difficult
+to demonstrate a marked hereditary taint.
+
+Where we have reason to assume that the neurosis is acquired we can find
+by careful and laborious examination that the etiologically effective
+moments are based on a series of injuries and influences from the sexual
+life. These at first appear to be of a varied nature but easily display
+the common character which explains their homogeneous effect on the
+nervous system. They are found either alone or with other banal injuries
+to which a reinforcing effect can be attributed. This sexual etiology of
+anxiety neurosis can be demonstrated so preponderately often that I
+venture for the purpose of this brief communication to set aside all
+cases of a doubtful or different etiology.
+
+For the more precise description of the etiological determinations under
+which anxiety neurosis occurs, it will be advisable to treat separately
+those occurring in men and those occurring in women. Anxiety neurosis
+appears in women—disregarding their predisposition—in the following
+cases:
+
+(_a_) As virginal fear or anxiety in adults. A number of unequivocal
+observations showed me that an anxiety neurosis, which is almost
+typically combined with hysteria, can be evoked in maturing girls, at
+the first encounter with the sexual problem, that is at the sudden
+revelation of the things hitherto veiled, by either seeing the sexual
+act, or by hearing or reading something of that nature;
+
+(_b_) As fear in the newly married. Young women who remain anesthetic
+during the first cohabitation not seldom merge into an anxiety neurosis
+which disappears after the anesthesia is displaced by the normal
+sensation. As most young women remain undisturbed through such a
+beginning anesthesia, the production of this fear requires determinants
+which I will mention;
+
+(_c_) As fear in women whose husbands suffer from ejaculatio precox or
+from diminished potency; and,
+
+(_d_) In those whose husbands practice coitus interruptus or reservatus.
+These cases go together, for on analyzing a large number of examples one
+can easily be convinced that they only depend on whether the woman
+attained gratification during coitus or not. In the latter case one
+finds the determinant for the origin of anxiety neurosis. On the other
+hand the woman is spared from the neurosis if the husband afflicted by
+ejaculatio precox can repeat the congress with better results
+immediately thereafter. The congressus reservatus by means of the condom
+is not injurious to the woman if she is quickly excited and the husband
+is very potent; in other cases the noxiousness of this kind of
+preventive measure is not inferior to the others. Coitus interruptus is
+almost regularly injurious; but for the woman it is injurious only if
+the husband practices it regardlessly, that is, if he interrupt coitus
+as soon as he comes near ejaculating without concerning himself about
+the determination of the excitement of his wife. On the other hand if
+the husband waits until his wife is gratified, the coitus has the same
+significance for the latter as a normal one; but then the husband
+becomes afflicted with an anxiety neurosis. I have collected and
+analyzed a number of cases which furnished the material for the above
+statements.
+
+(_e_) As fear in widows and intentional abstainers, not seldom in
+typical combination with obsessions; and,
+
+(_f_) As fear in the climacterium during the last marked enhancement of
+the sexual desire.
+
+The cases (_c_), (_d_), and (_e_), contain the determinants under which
+the anxiety neurosis originates in the female sex, most frequently and
+most independently, of hereditary predisposition. I will endeavor to
+demonstrate in these—curable, acquired—cases of anxiety neurosis that
+the discovered sexual injuries really represent the etiological moments
+of the neurosis. But before proceeding I will mention the sexual
+determinants of anxiety neurosis in men. I would like to formulate the
+following groups, every one of which finds its analogy in women:
+
+(_a_) Fear of the intentional abstainers; this is frequently combined
+with symptoms of defense (obsessions, hysteria). The motives which are
+decisive for intentional abstinence carry along with them the fact that
+a number of hereditarily burdened eccentrics, etc., belong to this
+category.
+
+(_b_) Fear in men with frustrated excitement (during the engagement
+period), persons who out of fear for the consequences of sexual
+relations satisfy themselves with handling or looking at the woman. This
+group of determinants which can moreover be transferred to the other
+sex—engagement periods, relations with sexual forbearance—furnish the
+purest cases of the neurosis.
+
+(_c_) Fear in men who practice coitus interruptus. As observed above,
+coitus interruptus injures the woman if it is practiced regardless of
+the woman’s gratification; it becomes injurious to the man, if in order
+to bring about the gratification in the woman be voluntarily controls
+the coitus by delaying the ejaculation. In this manner we can understand
+why it is that in couples who practice coitus interruptus it is usually
+only one of them who becomes afflicted. Moreover the coitus interruptus
+only rarely produces in man a pure anxiety neurosis, usually it is a
+mixture of the same with neurasthenia.
+
+(_d_) Fear in men in the senium. There are men who show a climacterium
+like women, and merge into an anxiety neurosis at the time when their
+potency diminishes and their libido increases.
+
+Finally I must add two more cases holding true for both sexes:
+
+(_e_) Neurasthenics merge into anxiety neurosis in consequence of
+masturbation as soon as they refrain from this manner of sexual
+gratification. These persons have especially made themselves unfit to
+bear abstinence.
+
+What is important for the understanding of the anxiety neurosis is the
+fact that any noteworthy development of the same occurs only in men who
+remain potent, and in non-anesthetic women. In neurasthenics, who on
+account of masturbation have markedly injured their potency, anxiety
+neurosis as a result of abstinence occurs but rarely and limits itself
+usually to hypochondria and light chronic dizziness. The majority of
+women are really to be considered as “potent”; a real impotent, that is,
+a real anesthetic woman, is also inaccessible to anxiety neurosis, and
+bears strikingly well the injuries cited.
+
+How far we are perhaps justified in assuming constant relations between
+individual etiological moments and individual symptoms from the complex
+of anxiety neurosis, I do not care to discuss here.
+
+(_f_) The last of the etiological determinants to be mentioned seems, in
+the first place, really not to be of a sexual nature. Anxiety neurosis
+originates in both sexes through the moment of overwork, exhaustive
+exertion, as for instance, after sleepless nights, nursing the sick, and
+even after serious illnesses.
+
+
+The main objection against my formulation of a sexual etiology of the
+anxiety neurosis will probably be to the purport that such abnormal
+relations of the sexual life can be found so very often that wherever
+one will look for them they will be found near at hand. Their
+occurrence, therefore, in the cases cited of anxiety neurosis does not
+prove that the etiology of the neurosis was revealed in them. Moreover,
+the number of persons practicing coitus interruptus, etc., is
+incomparably greater than the number of those who are burdened with
+anxiety neurosis, and the overwhelming number of the first are quite
+well in spite of this injury.
+
+To this I can answer that we certainly ought not to expect a rarely
+occurring etiological moment in the conceded enormous frequency of the
+neurosis, and especially anxiety neurosis; furthermore, that it really
+fulfills a postulate of pathology if on examining an etiology the
+etiological moments can be more frequently demonstrated than their
+effects, for, for the latter still other determinants (predisposition,
+summation of the specific etiology, reinforcement through other banal
+injuries) could be demanded; and furthermore, that the detailed analysis
+of suitable cases of anxiety neurosis show quite unequivocally the
+significance of the sexual moment. I shall, however, here confine myself
+to the etiological moment of coitus interruptus, and I will render
+prominent obvious individual experiences.
+
+1. As long as the anxiety neurosis in young women is not yet constituted
+but appears in fragments which again spontaneously disappear, it can be
+shown that every such turn of the neurosis depends on a coitus with lack
+of gratification. Two days after this influence, and in persons of
+little resistance the day after, there regularly appears the attack of
+anxiety or vertigo to which all the other symptoms of the neurosis
+attach themselves, only to separate again on rarer marriage relations.
+An unexpected journey of the husband, a sojourn in the mountains causing
+a separation of the married couple, does good; the benefit from a course
+of gynecological treatment is due to the fact that during its
+continuation the marriage relations are stopped. It is noteworthy that
+the success of a local treatment is only transitory, the neurosis
+reappears while in the mountains if the husband joins his wife for his
+own vacation, etc. If, in a not as yet constituted neurosis, a physician
+aware of this etiology causes a substitution of the coitus interruptus
+by normal relations there results a therapeutic proof of the assertion
+here formulated. The anxiety is removed and does not return unless there
+be a new or similar cause.
+
+2. In the anamnesis of many cases of anxiety neurosis we find in both
+men and women a striking fluctuation in the intensity of the appearances
+in both the coming and going of the whole condition. This year was
+almost wholly good, the following was terrible, etc.; on one occasion
+the improvement occurred after a definite treatment which, however,
+failed to produce a response at the next attack. If we inform ourselves
+about the number and the sequence of the children, and compare this
+marriage chronicle with the peculiar course of the neurosis, the result
+of the simple solution shows that the periods of improvement or well
+being corresponded with the pregnancies of the woman during which,
+naturally, the occasions for preventive relations were unnecessary. The
+treatment which benefited the husband, be it Father Kneip’s or the
+hydrotherapeutic institute, was the one which he has taken after he
+found his wife was pregnant.
+
+3. From the anamnesis of the patients we often find that the symptoms of
+the anxiety neurosis are relieved at a certain time by another neurosis,
+perhaps a neurasthenia which has supplanted it. It can then be regularly
+demonstrated that shortly before this change of the picture there
+occurred a corresponding change in the form of a sexual injury.
+
+Whereas such experiences, which can be augmented at pleasure, plainly
+obtrude upon the physician the sexual etiology for a certain category of
+cases, other cases which would have otherwise remained incomprehensible
+can at least without gainsaying be solved and classified by the key of
+the sexual etiology. We refer to those numerous cases in which
+everything exists that has been found in the former category, such as
+the appearance of anxiety neurosis on the one hand, and the specific
+moment of the coitus interruptus on the other, but yet something else
+slips in, namely, a long interval between the assumed etiology and its
+effect, and perhaps other etiological moments of a non-sexual nature. We
+have here, for example, a man who was seized with an attack of
+palpitation on hearing of his father’s death, and who since that time
+suffered from an anxiety neurosis. The case cannot be understood, for up
+to that time this man was not nervous. The death of the father, well
+advanced in years, did not occur under any peculiar circumstances, and
+it must be admitted that the natural expected death of an aged father
+does not belong to those experiences which are wont to make a healthy
+adult sick. The etiological analysis will perhaps seem clearer if I add
+that out of regard for his wife this man practiced coitus interruptus
+for eleven years. At all events the manifestations are precisely the
+same as those appearing in other persons after a short sexual injury of
+this nature, and without the intervention of another trauma. The same
+judgment may be pronounced in the case of a woman who merges into an
+anxiety neurosis after the death of her child, or in the case of the
+student who becomes disturbed by an anxiety neurosis while preparing for
+his final state examination. I find that here, as there, the effect is
+not explained by the reported etiology. One must not necessarily
+“overwork” himself studying, and a healthy mother is wont to react to
+the death of her child with normal grief. But, above all, I would expect
+that the overworked student would acquire a cephalasthenia, and the
+mother in our example a hysteria. That both became afflicted with
+anxiety neurosis causes me to attach importance to the fact that the
+mother lived for eight year in marital coitus interruptus, and that the
+student entertained for three years a warm love affair with a
+“respectable” girl whom he was not allowed to impregnate.
+
+These examples tend to show that where the specific sexual injury of the
+coitus interruptus is in itself unable to provoke an anxiety neurosis it
+at least predisposes to its acquisition. The anxiety neurosis then comes
+to light as soon as the effect of another banal injury enters into the
+latent effect of the specific moment. The former can quantitatively
+substitute the specific moment but not supplant it qualitatively. The
+specific moment always remains that which determines the form of
+neurosis. I hope to be able to prove to a greater extent this
+proposition for the etiology of the neurosis.
+
+Furthermore, the last discussions contain the, not in itself, improbable
+assumption that a sexual injury like coitus interruptus asserts itself
+through summation. The time required before the effect of this summation
+becomes visible depends upon the predisposition of the individual and
+the former burdening of his nervous system. The individuals who bear
+coitus interruptus manifestly without disadvantage really become
+predisposed by it to the disturbance—anxiety neurosis—which can at any
+time burst forth spontaneously or after a banal, otherwise inadequate,
+trauma, just as the chronic alcoholic finally develops a cirrhosis or
+another disease by summation, or under the influence of a fever he
+merges into a delirium.
+
+
+ III. ADDENDA TO THE THEORY OF ANXIETY NEUROSIS.
+
+The following discussions claim nothing but the value of a first
+tentative experiment, which judgment should not influence the acceptance
+of the facts mentioned above. The estimation of this “Theory of Anxiety
+Neurosis” is rendered still more difficult by the fact that it merely
+corresponds to a fragment of a more comprehensive representation of the
+neuroses.
+
+The facts hitherto expressed concerning the anxiety neurosis already
+contain some starting points for an insight into the mechanism of this
+neurosis. In the first place it contains the assumption that we deal
+with an accumulation of excitement, and then the very important fact
+that the anxiety underlying the manifestations of the neurosis is not of
+psychic derivation. Such, for example, would exist if we found as a
+basis for the anxiety neurosis a justified fright happening once or
+repeatedly which has since supplied the source of the preparedness for
+the anxiety neurosis. But this is not the case; a former fright can
+perhaps cause a hysteria or a traumatic neurosis but never an anxiety
+neurosis. As the coitus interruptus is rendered so prominent among the
+causes of anxiety neurosis I have thought at first that the source of
+the continuous anxiety was perhaps the repeated fear during the sexual
+act lest the technique will fail and conception follow. But I have found
+that this state of mind of the man or woman during the coitus
+interruptus plays no part in the origin of anxiety neurosis, that the
+women who are really indifferent to the possibilities of conception are
+just as exposed to the neurosis as those who are trembling at the
+possibility of it, it all depends on which person suffers the loss of
+sexual gratification.
+
+Another starting point presents itself in the as yet unmentioned
+observation that in a whole series of cases the anxiety neurosis goes
+along with the most distinct diminution of the sexual libido or the
+psychic desire, so that on revealing to the patients that their
+affliction depends on “insufficient gratification,” they regularly reply
+that this is impossible as just now their whole desire is extinguished.
+The indications that we deal with an accumulation of excitement, that
+the anxiety which probably corresponds to such accumulated excitement is
+of somatic origin, so that somatic excitement becomes accumulated, and
+furthermore, that this somatic excitement is of a sexual nature, and
+that it is accompanied by a decreased psychic participation in the
+sexual processes—all these indications, I say, favor the expectation
+that the mechanism of the anxiety neurosis is to be found in the
+deviation of the somatic sexual excitement from the psychic, and in the
+abnormal utilization of this excitement occasioned by the former.
+
+This conception of the mechanism of anxiety neurosis will become clearer
+if one accepts the following view concerning the sexual process in man.
+In the sexually mature male organism, the somatic sexual excitement
+is—probably continuously—produced, and this becomes a periodic stimulus
+for the psychic life. To make our conceptions clearer we will add that
+this somatic sexual excitement manifests itself as a pressure on the
+wall of the seminal vesicle which is provided with nerve endings. This
+visceral excitement thus becomes continuously increased, but not before
+attaining a certain height is it able to overcome the resistances of the
+intercalated conduction as far as the cortex, and manifest itself as
+psychic excitement. Then the group of sexual ideas existing in the
+psyche becomes endowed with energy and results in a psychic state of
+libidinous tension which is accompanied by an impulse to remove this
+tension. Such psychic unburdening is possible only in one way which I
+wish to designate as specific or adequate action. This adequate action
+for the male sexual impulse consists of a complicated spinal reflex-act
+which results in the unburdening of those nerve endings, and of all
+psychically formed preparations for the liberation of this reflex.
+Anything else except the adequate action would be of no avail, for after
+the somatic sexual excitement has once reached the liminal value, it
+continuously changes into psychic excitement; that must by all means
+occur which frees the nerve endings from their heavy pressure, and thus
+abolish the whole somatic excitement existing at the time and allow the
+subcortical conduction to reestablish its resistance.
+
+I will desist from presenting in a similar manner more complicated cases
+of the sexual process. I will merely formulate the statement that this
+scheme can essentially be transferred to the woman despite the problem
+of the perplexity, artificial retardation, and stunting of the female
+sexual impulse. In the woman, too, it can be assumed that there is a
+somatic sexual excitement and a state in which this excitement becomes
+psychic, evoking libido and the impulse to specific action which is
+accompanied by the sensual feeling. But we are unable to state what
+analogy there may be in the woman to the unburdening of the seminal
+vesicles.
+
+We can bring into the bounds of this representation of the sexual
+process the etiology of actual neurasthenia as well as of the anxiety
+neurosis. Neurasthenia always originates whenever the adequate (action)
+unburdening is replaced by a less adequate one, like the normal coitus
+under the most favorable conditions, by a masturbation or spontaneous
+pollution; while anxiety neurosis is produced by all moments which
+impede the psychic elaboration of the somatic sexual excitement. The
+manifestations of anxiety neurosis are brought about by the fact that
+the somatic sexual excitement diverted from the psyche expends itself
+subcortically in not at all adequate reactions.
+
+I will now attempt to test the etiological determinants suggested before
+in order to see whether they show the common character formulated by me.
+As the first etiological moment for the man, I have mentioned
+intentional abstinence. Abstinence consists in foregoing the specific
+action which results from the libido. Such foregoing may have two
+consequences, namely that the somatic excitement accumulates, and then,
+what is more important, is the fact that it becomes diverted to another
+route where there is more chance for discharge than through the psyche.
+It will then finally diminish the libido and the excitement will
+manifest itself subcortically as anxiety. Where the libido does not
+become diminished, or the somatic excitement is expended in pollutions,
+or where it really becomes exhausted in consequence of repulsion,
+everything else except anxiety neurosis is formed. In this manner
+abstinence leads to anxiety neurosis. But abstinence is also the active
+process in the second etiological group of frustrated excitement. The
+third case, that of the considerate coitus reservatus, acts through the
+fact that it disturbs the psychic preparedness for the sexual discharge
+by establishing beside the subjugation of the sexual affect, another
+distracting psychic task. Through this psychic distraction, too, the
+libido gradually disappears and the further course is then the same as
+in the case of abstinence. The anxiety in old age (climacterium of men)
+requires another explanation. Here the libido does not diminish, but
+just as in the climacterium of women, such an increase takes place in
+the somatic excitement that the psyche shows itself relatively
+insufficient for the subjugation of the same.
+
+The subsummation of the etiological determinants in the woman, under the
+aspect mentioned, does not afford any greater difficulties. The case of
+the virginal fear is especially clear. Here the group of ideas with
+which the somatic sexual excitement should combine are not as yet
+sufficiently developed. In anesthetically newly married the anxiety
+appears only if the first cohabitations awakened a sufficient amount of
+somatic excitement. Where the local signs of such excitability (like
+spontaneous feelings of excitement, desire to micturate, etc.) are
+lacking, the anxiety, too, stays away. The case of ejaculatio precox or
+coitus interruptus is explained similarly to that in the man by the fact
+that the libido gradually disappears in the psychically ungratified act,
+whereas the excitement thereby evoked is subcortically expended. The
+formation of an estrangement between the somatic and psychic in the
+discharge of the sexual excitement succeeds quicker in the woman than in
+the man and is more difficult to remove. The case of widowhood or
+voluntary abstinence, as well as the case of climacterium adjusts itself
+in the woman as in the man, but in the case of abstinence there surely
+is in addition the intentional repression of the sexual ideas, for an
+abstinent woman struggling with temptation must often decide to suppress
+it. The abhorrence perceived by an elderly woman during her menopause
+against the immensely increased libido can have a similar effect.
+
+The two etiological determinants mentioned last can also be classified
+without any difficulty.
+
+The tendency to anxiety of the masturbator who becomes neurasthenic is
+explained by the fact that these persons so easily merge into the state
+of abstinence after they have for long been accustomed to afford a
+discharge, to be sure an incorrect one, for every little quantity of
+somatic excitement. Finally the last case, the origin of anxiety
+neurosis through a severe illness, overwork, exhaustive nursing, etc.,
+in addition to the efficacy of coitus interruptus readily permits a free
+interpretation. Through deviation the psyche becomes here insufficient
+for the subjugation of the somatic sexual excitement, a task which
+continuously devolves upon it. We know how deeply the libido can sink
+under the same conditions, and we have here a nice example of a neurosis
+which although not of a sexual etiology still evinces a sexual
+mechanism.
+
+The conception here developed represents the symptoms of anxiety
+neurosis in a measure as a substitute for the omitted specific action to
+the sexual excitement. As a further corroboration of this I recall that
+also in normal coitus the excitement expends itself in respiratory
+acceleration, palpitation, perspiration, congestion, etc. In the
+corresponding attack of anxiety of our neurosis we have before us the
+dyspnoea, the palpitation, etc., of the coitus in an isolated and
+aggravated manner.
+
+It can still be asked why the nervous system merges into a peculiar
+affective state of anxiety under the circumstances of psychic inadequacy
+for the subjugation of the sexual excitement? A hint to the answer is as
+follows: The psyche merges into the affect of fear when it perceives
+itself unable to adjust an externally approaching task (danger) by
+corresponding reaction; it merges into the neurosis of anxiety when it
+finds itself unable to equalize the endogenously originated (sexual)
+excitement. The psyche, therefore, behaves as if projecting this
+excitement externally. The affect and the neurosis corresponding to it
+stand in close relationship to each other; the first is the reaction to
+an exogenous, the latter the reaction to an analogous endogenous
+excitement. The affect is a rapidly passing state, the neurosis is
+chronic because the exogenous excitement acts like a stroke happening
+but once, while the endogenous acts like a constant force. The nervous
+system reacts in the neurosis against an inner source of excitement just
+as it does in the corresponding affect against an analogous external
+one.
+
+
+ IV. THE RELATIONS TO OTHER NEUROSES.
+
+A few observations still remain to be mentioned on the relations of the
+anxiety neurosis to the other neuroses in reference to occurrence and
+inner relationship.
+
+The purest cases of anxiety neurosis are also usually the most
+pronounced. They are found in potent young individuals with a uniform
+etiology, and where the disease is not of long standing.
+
+To be sure, the symptoms of anxiety are found more frequently as a
+simultaneous and common occurrence with those of neurasthenia, hysteria,
+compulsive ideas, and melancholia. If on account of such clinical
+mixtures one hesitates in recognizing anxiety neurosis as an independent
+unity, he will also have to abandon the laboriously acquired separation
+of hysteria and neurasthenia.
+
+For the analysis of the “mixed neuroses” I can advocate the following
+proposition: Where a mixed neurosis exists, an involvement of many
+specific etiologies can be demonstrated.
+
+Such a multiplicity of etiological moments determining a mixed neurosis
+can only come about accidentally, if the activities of a newly formed
+injury are added to those already existing. Thus, for example, a woman
+who was at all times a hysteric begins to practice coitus reservatus at
+a certain period of her married life, and adds an anxiety neurosis to
+her hysteria; a man who had masturbated and become neurasthenic, becomes
+engaged and excites himself with his fiancée so that a fresh anxiety
+neurosis allies itself to his neurasthenia.
+
+The multiplicity of etiological moments in other cases is not
+accidental, one of them has brought the other into activity. Thus a
+woman, with whom her husband practices coitus reservatus without regard
+to her gratification, finds herself forced to finish the tormenting
+excitement following such an act with masturbation, as a result of which
+she shows an anxiety neurosis with symptoms of neurasthenia. Under the
+same noxiousness another woman has to contend with lewd pictures against
+which she wishes to defend herself, and in this way the coitus
+interruptus will cause her to acquire obsessions along with the anxiety
+neurosis. Finally a third woman, as a result of coitus interruptus loses
+her affection for her husband and forms another which she secretly
+guards, and as a result she evinces a mixture of hysteria and anxiety
+neurosis.
+
+In a third category of mixed neuroses the connection of the symptoms is
+of a still more intimate nature, as the same etiological determinants
+regularly and simultaneously evoke both neuroses. Thus, for example, the
+sudden sexual explanation which we have found in virginal fear always
+produces hysteria, too; most causes of intentional abstinence connect
+themselves in the beginning with actual obsessions; and it seems to me
+that the coitus interruptus of men can never provoke a pure anxiety
+neurosis, but always a mixture of the same with neurasthenia, etc.
+
+It follows from this discussion that the etiological determinants of the
+occurrence must moreover be distinguished from the specific etiological
+moments of neurasthenia. The first moments, as for example the coitus
+interruptus, masturbation, and abstinence, are still ambiguous, and can
+each produce different neuroses; and it is only the etiological moments
+abstracted from them, like the inadequate unburdening, psychic
+insufficiency, and defense with substitution, that have an unambiguous
+and specific relation to the etiology of the individual great neuroses.
+
+In its intrinsic property, anxiety neurosis shows the most interesting
+agreements and differences when compared with the other great neuroses,
+particularly when compared with neurasthenia and hysteria. With
+neurasthenia it shares one main character, namely, that the source of
+excitement, the cause of the disturbance, lies in the somatic rather
+than in the psychic sphere as in the case of hysteria and compulsion
+neurosis. For the rest we can recognize a kind of contrast between the
+symptoms of neurasthenia and anxiety neurosis, which can be expressed in
+the catchwords, accumulation and impoverishment of excitement. This
+contrast does not hinder the two neuroses from combining with each
+other, but shows itself in the fact that the most extreme forms in both
+cases are also the purest.
+
+When compared with hysteria anxiety neurosis shows in the first place a
+number of agreements in the symptomatology the valuation of which is
+still unsettled. The appearance of the manifestations as persistent
+symptoms or attacks, the aura-like grouped paresthesias, the
+hyperesthesias and pressure points can be found in certain substitutes
+for the anxiety attack, as in dyspnoea and palpitation, the aggravation
+of the perhaps organically determined pains (by conversion)—these and
+other joint features lead to the supposition that some things which are
+ascribed to hysteria can with full authority be fastened to anxiety
+neurosis. But if we enter into the mechanism of both neuroses, as far as
+it can at present be penetrated, we find aspects which make it appear
+that the anxiety neurosis is really the somatic counterpart to hysteria.
+Here as there we have accumulation and excitement—on which is perhaps
+based the similarity of the aforementioned symptoms—; here as there we
+have a psychic insufficiency which results from abnormal somatic
+processes; and here as there we have instead of a psychic elaboration a
+deviation of the excitement into the somatic. The difference only lies
+in the fact that the excitement, in which displacement the neurosis
+manifests itself, is purely somatic (somatic sexual excitement) in
+anxiety neurosis, while in hysteria it is psychic (evoked through a
+conflict). Hence it is not surprising that hysteria and anxiety neurosis
+lawfully combine with each other, as in the “virginal fear” or in the
+“sexual hysteria,” and that hysteria simply borrows a number of symptoms
+from anxiety neurosis, etc. This intimate relationship between anxiety
+neurosis and hysteria furnishes us with a new argument for demanding the
+separation of anxiety neurosis from hysteria, for if this be denied, one
+will also be unable to maintain the so painstakingly acquired
+distinction between neurasthenia and hysteria, so indispensable for the
+theory of the neuroses.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+ FURTHER OBSERVATIONS ON THE DEFENSE NEUROPSYCHOSES.
+
+
+Under the caption of “Defense Neuropsychoses” I have comprised hysteria,
+obsessions, as well as certain cases of acute hallucinatory
+confusion.[47] All these affections evince one common aspect in the fact
+that their symptoms originated through the psychic mechanism of
+(unconscious) defense, that is, through the attempt to repress an
+unbearable idea which appeared in painful contrast to the ego of the
+patient. I was also able to explain and exemplify by cases reported in
+the preceding chapters in what sense this psychic process of “defense”
+or “repression” is to be understood. I have also discussed the laborious
+but perfectly reliable method of psychoanalysis of which I make use in
+my examinations, and which at the same time serves as a therapy.
+
+My experiences during the last two years have strengthened my
+predilection for making the defense the essential point in the psychic
+mechanism of the mentioned neuroses, and on the other hand have
+permitted me to give a clinical foundation to the psychological theory.
+To my surprise I have discovered some simple but sharply circumscribed
+solutions for the problem of the neuroses which I shall provisionally
+briefly report in the following pages. It would be inconsistent with
+this manner of reporting to add to the assertions the required proofs,
+but I hope to be able to fulfill this obligation in a comprehensive
+discussion.
+
+
+ I. THE “SPECIFIC” ETIOLOGY OF HYSTERIA.
+
+That the symptoms of hysteria become comprehensible only through a
+reduction to “traumatically” effective experiences, and that these
+psychic traumas refer to the sexual life has already been asserted by
+Breuer and me in former publications. What I have to add today as a
+uniform result of thirteen analyzed cases of hysteria concerns, on the
+one hand, the nature of these sexual traumas, and on the other, the
+period of life in which they occurred. An experience occurring at any
+period of life, touching in any way the sexual life, and then becoming
+pathogenic through the liberation and suppression of a painful affect is
+not sufficient for the causation of hysteria. It must on the contrary
+belong to the sexual traumas of early childhood (the period of life
+before puberty), and its content must consist in a real irritation of
+the genitals (coitus-like processes).
+
+This specific determination of hysteria—sexual passivity in pre-sexual
+periods—I have found fulfilled in all analyzed cases of hysteria (among
+which were two men). To what extent the determination of the accidental
+etiological moment diminishes the requirement of the hereditary
+predisposition needs only be intimated. We can, moreover, understand the
+disproportionately greater frequency of hysteria in the female sex, as
+even in childhood this sex is more subject to sexual assaults.
+
+The objection most frequently advanced against this result may be to the
+purport, that sexual assaults on little children occur too frequently to
+give an etiological value to its verification, or that such experiences
+must remain ineffectual just because they concern a sexually undeveloped
+being; and that one must moreover be careful not to obtrude upon the
+patient through the examination such alleged reminiscences or believe in
+the romances which they themselves fabricate. To the latter objections I
+hold out the request that no one should really judge with great
+certainty this obscure realm unless he has made use of the only method
+which can clear it up (the method of psychoanalysis for bringing to
+consciousness the hitherto unconscious[48]). The essential point in the
+first doubts is settled by the observation that it really is not the
+experiences themselves that act traumatically, but their revival as
+reminiscences after the individual has entered into sexual maturity.
+
+My thirteen cases of hysteria were throughout of the graver kind, they
+were all of long duration, and some had undergone a lengthy and
+unsuccessful asylum treatment. Every one of the infantile traumas which
+the analysis revealed for these severe cases had to be designated as
+marked sexual injuries; some of them were indeed abominable. Among the
+persons who were guilty of such serious abuse we have in the first place
+nurses, governesses, and other servants to whom children are left much
+too carelessly, then in regrettable frequency come the teachers; but in
+seven of the thirteen cases we dealt with innocent childish offenders,
+mostly brothers who for years entertained sexual relations with their
+younger sisters. The course of events always resembled some of the cases
+which could with certainty be tracked, namely, that the boy had been
+abused by a person of the feminine sex, thus awakening in him
+prematurely the libido, and that after a few years he repeated in sexual
+aggression on his sister the same procedures to which he himself was
+subjected.
+
+I must exclude active masturbation from the list of sexual injuries of
+early childhood as being pathogenic for hysteria. That it is so very
+frequently found associated with hysteria is due to the fact that
+masturbation in itself is more frequently the result of abuse or
+seduction than one supposes. It not seldom happens that both members of
+a childish pair later in life become afflicted by defense neuroses, the
+brother by obsessions and the sister by hysteria, which naturally gives
+the appearance of a familial neurotic predisposition. This
+pseudo-heredity is now and then solved in a surprising manner. I have
+had under observation a brother, sister, and a somewhat older cousin.
+The analysis which I have undertaken with the brother showed me that he
+suffered from reproaches for being the cause of his sister’s malady; he
+himself was corrupted by his cousin, concerning whom it was known in the
+family that he fell a victim to his nurse.
+
+I can not definitely state up to what age sexual damage occurs in the
+etiology of hysteria, but I doubt whether sexual passivity can cause
+repression after the eighth and tenth year unless qualified for it by
+previous experiences. The lower limit reaches as far as memory in
+general, that is, to the delicate age of one and one half or two years!
+(two cases). In a number of my cases the sexual trauma (or the number of
+traumas) occurred during the third and fourth year of life. I myself
+would not lend credence to this peculiar discovery if it were not for
+the fact that the later development of the neurosis furnished it with
+full trustworthiness. In every case there are a number of morbid
+symptoms, habits and phobias which are only explainable by returning to
+those youthful experiences, and the logical structure of the neurotic
+manifestation makes it impossible to reject the faithfully retained
+memories of childhood. Except through psychoanalysis it is of no avail
+to ask a hysterical patient about these infantile traumas; their remains
+can only be found in the morbid symptoms and not in conscious memory.
+
+All the experiences and excitements which prepare the way for, or
+occasion the outburst of, hysteria in the period of life after puberty
+evidently act through the fact that they awaken the memory remnants of
+those infantile traumas which do not become conscious but lead to the
+liberation of affect and repression. It is quite in harmony with this
+rôle of the later traumas not to be subject to the strict limitation of
+the infantile traumas, but that both in intensity and quality they can
+vary from an actual sexual assault to a mere approximation of the
+sexual, such as perceiving the sexual acts of others, or receiving
+information concerning sexual processes.[49]
+
+In my first communication on the defense neuropsychoses I failed to
+explain how the exertion of a hitherto healthy individual to forget such
+traumatic happenings would result in the real intentional repression,
+and thus open the door for the defense neurosis. It can not depend on
+the nature of the experience, as other persons remain unaffected despite
+the same motives. Hysteria cannot therefore be fully explained by the
+effect of the trauma, and we are forced to admit that the capacity for
+hysteria already existed before the trauma.
+
+This indefinite hysterical predisposition can now wholly or partially be
+substituted by the posthumous effect of the infantile sexual trauma. The
+“repression” of the memory of a painful sexual experience of maturer
+years can take place only in persons in whom this experience can bring
+into activity the memory remnants of an infantile trauma.[50]
+
+The prerequisite of obsessions is also a sexual infantile experience,
+but of a different nature than that of hysteria. The etiology of both
+defense neuropsychoses now shows the following relation to the etiology
+of both simple neuroses, neurasthenia and anxiety neurosis. As I have
+shown above, both the latter neuroses are the direct results of the
+sexual noxas alone, while both defense neuroses are the direct results
+of sexual noxas which acted before the appearance of sexual maturity,
+that is, they are the results of the psychic memory remnants of these
+noxas. The actual causes producing neurasthenia and anxiety neurosis
+simultaneously play the rôle of inciting causes of the defense neuroses,
+and on the other hand, the specific causes of the defense neuroses, the
+infantile traumas, may simultaneously prepare the soil for the later
+developing neurasthenia. Finally it not seldom happens that the
+existence of a neurasthenia or anxiety neurosis is only preserved by
+continued recollection of an infantile trauma rather than by actual
+sexual injuries.
+
+
+ II. THE ESSENCE AND MECHANISM OF COMPULSION NEUROSIS.
+
+Sexual experiences of early childhood have the same significance in the
+etiology of the compulsion neurosis as in hysteria, still we no longer
+deal here with sexual passivity but with pleasurably accomplished
+aggressions, and with pleasurably experienced participation in sexual
+acts, that is, we deal here with sexual activity. It is due to this
+difference in the etiological relations that the masculine sex seems to
+be preferred in the compulsion neurosis.
+
+In all my cases of compulsion neurosis I have found besides a subsoil of
+hysterical symptoms which could be traced to a pleasurable action of
+sexual passivity from a precedent scene. I presume that this coincidence
+is a lawful one, and that premature sexual aggression always presupposes
+an experience of seduction. But I am unable to present as yet a complete
+description of the etiology of the compulsion neurosis. I only believe
+that the final determination as to whether a hysteria or compulsion
+neurosis should originate on the basis of infantile traumas depends on
+the temporal relation of the development of the libido.
+
+The essence of the compulsion neurosis may be expressed in the following
+simple formula: Obsessions are always transformed _reproaches_ returning
+from consciousness which always refer to a pleasurably accomplished
+sexual action of childhood. In order to elucidate this sentence it will
+be necessary to describe the typical course of compulsion neurosis.
+
+In a first period—period of childish immorality—the events containing
+the seeds of the later neurosis take place. In the earliest childhood
+there appear at first the experiences of sexual seduction which later
+makes the repression possible, and this is followed by the actions of
+sexual aggressions against the other sex which later manifest themselves
+as actions of reproach.
+
+This period is brought to an end by the appearance of the—often self
+ripened—sexual “maturity.” A reproach then attaches itself to the memory
+of that pleasurable action, and the connection with the initial
+experience of passivity makes it possible—often only after conscious and
+recollected effort—to repress it and replace it by a primary symptom of
+defense. The third period, that of apparent healthiness but really of
+successful defense, begins with the symptoms of scrupulousness, shame
+and diffidence.
+
+The next period, the disease is characterized by the return of the
+repressed reminiscences, hence, by the failure of the defense; but it
+remains undecided whether the awakening of the same is more frequently
+accidental and spontaneous, or whether it appears in consequence of
+actual sexual disturbances, that is, as additional influences of the
+same. But the revived reminiscences and the reproaches formed from them
+never enter into consciousness unchanged, but what becomes conscious as
+an obsession and obsessive affect and substitutes the pathogenic memory
+in the conscious life, are compromise formations between the repressed
+and the repressing ideas.
+
+In order to describe clearly and probably convincingly the processes of
+repression, the return of the repression, and the formation of the
+pathological ideas of compromise, we would have to decide upon very
+definite hypotheses concerning the substratum of the psychic occurrence
+and consciousness. As long as we wish to avoid it we will have to rest
+content with the following rather figuratively understood observations.
+Depending on whether the memory content of the reproachful action alone
+forces an entrance into consciousness or whether it takes with it the
+accompanying reproachful affect, we have two forms of compulsion
+neurosis. The first represents the typical obsessions, the content of
+which attracts the patient’s attention; only an indefinite displeasure
+is perceived as an affect, whereas, for the content of the obsession the
+only suitable affect would be one of reproach. The content of the
+obsession is doubly distorted when compared to the content of the
+infantile compulsive act. First, something actual replaces the past
+experience, and second, the sexual is substituted by an analogous
+non-sexual experience. These two changes are the results of the constant
+tendency to repression still in force which we will attribute to the
+“ego.” The influence of the revived pathogenic memory is shown by the
+fact that the content of the obsession is still partially identical with
+the repressed, or can be traced to it by a correct stream of thought.
+If, with the help of the psychoanalytic method, we reconstruct the
+origin of one individual obsession we find that one actual impression
+instigated two diverse streams of thought, and that the one which passed
+over the repressed memory, though incapable of consciousness and
+correction, proves to be just as correctly formed logically as the
+other. If the results of the two psychic operations disagree, the
+contradiction between the two may never be brought to logical
+adjustment, but as a compromise between the resistance and the
+pathological result of thought an apparently absurd obsession enters
+into consciousness beside the normal result of the thought. If both
+streams of thought yield the same result, they reinforce each other so
+that the normally gained result of thought now behaves psychically like
+an obsession. Wherever neurotic compulsion manifests itself psychically
+it originates from repression. The obsessions have, as it were, a
+psychical course of compulsion which is due, not to their own validity,
+but to the source from which they originate, or to the source which
+furnishes a part of their validity.
+
+A second form of compulsion neurosis results if the repressed reproach
+and not the repressed content of memory forces a replacement in the
+conscious psychic life. Through a psychic admixture, the affect of the
+reproach can change itself into any other affect of displeasure, and if
+this occurs there is nothing to hinder the substituting affect from
+becoming conscious. Thus, the reproach (of having performed in childhood
+some sexual actions) may be easily transformed into shame (if some one
+else becomes aware of it), into hypochondriacal anxiety (because of the
+physical harmful consequences of those reproachful acts), into social
+anxiety (fearing punishment from others), into religious anxiety, into
+delusions of observation (fear of betraying those actions to others),
+into fear of temptations (justified distrust in one’s own moral ability
+of resistance), etc. Besides, the memory content of the reproachful
+action may also be represented in consciousness, or it may be altogether
+concealed, which makes the diagnosis very difficult. Many cases which on
+superficial examination are taken as ordinary (neurasthenic)
+hypochondria often belong to this group of compulsive affects; the very
+frequently so called “periodic neurasthenia” or “periodic melancholia”
+especially seem to be explained by compulsive affects or obsessions, a
+recognition not unimportant therapeutically.
+
+Beside these compromise symptoms which signify the return of the
+repression and hence a failure of the originally achieved defense, the
+compulsion neurosis forms a series of other symptoms of a totally
+different origin. The ego really tries to defend itself against those
+descendants of the initial repressed reminiscence, and in this conflict
+of defense it produces symptoms which may be comprehended as “secondary
+defense.” These are throughout “protective measures” which have
+performed good service in the struggle carried on against the obsessions
+and the obsessing affects. If these helps in the conflict of the defense
+really succeed in repressing anew the symptoms of return obtruding
+themselves on the ego, the compulsion then transmits itself on the
+protective measures themselves and produces a third form of the
+“compulsion neurosis,” the compulsive action. These are never primary,
+they never contain anything else but a defense, never an aggression.
+Psychic analysis shows that despite their peculiarity they can always be
+fully explained by reduction to the compulsive reminiscence which they
+oppose.[51]
+
+The secondary defense of the obsessions can be brought about by a
+forcible deviation to other thoughts of possibly contrary content;
+hence, in case of success there is a compulsive reasoning, regularly
+concerning abstract and transcendental subjects, because the repressed
+ideas always occupied themselves with the sensuous. Or the patient tries
+to become master of every compulsive idea through logical labor and by
+appealing to his conscious memory; this leads to compulsive thinking and
+examination and to doubting mania. The priority of the perception before
+the memory in these examinations at first induce and then force the
+patient to collect and preserve all objects with which he comes in
+contact. The secondary defense against the compulsive affects results in
+a greater number of defensive measures which are capable of being
+transformed into compulsive actions. These can be grouped according to
+their tendency. We may have measures of penitence (irksome ceremonial
+and observation of numbers), of prevention (diverse phobias,
+superstition, pedantry, aggravation of the primary symptom of
+scrupulousness), measures of fear of betrayal (collecting papers and
+shyness), and measures of becoming unconscious (dipsomania). Among these
+compulsive acts and impulses the phobias play the greatest part as
+limitations of the patient’s existence.
+
+There are cases in which we can observe how the compulsion becomes
+transferred from the idea or affect to the measure, and other cases in
+which the compulsion oscillates between the returning symptoms of
+secondary defense. But there are also cases in which no obsessions are
+really formed, but the repressed reminiscence immediately becomes
+replaced by the apparent primary defensive measure. Here that stage is
+attained at a bound which otherwise ends the course of the compulsion
+neurosis only after the conflict of the defense. Grave cases of this
+affection end either with a fixation of ceremonial actions, general
+doubting mania, or in an existence of eccentricity conditioned by
+phobias.
+
+That the obsessions and everything derived from them are not believed is
+probably due to the fact that the defense symptom of scrupulousness was
+formed during the first repression and gained compulsive validity. The
+certainty of having lived morally throughout the whole period of the
+successful defense makes it impossible to give credence to the reproach
+which the obsession really involves. Only transitorily during the
+appearance of a new obsession, and now and then in melancholic
+exhaustive states of the ego do the morbid symptoms of the return also
+enforce the belief. The “compulsion” of the psychic formations here
+described has in general nothing to do with the recognition through
+belief, and is not to be mistaken for that moment which is designated as
+“strength” or “intensity” of an idea. Its main characteristic lies in
+its inexplicableness through psychic activities of conscious ability,
+and this character undergoes no change whether the idea to which the
+compulsion is attached is stronger or weaker, more or less intensively
+“elucidated,” “supplied with energy,” etc.
+
+The reason for the unassailableness of the obsession or its derivative
+is due only to its connection with the repressed memory of early
+childhood, for as soon as we succeed in making it conscious, for which
+the psychotherapeutic methods already seem quite sufficient, the
+compulsion, too, becomes detached.
+
+
+ III. ANALYSIS OF A CASE OF CHRONIC PARANOIA.
+
+For some length of time I entertained the idea that paranoia also—or the
+group of cases belonging to paranoia—is a defense psychosis, that is,
+like hysteria and obsessions it originates from the repression of
+painful reminiscences, and that the form of its symptoms is determined
+by the content of the repression. A special way or mechanism of
+repression must be peculiar to paranoia perhaps just as in hysteria
+which brings about the repression by way of conversion into bodily
+innervation, and perhaps like obsessions in which a substitution is
+accomplished (displacement along certain associative categories). I
+observed many cases which seemed to favor this interpretation, but I had
+not found any which demonstrated it until a few months ago when, through
+the kindness of Dr. J. Breuer, I subjected to psychoanalysis, with
+therapeutic aims, an intelligent woman of 32, whom no one will be able
+to refuse to designate as a chronic paranoiac. I report here some
+explanations gained in this work, because I have no prospects of
+studying paranoia except in very isolated examples, and because I think
+it possible that these observations may instigate a psychiatrist for
+whom conditions are more favorable, to give due justice to the moment of
+defense in the present animated discussion on the nature and psychic
+mechanism of paranoia. It is of course far from my thoughts to wish to
+show from the following single observation anything but that this case
+is a defense psychosis, and that in the group of “paranoia” there may be
+still others of a similar nature.
+
+Mrs. P. thirty-two years old, married three years. She is the mother of
+a two-year-old child, and does not descend from nervous parents; but her
+sister and brother whom I know, are also neurotic. It was doubtful
+whether she was not transitorily depressed and mistaken in her judgment
+in the middle of her twentieth year. During the last years she was
+healthy and capacitated until she evinced the first symptoms of the
+present illness, six months after the birth of her child. She became
+secluded and suspicious, showing a disinclination towards social
+relations with the relatives of her husband, and complained that the
+neighbors in the little town now behaved towards her in a rather
+impolite and regardless manner. Gradually these complaints grew in
+intensity, she thought that there was something against her, though she
+had no notion what it could be. But there was no doubt that all the
+relatives and friends denied her respect, and did everything to
+aggravate her. She was trying very hard to find out whence this came but
+could not discover anything. Some time later she complained that she was
+watched, that her thoughts were guessed, and that everything that
+happened in her house was known. One afternoon she suddenly conceived
+the thought that she was watched during the evening while undressing.
+Since then she applied while undressing the most complicated
+precautionary measures. She slipped into her bed in the darkness and
+undressed only under cover. As she avoided all social relations, and
+took but little nourishment, and was very depressed, she was sent in the
+summer of 1895 to a hydrotherapeutic institute. There new symptoms
+appeared and reinforced those already existing. As early as the spring,
+while she was alone with the servant girl, she suddenly perceived a
+sensation in her lap, and thought that the servant girl then had an
+unseemly thought. This sensation became more frequent in the summer, it
+was almost continuous, and she felt her genitals “as if one feels a
+heavy hand.” She then began to see pictures which frightened her; they
+were hallucinations of female nakedness, especially an exposed woman’s
+lap with hair; occasionally she also saw male genitals. The picture of
+the hairy lap and the organic sensation in the lap usually came
+conjointly. The pictures became very aggravating, as she regularly
+perceived them when she was in the company of a woman, and the thought
+accompanying them was that she sees the woman in an indecent exposure,
+and that in the same moment the woman sees the same picture of her (!)
+Simultaneously with these visual hallucinations, which, after their
+first appearance in the asylum, disappeared again for many months, she
+began to be troubled with voices which she did not recognize and could
+not explain. When she was in the street she heard, “This is Mrs. P.—Here
+she goes.—Where does she go?”. Every one of her movements and actions
+were commented upon. Occasionally she heard threats and reproaches. All
+these symptoms became worse when she was in society, or even in the
+street; she therefore hesitated about going out; she also stated that
+she experienced nausea for food, and as a result she became reduced in
+vitality.
+
+I obtained this from her when she came under my care in the winter of
+1895. I present this case in detail in order to make the impression that
+we really deal here with a very frequent form of chronic paranoia, which
+diagnosis will agree with the details of the symptoms and their behavior
+to be mentioned later. At that time she either concealed from me the
+delusions for the interpretation of the hallucinations or they really
+had not as yet occurred. Her intelligence was undiminished. It was
+reported to me as peculiar that she had a number of rendezvous with her
+brother who lived in the neighborhood, in order to confide something to
+him, but this she never told him. She never spoke about her
+hallucinations, and towards the end she did not say much about the
+aggravations and persecutions from which she suffered. What I have to
+report about this patient concerns the etiology of the case and the
+mechanism of the hallucinations. I discovered the etiology by applying
+Breuer’s method exactly as in hysteria, for the investigation and
+removal of the hallucinations. I started with the presupposition that
+just as in the two other defense neuroses known to me this paranoia must
+contain unconscious thoughts and repressed reminiscences which have to
+be brought to consciousness, in the same manner as in the others, by
+overcoming a certain resistance. The patient immediately corroborated
+this expectation by behaving during the analysis exactly like a
+hysteric, and under attention to the pressure of my hand she reproduced
+thoughts which she could not remember having had, which she at first
+could not understand, and which contradicted her expectations. The
+occurrence of important unconscious ideas was therefore also
+demonstrated in a case of paranoia, and I could hope to reconduct the
+compulsion of paranoia to repression. It was only peculiar that the
+assertions which originated in the unconscious were usually heard
+inwardly or hallucinated by her as her voices.
+
+Concerning the origin of the visual hallucinations, or at least the
+vivid pictures, I discovered the following: The picture of the female
+lap occurred almost always together with the organic sensation in the
+lap. The latter, however, was more constant and often occurred without
+the picture.
+
+The first pictures of feminine laps appeared in the hydrotherapeutic
+institute a few hours after she had actually seen a number of women
+naked in the bath house. They were therefore only simple reproductions
+of a real impression. It may be assumed that these impressions repeated
+themselves because something of great interest was connected with them.
+She stated that she was at that time ashamed of these women, and that
+since she recalled it she is ashamed of having been seen naked. Having
+been obliged to look upon this shame as something compulsive, I
+concluded that according to the mechanism of defense an experience must
+have here been repressed in which she was not ashamed, and I requested
+her to allow those reminiscences to emerge which belonged to the theme
+of shame. She promptly reproduced a series of scenes from her
+seventeenth to her eighth year, during which while bathing before her
+mother, her sister, and her physician she was ashamed of her nakedness.
+This series, however, reached back to a scene in her sixth year when she
+undressed in the children’s room before going to sleep without feeling
+ashamed of her brother who was present. On questioning her it was found
+that there were a number of such scenes, and that for years the brothers
+and sisters were in the habit of showing themselves naked to one another
+before retiring. I now understood the significance of the sudden thought
+of being watched on going to sleep. It was an unchanged fragment of the
+old reproachful reminiscence, and she was now trying to make up in shame
+what she lost as a child.
+
+The supposition that we dealt here with an amour of childhood so
+frequent in the etiology of hysteria was strengthened by the further
+progress of the analysis which also showed simultaneous solutions for
+individual frequently recurring details in the picture of paranoia. The
+beginning of her depression commenced at the time of a disagreement
+between her husband and her brother on account of which the latter no
+longer visited her. She was always much attached to this brother and
+missed him very much at this time. Besides this she spoke about a moment
+in the history of her disease during which for the first time
+“everything became clear,” that is, during which she became convinced
+that her assumption about being generally despised and intentionally
+annoyed was true. She gained this assurance during a visit of her
+sister-in-law, who in the course of conversation dropped the words, “If
+such a thing should happen to me I would not mind it.” Mrs. P. at first
+took this utterance unsuspectingly, but when her visitor left her it
+seemed to her that these words contained a reproach meaning that she was
+in the habit of taking serious matters lightly, and since that hour she
+was sure that she was a victim of common slander. On asking her why she
+felt justified in referring those words to herself she answered that the
+tone in which her sister-in-law spoke convinced her of it—to be sure
+subsequently—This is really a characteristic detail of paranoia. I now
+urged her to recall her sister-in-law’s conversation before the accusing
+utterance, and it was found that she related that in her father’s home
+there were all sorts of difficulties with the brothers, and added the
+wise remark, “In every family many things happen which one would rather
+keep under cover, and that if such a thing should happen to her she
+would take it lightly.” Mrs. P. had to acknowledge that her depression
+was connected with the sentences before the last utterance. As she
+repressed both sentences which could recall her relations with her
+brother, and retained only the last meaningless one, she was forced to
+connect with it the feeling of being reproached by her sister-in-law;
+but, inasmuch as the contents of this sentence offered absolutely no
+basis for such assumption she disregarded it and laid stress on the tone
+with which the words were pronounced. It is probably a typical
+illustration for the fact that the misinterpretations of paranoia depend
+on repression.
+
+In a most surprising manner it also explains her peculiar behavior in
+making appointments with her brother and then refusing to tell him
+anything. Her explanation was that she thought that if she only looked
+at him he must understand her suffering, as he knew the cause of it. As
+this brother was really the only person who could know anything about
+the etiology of her disease it followed that she acted from a motive
+which, though she did not consciously understand, seemed perfectly
+justified as soon as a new sense was put on it from the unconscious.
+
+I then succeeded in causing her to reproduce different scenes the
+culminating points of which were the sexual relations with her brother
+at least from her sixth to her tenth year. During this work of
+reproduction the organic sensation in the lap “joined in the
+discussion,” precisely as regularly observed in the analysis of memory
+remnants of hysterical patients. The picture of a naked female lap (but
+now reduced to childish proportions and without hair) immediately
+appeared or stayed away in accordance with the occurrence of the scene
+in question in full light or in darkness. The disgust for eating, too,
+was explained by a repulsive detail of these actions. After we had gone
+through this series, the hallucinatory sensations and pictures
+disappeared without having thus far returned.[52]
+
+I have thus learned that these hallucinations were nothing other than
+fragments from the content of the repressed experiences of childhood,
+that is, symptoms of the return of the repressed material.
+
+I now turned to the analysis of the voices. Here it must before all be
+explained why such indifferent remarks as, “Here goes Mrs. P.—She now
+looks for apartments, etc.” could be so painfully perceived, and how
+these harmless sentences managed to become distinguished by
+hallucinatory enforcement. To begin with, it was clear that these
+“voices” could not be hallucinatory reproduced reminiscences like the
+pictures and sensations, but rather thoughts which “became loud.”
+
+She heard the voices for the first time under the following
+circumstances. With great tension she read the pretty story, “The
+Heiterethei” by O. Ludwig, and noticed that while reading she was
+preoccupied with incoming thoughts. Immediately after she took a walk on
+the highway and suddenly while passing a peasant’s cottage the voices
+told her, “That is how the house of the Heiterethei looked! Here is the
+well, and here is the bush! How happy she was in all her poverty!” The
+voices then repeated whole paragraphs of what she had just read, but it
+remained incomprehensible why house, bush, and well of the Heiterethei,
+and just such indifferent and most irrelevant passages of the romance
+should have obtruded themselves upon her attention with pathological
+strength. The analysis showed that while reading she at the same time
+entertained extraneous thoughts, and that she was excited by totally
+different passages of the book. Against this material analogy between
+the couple of the romance and herself and her husband, the reminiscence
+of intimate things of her married life and family secrets, against all
+these there arose a repressive resistance because they were connected
+with her sexual shyness by very simple and demonstrable streams of
+thought, and finally resulted in the awakening of old experiences of
+childhood. In consequence of the censorship exercised by the repression
+the harmless and idyllic passages connected with the objectionable ones
+by contrast and vicinity, became reinforced in consciousness, enabling
+them to become audible. For example, the first repressed thought
+referred to the slander to which the secluded heroine was subjected by
+her neighbors. She readily found in this an analogy to herself. She,
+too, lived in a small place, had no intercourse with anybody and
+considered herself despised by her neighbors. The suspicion against the
+neighbors was founded on the fact that in the beginning of her married
+life she was obliged to content herself with a small apartment. The wall
+of the bedroom, near which stood the nuptial bed of the young couple,
+adjoined the neighbors’ room. With the beginning of her marriage there
+awakened in her a great sexual shyness. This was apparently due to an
+unconscious awakening of some reminiscences of childhood of having
+played husband and wife. She was very careful lest the neighbors might
+hear through the adjacent wall either words or noises and this shyness
+changed into suspicion against the neighbors.
+
+The voices therefore owed their origin to the repression of thoughts
+which in the last analysis really signified reproaches on the occasion
+of an experience analogous to the infantile trauma; they were
+accordingly symptoms of the return of the repression, but at the same
+time they were results of a comparison between the resistance of the ego
+and the force of the returning repression which in this case produce a
+distortion beyond recognition. On other occasions when analyzing voices
+in Mrs. P. the distortion was less marked, still the words heard always
+showed a character of diplomatic uncertainty. The annoying allusion was
+generally deeply hidden, the connection of the individual sentences was
+masked by a strange expression, unusual forms of speech, etc.,
+characteristics generally common to the auditory hallucinations of
+paranoiacs, and in which I noticed the remnant of the compromise
+distortion. The expression, “There goes Mrs. P., she is looking for
+apartments in the street,” signified, for example, the threat that she
+will never recover, for I promised her that after the treatment she
+would be able to return to the little city where her husband was
+employed. She rented temporary quarters in Vienna for a few months.
+
+On some occasions Mrs. P. also perceived more distinct threats, for
+example, concerning the relatives of her husband, the restrained
+expression of which still continued to contrast with the grief which
+such voices caused her. Considering all that we otherwise know of
+paranoiacs I am inclined to assume a gradual relaxation of that
+resistance which weakens the reproaches so that finally the defense
+fails completely and the original reproach, the insulting word, which
+one wanted to save himself returns in unchanged form. I do not, however,
+know whether this is a constant course, whether the censor of the
+expressions of reproach can not from the beginning stay away, or persist
+to the end.
+
+It is left for me to utilize the explanations gained in this case of
+paranoia for the comparison of paranoia with compulsion neurosis. Here,
+as there, the repression was shown to be the nucleus of the psychic
+mechanism, and in both cases the repression is a sexual experience of
+childhood. The origin of every compulsion in this paranoia is in the
+repression, and the symptoms of paranoia allow a similar classification
+as the one found justified in compulsion neurosis. Some symptoms also
+originate from the primary defense among which are all delusions of
+distrust, suspicion and persecution by others. In the compulsion
+neurosis the initial reproach became repressed through the formation of
+the primary symptom of defense, self-distrust, moreover, the reproach
+was recognized as justified, and for the purpose of adjustment the
+validity acquired by the scrupulousness during the normal interval now
+guards against giving credence to the returning reproach in the form of
+an obsession. By the formation of the defense symptom of distrust in
+others, the reproach in paranoia is repressed in a way which may be
+designated as projection; the reproach is also deprived of recognition,
+and as a retaliation there is no protection against the returning
+reproaches contained in the delusions.
+
+The other symptoms in my case of paranoia are therefore to be designated
+as symptoms of the return of the repression, and as in the compulsion
+neurosis they show the traces of the compromise which alone permits an
+entrance into consciousness. Such are the delusions of being observed
+while undressing, the visual hallucinations, the perceptual
+hallucinations and the hearing of voices. The memory content existing in
+the delusion mentioned is almost unchanged and appears only uncertain
+through utterance. The return of the repression into visual pictures
+comes nearer to the character of hysteria than to the character of
+compulsion neurosis; still, hysteria is wont to repeat its memory
+symbols without modification, whereas the paranoiac memory hallucination
+undergoes a distortion similar to those in compulsion neurosis. An
+analogous modern picture takes the place of the one repressed (instead
+of a child’s lap it was the lap of a woman upon which the hairs were
+particularly distinct because they were absent in the original
+impression). Quite peculiar to paranoia but no further elucidated in
+this comparison is the fact that the repressed reproaches return as loud
+thoughts, this must yield to a double distortion: (1) a censor, which
+either leads to a replacement through other associated thoughts or to a
+concealment by indefinite expressions, and (2) the reference to the
+modern which is merely analogous to the old.
+
+The third group of symptoms found in compulsion neurosis, the symptoms
+of the secondary defense, cannot exist as such in paranoia, for no
+defense asserts itself against the returning symptoms which really find
+credence. As a substitute for this we find in paranoia another source of
+symptom formation; the delusions (symptoms of return) reaching
+consciousness through the compromise demand a great deal of the thinking
+work of the ego until they can be unconditionally accepted. As they
+themselves are not to be influenced the ego must adapt itself to them,
+and hence the combining delusional formation, the delusion of
+interpretation which results in the transformation of the ego,
+corresponds here to the symptoms of secondary defense of compulsion
+neurosis. In this respect my case was imperfect as it did not at that
+time show any attempt at interpretation, this only appeared later. I do
+not doubt, however that if psychoanalysis were also applied to that
+stage of paranoia, another important result would be established. It
+would probably be found that even the so called weakness of memory in
+paranoiacs is purposeful, that is, it depends on the repression and
+serves its purpose. Subsequently even those nonpathogenic memories which
+stand in opposition to the transformation of the ego become repressed
+and replaced; this the symptoms of return imperatively demand.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+ ON PSYCHOTHERAPY.[53]
+
+
+ _Gentlemen_:
+
+It is almost eight years since, at the request of your deceased
+chairman, Prof. v. Reder, I had the pleasure of speaking in your midst
+on the subject of hysteria. Shortly before (1895) I had published the
+“Studien über Hysterie” together with Dr. J. Breuer, and on the basis of
+a new knowledge for which we are thankful to this investigator, I have
+attempted to introduce a new way of treating the neurosis. Fortunately,
+I can say that the endeavors of our “Studies” have met with success, and
+that the ideas which they advocate concerning the effects of psychic
+traumas through the restraint of affects and the conception of the
+hysterical symptom as a result of a displacement of excitement from the
+psychic to the physical—ideas for which we have created the terms
+“ab-reaction” and “conversion”—are today generally known and understood.
+At least in German-speaking countries there are no descriptions of
+hysteria which do not to a certain extent take cognizance of them, and
+no colleague who does not at least partially follow this theory. And yet
+as long as they were new these theories and these terms must have
+sounded strange enough!
+
+I can not say the same thing about the therapeutic procedure which we
+have proposed to our colleagues together with our theory. It still
+struggles for recognition. This may have its special reasons. The
+technique of the procedure was at that time still rudimentary. I was
+unable to give those indications to the medical reader of the book which
+would enable him to perform such a treatment. But surely there were
+other causes of a general nature. To many physicians psychotherapy even
+today appears as a product of modern mysticism, and in comparison to our
+physico-chemical remedies the application of which is based on
+physiological insight, psychotherapy appears quite unscientific and
+unworthy of the interest of a natural philosopher. You will therefore
+allow me to present to you the subject of psychotherapy, and to point
+out to you what part of this verdict can be designated as unjust or
+erroneous.
+
+In the first place let me remind you that psychotherapy is not a modern
+therapeutic procedure. On the contrary it is one of the oldest remedies
+used in medicine. In Lëwenfeld’s instructive work (Lehrbuch der gesamten
+Psychotherapie) you can find the methods employed in primitive and
+ancient medicine. Most of them were of a psychotherapeutic nature. In
+order to cure a patient he was transferred into a state of “credulous
+expectation” which acts in a similar manner even today. Even after the
+doctors found other remedial agents psychotherapeutic endeavors never
+disappeared from this or that branch of medicine.
+
+Secondly, I call your attention to the fact that we doctors really can
+not abandon psychotherapy if only because another very much to be
+considered party in the treatment—namely the patient—has no intention of
+abandoning it. You know how much we owe to the Nancy school (Liébault,
+Bernheim) for these explanations. Without our intention, an independent
+factor from the patient’s psychic disposition enters into the activity
+of every remedial agent introduced by the doctor, acting mostly in a
+favorable sense but often also in an inhibiting sense. We have learned
+to apply to this factor the word “suggestion,” and Moebius taught us
+that the failures of some of our remedies are to be ascribed to the
+disturbing influences of this very powerful moment. You doctors, all of
+you, constantly practice psychotherapy, even when you do not know it, or
+do not intend it, but it has one disadvantage, you leave entirely to the
+patient the psychic factor of your influence. It then becomes
+uncontrollable, it can not be divided into doses and can not be
+increased. Is it not a justified endeavor of the doctor to become master
+of this factor, to make use of it intentionally, to direct and enforce
+it? It is nothing other than that, that scientific psychotherapy expects
+of you.
+
+In the third place, gentlemen, I wish to refer you to the well known
+experience, namely, that certain maladies and particularly the
+psychoneuroses, are more accessible to psychic influences than to any
+other medications. It is no modern talk but a dictum of old physicians
+that these diseases are not cured by the drug, but by the doctor, to
+wit, by the personality of the physician in so far as it exerts a
+psychic influence. I am well aware, gentlemen, that you like very much
+the idea which the aesthete Vischer, in his parody on Faust (Faust, der
+Tragödie, III Teil) endowed with a classical expression: “I know that
+the physical often acts on the moral.”
+
+But would it not be more adequate and frequently more correct to
+influence the moral part of the person with the moral, that is, with
+psychic means?
+
+There are many ways and means of psychotherapy. All methods are good
+which produce the aim of the therapy. Our usual consolation, “You will
+soon be well again,” with which we are so generous to our patients,
+corresponds to one of the psychotherapeutic methods, only that on
+gaining a profounder insight into the neuroses we are not forced to
+limit ourselves to this consolation alone. We have developed the
+technique of hypnotic suggestion, of psychotherapy through diversion,
+through practice, and through the evocation of serviceable affects. I do
+not disdain any of them, and would practice them all under suitable
+conditions. That I have in reality restricted myself to a single
+therapeutic procedure, to the method called by Breuer “cathartic,” which
+I prefer to call “analytic,” is simply due to subjective motives which
+guided me. Having participated in the elaboration of this therapy I feel
+it a personal duty to devote myself to its investigation, and to the
+final development of its technique. I maintain that the analytic method
+of psychotherapy is one which acts most penetratingly, and carries
+farthest; through it one can produce the most prolific changes in the
+patient. If I relinquish for a moment the therapeutic point of view, I
+can assert that it is the most interesting, and that it alone teaches us
+something concerning the origin and the connection of the morbid
+manifestations. Owing to insights which it opens for us into the
+mechanism of the psychic malady, it can even lead us beyond itself, and
+show us the way to still other kinds of therapeutic influences.
+
+Allow me now to correct some errors, and furnish some explanations
+concerning this cathartic or analytic method of psychotherapy.
+
+(_a_) I notice that this method is often mistaken for the hypnotic
+suggestive treatment. I notice this by the fact that quite frequently
+colleagues whose confidant I am not by any means, send patients to me,
+refractory patients of course, with the request that I should hypnotize
+them. Now, for eight years I have not practiced hypnotism (individual
+cases excluded) as a therapeutic aim, and hence I used to return the
+patients with the advice that he who relies on hypnosis should do it
+himself. In truth, the greatest possible contrast exists between the
+suggestive and the analytic technique, that contrast which the great
+Leonardo da Vinci has expressed for the arts in the formulæ per via di
+porre and per via di levare. Said Leonardo, “the art of painting works
+per via di levare, that is to say, places little heaps of paint where
+they have not been before on the uncolored canvas; sculpturing, on the
+other hand, goes per via di levare, that is to say, it takes away from
+the stone as much as covers the surface of the statue therein
+contained.” Quite similarly, gentlemen, the suggestive technique acts
+per via di porre, it does not concern itself about the origin, force,
+and significance of the morbid symptoms, but puts on something, to wit,
+the suggestion which it expects will be strong enough to prevent the
+pathogenic idea from expression. On the other hand the analytic therapy
+does not wish to put on anything, or introduce anything new, but to take
+away, and extract, and for this purpose it concerns itself with the
+genesis of the morbid symptoms, and the psychic connection of the
+pathogenic idea the removal of which is its aim. This manner of
+investigation has considerably furthered our understanding. I have so
+early given up the technique of suggestion, and with it hypnosis,
+because I despaired of making the suggestion as strong and persistent as
+would be necessary for a lasting cure. In all grave cases I noticed that
+the suggestions which were put on crumbled off again, and then the
+disease, or one replacing it, reappeared. Besides, I charge this
+technique with concealing from us the psychic play of forces, for
+example, it does not permit us to recognize the resistance with which
+the patients adhere to their malady, with which they also strive against
+the recovery, and which alone can give us an understanding of their
+behavior in life.
+
+(_b_) It seems to me that a very widespread mistake among my colleagues
+is the idea that the technique of the investigation for the causes of
+the disease and the removal of the manifestations by this investigation
+is easy and self-evident. I concluded this from the fact that of the
+many who interest themselves in my therapy and express a definite
+opinion on the same, no one has yet asked me how I do it. There can only
+be one reason for it, they believe there is nothing to ask, that it is a
+matter of course. I occasionally also hear with surprise that in this or
+that division of the hospital a young interne is requested by his chief
+to undertake a “psychoanalysis” with a hysterical woman. I am convinced
+that he would not entrust him with the examination of an extirpated
+tumor without previously assuring himself that he is acquainted with the
+histological technique. Likewise I am informed that this or that
+colleague has made appointments with a patient for psychic treatment,
+whereas I am certain that he does not know the technique of such a
+treatment. He must, therefore, expect that the patient will bring him
+her secrets, or he seeks salvation in some kind of a confession or
+confidence. I should not wonder if the patient thus treated would rather
+be harmed than benefited. The mental instrument is really not at all
+easy to play. On such occasions I can not help but think of the speech
+of a world-renowned neurotic, who really never came under a doctor’s
+treatment, and only lived in the fancy of the poet. I mean Prince Hamlet
+of Denmark. The king has sent the two courtiers, Rosencrantz and
+Guildenstern, to investigate him and rob him of his secret. While he
+defended himself, pipes were brought on the stage. Hamlet took a pipe
+and requested one of his tormentors to play on it, saying that it is as
+easy to play as lying. The courtier hesitated because he knew no touch
+of it, and as he could not be moved to attempt to play the pipe, Hamlet
+finally burst forth: “Why, look you now, how unworthy a thing you make
+of me! You would play upon me; you would seem to know my stops; you
+would pluck out the heart of my mystery; you would sound me from my
+lowest note to the top of my compass; and there is much music, excellent
+voice, in this little organ, yet you cannot make it speak. ’Sblood! do
+you think I am easier to be played on than a pipe? Call me what
+instrument you will, though you can fret me, you cannot play upon me.”
+(Act III, Scene 2.)
+
+(_c_) You will have surmised from some of my observations that the
+analytic cure contains qualities which keep it away from the ideal of a
+therapy. Tuto, cito, iucunde; the investigation and examination does not
+really mean rapidity of success, and the allusion to the resistance has
+prepared you for the expectation of inconveniences. Certainly the
+psychoanalytic method lays high claims on the patient as well as the
+physician. From the first it requires the sacrifice of perfect candor,
+it takes up much of his time, and is therefore also expensive; for the
+physician it also means the loss of much time, and due to the technique
+which he has to learn and practice, it is quite laborious. I even find
+it quite justified to employ more suitable remedies as long as there is
+a prospect to achieve something with them. It comes to this point only:
+if we gain by the more laborious and cumbersome procedure considerably
+more than by the short and easy one, the first is justified despite
+everything. Just think, gentlemen, by how much the Finsen therapy of
+lupus is more inconvenient and expensive than the formerly used
+cauterization and scraping, and yet it means a great progress, merely
+because it achieves more, it actually cures the lupus radically. I do
+not really wish to carry through the comparison, but psychoanalysis can
+claim for itself a similar privilege. In reality I could develop and
+test my therapeutic method in grave and in the gravest of cases only; my
+material at first consisted of patients who tried everything
+unsuccessfully, and had spent years in asylums. I hardly gained enough
+experience to be able to tell you how my therapy behaves in those
+lighter, episodically appearing diseases which we see cured under the
+most diverse influences, and also spontaneously. The psychoanalytic
+method was created for patients who are permanently incapacitated, and
+its triumph is to make a gratifying number of such, permanently
+capacitated. Against this success all expense is insignificant. We can
+not conceal from ourselves what we were wont to disavow to the patient,
+namely, that the significance of a grave neurosis for the individual
+subjected to it is not less than any cachexia or any of the generally
+feared maladies.
+
+(_d_) In view of the many practical limitations which I have encountered
+in my work, I can hardly definitely enumerate the indications and
+contraindications of this treatment. However, I will attempt to discuss
+with you a few points:
+
+1. The former value of the person should not be overlooked in the
+disease, and you should refuse a patient who does not possess a certain
+degree of education, and whose character is not in a measure reliable.
+We must not forget that there are also healthy persons who are good for
+nothing, and that if they only show a mere touch of the neurosis, one is
+only too much inclined to blame the disease for incapacitating such
+inferior persons. I maintain that the neurosis does not in any way stamp
+its bearer as a dégéneré, but that frequently enough it is found in the
+same individual associated with the manifestations of degeneration. The
+analytic psychotherapy is therefore no procedure for the treatment of
+neuropathic degeneration, on the contrary it is limited by it. It is
+also not to be applied in persons who are not prompted by their own
+suffering to seek the treatment, but subject themselves to it by order
+of their relatives. The characteristic feature upon which the usefulness
+of the psychoanalytic treatment depends, the educability, we will still
+have to consider from another point of view.
+
+2. If one wishes to take a safe course he should limit his selection to
+persons of a normal state, for, in psychoanalytic procedures, it is from
+the normal that we seize upon the morbid. Psychoses, confusional states,
+and marked (I might say toxic) depressions, are unsuitable for analysis,
+at least as it is practiced today. I do not think it at all impossible
+that with the proper changes in the procedure it will be possible to
+disregard this contraindication, and thus claim a psychotherapy for the
+psychoses.
+
+3. The age of the patient also plays a part in the selection for the
+psychoanalytic treatment. Persons near or over the age of fifty lack, on
+the one hand, the plasticity of the psychic processes upon which the
+therapy depends—old people are no longer educable—and on the other hand,
+the material which has to be elaborated, and the duration of the
+treatment is immensely increased. The earliest age limit is to be
+individually determined; youthful persons, even before puberty, are
+excellent subjects for influence.
+
+4. One should not attempt psychoanalysis when it is a question of
+rapidly removing a threatening manifestation, as, for example, in the
+case of an hysterical anorexia.
+
+You have now gained the impression that the sphere of application of the
+analytic psychotherapy is a very limited one, for you really heard me
+enumerate nothing but contraindications. Nevertheless, there remain
+sufficient cases and morbid states, such as all chronic forms of
+hysteria with remnant manifestations, the extensive realms of compulsive
+states, abulias, etc., on which this therapy can be tried.
+
+It is pleasing that particularly the worthiest and highest developed
+persons can thus be most helped. Where the analytic psychotherapy has
+accomplished but little one can cheerfully assert that any other
+treatment would have certainly resulted in nothing.
+
+(_e_) You will surely wish to ask me about the possibility of doing harm
+through the application of psychoanalysis. To this I will reply that if
+you will judge justly you will meet this procedure with the same
+critical good-feeling as you have met our other therapeutic methods, and
+doing this you will have to agree with me that a rationally executed
+analytic treatment entails no dangers for the patient. One who, like a
+layman, is accustomed to ascribe to the treatment everything occurring
+during the disease, will probably judge differently. It is really not so
+long since our hydrotherapeutic asylums met with similar opposition.
+Thus one who was advised to go to such an asylum became thoughtful
+because he had an acquaintance who entered the asylum as nervous and
+there become insane. As you surmise we deal with cases of initial
+general paresis who in the first stages could still be sent to
+hydrotherapeutic asylums, and who there merged into the irresistible
+course leading to manifest insanity. For the layman the water was the
+cause and author of this sad transformation. Where it is a question of
+unfamiliar influences, even doctors are not free from such mistaken
+judgment. I recall having once attempted to treat a woman by
+psychotherapy who passed a great part of her existence by alternating
+between mania and melancholia. I began to treat her at the end of a
+melancholia and everything seemed to go well for two weeks, but in the
+third week she was again merging into a mania. It was surely a
+spontaneous alteration of the morbid picture, for two weeks is no time
+in which anything can be accomplished by psychotherapy, but the
+prominent—now deceased—physician who saw the case with me could not
+refrain from remarking that this decline must have been due to the
+psychotherapy. I am quite convinced that he would have been more
+critical under different conditions.
+
+(_f_) In conclusion, gentlemen, I must say to myself that it will not do
+to lay claim to your attention so long in favor of the analytic
+psychotherapy without telling you of what this treatment consists, and
+on what it is based. To be sure I can only indicate it as I have to be
+brief. This therapy is founded on the understanding that unconscious
+ideas—or rather the unconsciousness of certain psychic processes—are the
+main causes of a morbid symptom. We share this conviction with the
+French school (Janet) which moreover by gross schematization reduces the
+hysterical symptom to an unconscious idée fixe. Do not fear now that we
+will thus merge too far into the obscurest philosophy. Our unconscious
+is not quite the same as that of the philosophers and what is more, most
+philosophers wish to know nothing of the “psychical unconscious.” But if
+you will put yourselves in our position, you will understand that the
+interpretation of this unconscious, in patients’ psychic life, into the
+conscious, must result in a correction of their deviation from the
+normal, and in an abrogation of the compulsion controlling their psychic
+life. For the conscious will reaches as far as the conscious psychic
+processes and every psychic compulsion is substantiated by the
+unconscious. You need never fear that the patient will be harmed by the
+emotion produced in the entrance of his unconscious into consciousness,
+for you can theoretically readily understand that the somatic and
+affective activity of the emotion which became conscious can never
+become as great as those of the unconscious. For we only control all our
+emotions by directing upon them our highest psychic activities which are
+connected with consciousness.
+
+We can still choose another point of view for the understanding of the
+psychoanalytic treatment. The revealing and interpreting of the
+unconscious takes place under constant resistance on the part of the
+patient. The emerging of the unconscious is connected with displeasure
+and owing to this displeasure it is continuously repulsed by the
+patient. It is upon this conflict in the patient’s psychic life that you
+encroach, and if you succeed in prevailing upon him to accept something,
+for motives of better insight, which he has thus far repulsed
+(repressed) on account of the automatic adjustment of displeasure, you
+have achieved in him a piece of educational work. For it is really an
+education if you can induce a person to leave his bed early in the
+morning despite his unwillingness to do so. As such an after training
+for the overcoming of inner resistances you can conceive the
+psychoanalytic treatment in quite a general manner. But in no sphere of
+the nervous patients is such an after training so essential as in the
+psychic elements of their sexual life. For nowhere have culture and
+education produced as much harm as here, and it is here, as experience
+will show you, that the controlling etiologies of the neuroses are
+found. The other etiological element, the constitutional contribution,
+is really given to us as something immutable. But this gives rise to an
+important demand on the doctor. Not only must he be of unblemished
+character—“morality is really a matter of course” as the principal
+person in Th. Vischer’s “Auch Einer” used to say—but he must have
+overcome in his own personality the mixture of lewdness and prudishness
+with which so many others are wont to meet the sexual problems.
+
+This is perhaps the place for another observation. I know that the
+emphasis which I laid on the sexual rôle in the origin of the
+psychoneuroses has become widely known. But I also know that restriction
+and nearer determinations are of little use with the great public; the
+multitude has little room in its memory, and generally retains from a
+statement the bare nucleus, thus creating for itself an easily
+remembered extreme. The same might also have happened to some physicians
+when the faint notion that they have of my theory is that I trace back
+the neurosis in the last place to sexual privation. Of such there is
+surely no dearth under the vital conditions of our society. But if that
+supposition were true would it not seem obvious that in order to avoid
+the roundabout way of the psychic treatment and tend directly towards
+the cure, we should directly recommend sexual participation as the
+remedy? I really do not know what could induce me to suppress these
+conclusions if they were justified. But the state of affairs is
+different. The sexual need or privation is merely one of the factors
+playing a part in the mechanism of the neurosis, and if it alone existed
+the result would not be a disease but a dissipation. The other equally
+indispensable factor, which one is only too ready to forget, is the
+sexual repugnance of neurotics, their inability to love; it is that
+psychic feature which I have designated as “repression.” It is only from
+the conflict between the two strivings that the neurotic malady
+originates, and it is for this reason that the advice for sexual
+participation in the psychoneuroses can really only seldom be designated
+as good.
+
+Allow me to conclude with this guarded remark. Let us hope that with an
+interest for psychotherapy, purified of all hostile prejudice, you will
+help us to do some good in the treatment of the severe cases of
+psychoneuroses.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+ MY VIEWS ON THE RÔLE OF SEXUALITY IN THE ETIOLOGY OF THE NEUROSES.[54]
+
+
+I am of the opinion that my theory on the etiological significance of
+the sexual moment in the neuroses can be best appreciated by following
+its development. I will by no means make any effort to deny that it
+passed through an evolution during which it underwent a change. My
+colleagues can find the assurance in this admission that this theory is
+nothing other than the result of continued and painstaking experiences.
+In contradistinction to this whatever originates from speculation can
+certainly appear complete at one go and continue unchanged.
+
+Originally the theory had reference only to the morbid pictures
+comprehended as “neurasthenia,” among which I found two types which
+occasionally appeared pure, and which I described as “actual
+neurasthenia” and “anxiety neurosis.” For it was always known that
+sexual moments could play a part in the causation of these forms, but
+they were found neither regularly effective, nor did one think of
+conceding to them a precedence over other etiological influences. I was
+above all surprised at the frequency of coarse disturbances in the vita
+sexualis of nervous patients. The more I was in quest of such
+disturbances, during which I remembered that all men conceal the truth
+in things sexual, and the more skilful I became in continuing the
+examination despite the incipient negation, the more regularly such
+disease-forming moments were discovered in the sexual life, until it
+seemed to me that they were but little short of universal. But one must
+from the first be prepared for similar frequent occurrences of sexual
+irregularities under the stress of the social relations of our society,
+and one could therefore remain in doubt as to what part of the deviation
+from the normal sexual function is to be considered as a morbid cause. I
+could therefore only place less value on the regular demonstration of
+sexual noxas than on other experiences which appeared to me to be less
+equivocal. It was found that the form of the malady, be it neurasthenia
+or anxiety neurosis, shows a constant relation to the form of the sexual
+injury. In the typical cases of neurasthenia we could always demonstrate
+masturbation or accumulated pollutions, while in anxiety neurosis we
+could find such factors as coitus interruptus, “frustrated excitement,”
+etc. The moment of insufficient discharge of the generated libido seemed
+to be common to both. Only after this experience, which is easy to gain
+and very often confirmed, had I the courage to claim for the sexual
+influences a prominent place in the etiology of the neurosis. It also
+happened that the mixed forms of neurasthenia and anxiety neurosis
+occurring so often, showed the admixture of the etiologies accepted for
+both, and that such a bipartition in the form of the manifestations of
+the neurosis seemed to accord well with the polar characters of
+sexuality (male and female).
+
+At the same time, while I assigned to sexuality this significance in the
+origin of the simple neurosis, I still professed for the psychoneuroses
+(hysteria and obsessions) a purely psychological theory in which the
+sexual moment was no differently considered than any other emotional
+sources. Together with J. Breuer, and in addition to observations which
+he has made on his hysterical patients fully a decade before, I have
+studied the mechanism of the origin of hysterical symptoms by the
+awakening of memories in hypnotic states. We obtained information which
+permitted us to cross the bridge from Charcot’s traumatic hysteria to
+the common non-traumatic hysteria. We reached the conception that the
+hysterical symptoms are permanent results of psychic traumas, and that
+the amount of affect belonging to them was pushed away from conscious
+elaboration by special determinations, thus forcing an abnormal road
+into bodily innervation. The terms “strangulated affect,” “conversion,”
+and “ab-reaction,” comprise the distinctive characteristics of this
+conception.
+
+In the close relations of the psychoneuroses to the simple neuroses,
+which can go so far that the diagnostic distinction is not always easy
+for the unpracticed, it could happen that the cognition gained from one
+sphere has also taken effect in the other. Leaving such influences out
+of the question, the deep study of the psychic traumas also leads to the
+same results. If by the “analytic” method we continue to trace the
+psychic traumas from which the hysterical symptoms are derived, we
+finally reach to experiences which belong to the patient’s childhood,
+and concern his sexual life. This can be found even in such cases where
+a banal emotion of a non-sexual nature has occasioned the outburst of
+the disease. Without taking into account these sexual traumas of
+childhood we could neither explain the symptoms, find their
+determination intelligible, nor guard against their recurrence. The
+incomparable significance of sexual experiences in the etiology of the
+psychoneuroses seems therefore firmly established, and this fact remains
+until today one of the main supports of the theory.
+
+If we represent this theory by saying that the course of the life long
+hysterical neurosis lies in the sexual experiences of early childhood
+which are usually trivial in themselves, it surely would sound strange
+enough. But if we take cognizance of the historical development of the
+theory, and transfer the main content of the same into the sentence:
+hysteria is the expression of a special behavior of the sexual function
+of the individual, and that this behavior was already decisively
+determined by the first effective influences and experiences of
+childhood, we will perhaps be poorer in a paradox but richer in a motive
+for directing our attention to a hitherto very neglected and most
+significant aftereffect of infantile impressions in general.
+
+As I reserve the question whether the etiology of hysteria (and
+compulsion neurosis) is to be found in the sexual infantile experiences
+for a later more thorough discussion, I now return to the construction
+of the theory expressed in some small preliminary publications in the
+years 1895–1896.[55] The bringing into prominence of the assumed
+etiological moments permitted us at the time to contrast the common
+neuroses which are maladies with an actual etiology, with the
+psychoneuroses which etiology was in the first place to be sought in the
+sexual experiences of remote times. The theory culminates in the
+sentence: In a normal vita sexualis no neurosis is possible.
+
+If I still consider today this sentence as correct it is really not
+surprising that after ten years labor on the knowledge of these
+relations I passed a good way beyond my former point of view, and that I
+now think myself in a position to correct by detailed experience the
+imperfections, the displacements, and the misconceptions, from which
+this theory then suffered. By chance my former rather meagre material
+furnished me with a great number of cases in which infantile histories,
+sexual seduction by grown-up persons or older children, played the main
+rôle. I overestimated the frequency of these (otherwise not to be
+doubted) occurrences, the more so because I was then in no position to
+distinguish definitely the deceptive memories of hysterical patients
+concerning their childhood, from the traces of the real processes,
+whereas, I have since then learned to explain many a seduction fancy as
+an attempt at defense against the reminiscence of their own sexual
+activity (infantile masturbation). The emphasis laid on the “traumatic”
+element of the infantile sexual experience disappeared with this
+explanation, and it remained obvious that the infantile sexual
+activities (be they spontaneous or provoked) dictate the course of the
+later sexual life after maturity. The same explanation which really
+corrects the most significant of my original errors perforce also
+changed the conception of the mechanism of the hysterical symptoms.
+These no longer appeared as direct descendants of repressed memories of
+sexual infantile experiences, but between the symptoms and the infantile
+impressions there slipped in the fancies (confabulations of memory) of
+the patients which were mostly produced during the years of puberty and
+which on the one hand, are raised from and over the infantile memories,
+and on the other, are immediately transformed into symptoms. Only after
+the introduction of the element of hysterical fancies did the structure
+of the neurosis and its relation to the life of the patient become
+transparent. It also resulted in a veritable surprising analogy between
+these unconscious hysterical fancies and the romances which became
+conscious as delusions in paranoia.
+
+After this correction the “infantile sexual traumas” were in a sense
+supplanted by the “infantilism of sexuality.” A second modification of
+the original theory was not remote. With the accepted frequency of
+seduction in childhood there also disappeared the enormous emphasis of
+the accidental influences of sexuality to which I wished to shift the
+main rôle in the causation of the disease without, however, denying
+constitutional and hereditary moments. I even hoped to solve thereby the
+problem of the selection of the neurosis, that is, to decide by the
+details of the sexual infantile experience, the form of the
+psychoneurosis into which the patient may merge. Though with reserve I
+thought at that time that passive behavior during these scenes results
+in the specific predisposition for hysteria, while active behavior
+results in compulsion neurosis. This conception I was later obliged to
+disclaim completely though some facts of the supposed connection between
+passivity and hysteria, and activity and compulsion neurosis, can be
+maintained to some extent. With the disappearance of the accidental
+influences of experiences, the elements of constitution and heredity had
+to regain the upper hand, but differing from the view generally in vogue
+I placed the “sexual constitution” in place of the general neuropathic
+predisposition. In my recent work, “Three Contributions to the Sexual
+Theory.”[56] I have attempted to discuss the varieties of this sexual
+constitution, the components of the sexual impulse in general, and its
+origin from the contributory sources of the organism.
+
+Still in connection with the changed conception of the “sexual infantile
+traumas,” the theory continued to develop in a course which was already
+indicated in the publications of 1894–1896. Even before sexuality was
+installed in its proper place in the etiology, I had already stated as a
+condition for the pathogenic efficaciousness of an experience that the
+latter must appear to the ego as unbearable and thus evoke an exertion
+for defense. To this defense I have traced the psychic splitting—or as
+it was then called the splitting of consciousness—of hysteria. If the
+defense succeeded, the unbearable experience with its resulting affect
+was expelled from consciousness and memory; but under certain conditions
+the thing expelled which was now unconscious, developed its activity,
+and with the aid of the symptoms and their adhering affect it returned
+into consciousness, so that the disease corresponded to a failure of the
+defense. This conception had the merit of entering into the play of the
+psychic forces, and hence approximate the psychic processes of hysteria
+to the normal instead of shifting the characteristic of the neurosis
+into an enigmatic and no further analyzable disturbance.
+
+Further inquiries among persons who remained normal furnished the
+unexpected result, that the sexual histories of their childhood need not
+differ essentially from the infantile life of neurotics, and that
+especially the rôle of seduction is the same in the former, so the
+accidental influences receded still more in comparison to the moments of
+“repression” (which I began to use instead of “defense”). It really does
+not depend on the sexual excitements which an individual experiences in
+his childhood but above all on his reactions towards these experiences,
+and whether these impressions responded with “repression” or not. It
+could be shown that spontaneous sexual manifestations of childhood were
+frequently interrupted in the course of development by an act of
+repression. The sexual maturity of neurotic individuals thus regularly
+brings with it a fragment of “sexual repression” from childhood which
+manifests itself in the requirements of real life. Psychoanalyses of
+hysterical individuals show that the malady is the result of the
+conflict between the libido and the sexual repression, and that their
+symptoms have the value of a compromise between both psychic streams.
+
+Without a comprehensive discussion of my conception of repression I
+could not explain any further this part of the theory. It suffices to
+refer here to my “Three Contributions to the Sexual Theory,” where I
+have made an attempt to throw some light on the somatic processes in
+which the essence of sexuality is to be sought. I have stated there that
+the constitutional sexual predisposition of the child is more
+irregularly multifarious than one would expect, that it deserves to be
+called “polymorphous-perverse,” and that from this predisposition the so
+called normal behavior of the sexual functions results through a
+repression of certain components. By referring to the infantile
+character of sexuality, I could form a simple connection among normal,
+perversions, and neurosis. The normal resulted through the repression of
+certain partial impulses and components of the infantile predisposition,
+and through the subordination of the rest under the primacy of the
+genital zones for the service of the function of procreation. The
+perversions corresponded to disturbances of this connection due to a
+superior compulsive like development of some of the partial impulses,
+while the neurosis could be traced to a marked repression of the
+libidinous strivings. As almost all perversive impulses of the infantile
+predisposition are demonstrable as forces of symptom formation in the
+neurosis, in which, however, they exist in a state of repression, I
+could designate the neurosis as the “negative” of the perversion.
+
+I think it worth emphasizing that with all changes my ideas on the
+etiology of the psychoneuroses still never disavowed or abandoned two
+points of view, to wit, the estimation of sexuality and infantilism. In
+other respects we have in place of the accidental influences the
+constitutional moments, and instead of the pure psychologically intended
+defense we have the organic “sexual repression.” Should anybody ask
+where a cogent proof can be found for the asserted etiological
+significance of sexual factors in the psychoneuroses, and argue that
+since an outburst of these diseases can result from the most banal
+emotions, and even from somatic causes, a specific etiology in the form
+of special experiences of childhood must therefore be disavowed; I
+mention as an answer for all these arguments the psychoanalytic
+investigation of neurotics as the source from which the disputed
+conviction emanates. If one only makes use of this method of
+investigation he will discover that the symptoms represent the whole or
+a partial sexual manifestation of the patient from the sources of the
+normal or perverse partial impulses of sexuality. Not only does a good
+part of the hysterical symptomatology originate directly from the
+manifestations of the sexual excitement, not only are a series of
+erogenous zones in strengthening infantile attributes raised in the
+neurosis to the importance of genitals, but even the most complicated
+symptoms become revealed as the converted representations of fancies
+having a sexual situation as a content. He who can interpret the
+language of hysteria can understand that the neurosis only deals with
+the repressed sexuality. One should, however, understand the sexual
+function in its proper sphere as circumscribed by the infantile
+predisposition. Where a banal emotion has to be added to the causation
+of the disease, the analysis regularly shows that the sexual components
+of the traumatic experience, which are never missing, have exercised the
+pathogenic effect.
+
+We have unexpectedly advanced from the question of the causation of the
+psychoneuroses to the problem of its essence. If we wish to take
+cognizance of what we discovered by psychoanalysis we can only say that
+the essence of these maladies lies in disturbances of the sexual
+processes, in those processes in the organism which determine the
+formation and utilization of the sexual libido. We can hardly avoid
+perceiving these processes in the last place as chemical, so that we can
+recognize in the so called actual neuroses the somatic effects of
+disturbances in the sexual metabolism, while in the psychoneuroses we
+recognize besides the psychic effects of the same disturbances. The
+resemblance of the neuroses to the manifestations of intoxication and
+abstinence following certain alkaloids, and to Basedow’s and Addison’s
+diseases, obtrudes itself clinically without any further ado, and just
+as these two diseases should no more be described as “nervous diseases,”
+so will the genuine “neuroses” soon have to be removed from this class
+despite their nomenclature.
+
+Everything that can exert harmful influences in the processes serving
+the sexual function therefore belongs to the etiology of the neurosis.
+In the first place we have the noxas directly affecting the sexual
+functions insofar as they are accepted as injuries by the sexual
+constitution which is changeable through culture and breeding. In the
+second place, we have all the different noxas and traumas which may also
+injure the sexual processes by injuring the organism as a whole. But we
+must not forget that the etiological problem in the neuroses is at least
+as complicated as in the causation of any other disease. One single
+pathogenic influence almost never suffices, it mostly requires a
+multiplicity of etiological moments reinforcing one another, and which
+can not be brought in contrast to one another. It is for that reason
+that the state of neurotic illness is not sharply separated from the
+normal. The disease is the result of a summation, and the measure of the
+etiological determinations can be completed from any one part. To seek
+the etiology of the neurosis exclusively in heredity or in the
+constitution would be no less one sided than to attempt to raise to the
+etiology the accidental influences of sexuality alone, even though the
+explanations show that the essence of this malady lies only in a
+disturbance of the sexual processes of the organism.
+
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER X.
+ HYSTERICAL FANCIES AND THEIR RELATIONS TO BISEXUALITY.[57]
+
+
+The delusional formations of paranoiacs containing the greatness and
+sufferings of their own ego, which manifest themselves quite typically
+in almost monotonous forms are universally familiar. Furthermore,
+through numerous communications we became acquainted with the peculiar
+organizations by means of which certain perverts put into operation
+their sexual gratifications, be it in fancy or reality. On the other
+hand it may sound rather novel to some to hear that quite analogous
+psychic formations regularly appear in all psychoneuroses, especially in
+hysteria, and that these so called hysterical fancies show important
+relations to the causation of the neurotic symptoms.
+
+Of the same source and of the normal prototype are all these fantastic
+creations, so called reveries of youth, which have already gained a
+certain consideration in the literature, though not a sufficient
+one.[58] They are perhaps equally frequent in both sexes; in girls and
+women they seem to be wholly of an erotic nature, while in men they are
+of an erotic or ambitious nature. Yet even in men the significance of
+the erotic moment is not to be put in the second place, for on examining
+more closely the reveries of men we generally learn that all these
+heroic acts are accomplished, that all these successes are acquired in
+order to please a woman and to be preferred to other men.[59] These
+fancies are wish gratifications which emanate from privation and
+longing. They are justly named “day dreams” for they give the key for
+the understanding of night dreams in which the nucleus of the dream
+formation is produced by just such complicated, disfigured day fancies
+which are misunderstood by the conscious psychic judgment.[60]
+
+These day dreams are garnished with great interest, are cautiously
+nurtured, and coyly guarded, as if they were numbered among the most
+intimate estates of personality. On the street, however, the day dreamer
+can be readily recognized by a sudden, as if absent minded smile, by
+talking to himself, or by a running-like acceleration of his gait
+wherein he designates the acme of the imaginary situation.
+
+All hysterical attacks which I have been thus far able to examine proved
+to be such involuntary incursions of day dreams. Observation leaves no
+doubt that such fancies may exist as unconscious or conscious and
+whenever they become unconscious they may also become pathogenic, that
+is, they may express themselves in symptoms and attacks. Under favorable
+conditions it is possible for consciousness to seize such unconscious
+fancies. One of my patients whose attention I have called to her fancies
+narrated that once while in the street she suddenly found herself in
+tears, and rapidly reflecting over the cause of her weeping the fancy
+became clear to her. She fancied herself in delicate relationship with a
+piano virtuoso familiar in the city, but whom she did not know
+personally. In her fancy she bore him a child (she was childless), and
+he then deserted her, leaving her and her child in misery. At this
+passage of the romance she burst into tears.
+
+The unconscious fancies are either from the first unconscious, having
+been formed in the unconscious, or what is more frequently the case they
+were once conscious fancies, day dreams, and were then intentionally
+forgotten, merging into the unconscious by “repression.” Their content
+then either remained the same or underwent a transformation, so that the
+present unconscious fancy represents a descendant of the once conscious
+one. The unconscious fancy stands in a very important relation to the
+sexual life of the person, it is really identical with that fancy which
+helped it towards sexual gratification during a period of masturbation.
+The masturbating act (in the broader sense the onanistic) then consisted
+of two parts, the evocation of the fancy, and the active performance of
+self gratification at the height of the same. This combination is
+familiarly in itself a soldering.[61] Originally this action was a
+purely auto-erotic undertaking for the pleasure obtained from a certain
+so called erogenous part of the body. Later this action blended with a
+wish presentation from the sphere of the object loved, and served for a
+partial realization of the situation in which this fancy culminated. If,
+then, the person forgoes in this manner the masturbo-fantastic
+gratification, the action remains undone, the fancy, however, changes
+from a conscious to an unconscious one. If no other manner of sexual
+gratification occurs, if the person remains abstinent and does not
+succeed in sublimating his libido, that is, in diverting the sexual
+excitement to a higher aim, we then have the conditions for the
+refreshment of the unconscious fancy; it grows exuberantly and with all
+the force of the desire for love at least a fragment of its content
+becomes a morbid symptom.
+
+The unconscious fancies are then the nearest psychical first steps of a
+whole series of hysterical symptoms. The hysterical symptoms are nothing
+other than unconscious fancies brought to light by “conversion,” and
+insofar as they are somatic symptoms they are frequently enough taken
+from the spheres of the sexual feelings and motor innervations which
+originally accompanied the former still conscious fancies. In this way
+the disuse of onanism is really made retrograde, and the final aim of
+the whole pathological process, the restoration of the primary sexual
+gratification, though it never becomes perfect, in a manner always
+achieves a certain approximation.
+
+The interest of him who studies hysteria turns directly from the
+symptoms to the fancies from which the former originate. The technique
+of psychoanalysis gives the means of finding out from the symptoms the
+unconscious fancies, and then of bringing them back to the patient’s
+consciousness. In this way it was found that the unconscious fancies of
+hysterics perfectly correspond in content to the consciously performed
+gratification situations of perverts. Those who lack examples of such
+nature need only recall the historical managements of the Roman Caesars
+whose frenzies were naturally only conditioned by the unrestricted
+fullness of the fancy creators. The delusional formations of paranoiacs
+are of the same nature, they are fancies which directly become
+conscious, and which are borne by the masochistic-sadistic components of
+the sexual impulse. Complete counterparts of these can also be found in
+certain unconscious fancies of hysterics. It is a familiar, practically
+significant fact that hysterics express their fancies not as symptoms
+but in conscious realization, and in this way they feign and commit
+murders, assaults, and sexual aggressions.
+
+All that can be found out about the sexuality of the psychoneurotic can
+be ascertained by the psychoanalytic examination which leads from the
+obtrusive symptoms to the hidden unconscious fancies; herein, too, is
+the fact, the communication of which will be put in the foreground of
+this short preliminary publication.
+
+Probably in view of the difficulties which prevent the effort of the
+unconscious fancies from expressing themselves, the relation between the
+fancies to the symptoms is not simple but rather manifoldly
+complicated.[62] As a rule, that is, in a fully developed and a long
+standing neurosis, a symptom does not correspond to an individual
+unconscious fancy, but to a number of such, and indeed it is not
+arbitrary but in lawful combination. To be sure in the beginning of the
+disease all these complications are not developed.
+
+For the sake of general interest I pass over the connection of this
+communication and insert a series of formulæ which strive to
+progressively exhaust the nature of hysteria. They do not contradict one
+another but correspond partly to more complete and sharper conceptions,
+and partly to the use of different points of view.
+
+1. The hysterical symptom is the memory symbol of certain efficacious
+(traumatic) impressions and experiences.
+
+2. The hysterical symptom is the compensation by conversion for the
+associative return of the traumatic experience.
+
+3. The hysterical symptom—like all other psychic formations—is the
+expression of a wish realization.
+
+4. The hysterical symptom is the realization of an unconscious fancy
+serving as a wish fulfilment.
+
+5. The hysterical symptom serves as a sexual gratification, and
+represents a part of the sexual life of the individual (corresponding to
+one of the components of his sexual impulse).
+
+6. The hysterical symptom, in a fashion, corresponds to the return of
+the sexual gratification which was real in infantile life but had been
+repressed since then.
+
+7. The hysterical symptom results as a compromise between two opposing
+affects or impulse incitements, one of which strives to bring to
+realization a partial impulse, or a component of the sexual
+constitution, while the other strives to suppress the same.
+
+8. The hysterical symptom may undertake the representation of diverse
+unconscious non-sexual incitements, but can not lack the sexual
+significance.
+
+It is the seventh among these determinations which expresses most
+exhaustively the essence of the hysterical symptom as a realization of
+an unconscious fancy, and it is the eighth which properly designates the
+significance of the sexual moment. Some of the preceding formulæ are
+contained as first steps in this formula.
+
+In view of these relations between symptoms and fancies one can readily
+reach from the psychoanalysis of the symptoms to the knowledge of the
+components of the sexual impulse controlling the individual, just as I
+have shown in the “Three Contributions to the Sexual Theory.” But in
+some cases this examination gives rather unexpected results. It shows
+that many symptoms can not be solved by one unconscious sexual fancy or
+by a series of fancies in which the most significant and most primitive
+is of a sexual nature, but in order to solve the symptom two sexual
+fancies are required, one of the masculine and one of the feminine
+character, so that one of these fancies arises from a homosexual
+impulse. The axiom pronounced in formula seven is in no way effected by
+this novelty, so that a hysterical symptom necessarily corresponds to a
+compromise between a libidinous and a repressed emotion, but besides
+that, it can correspond to a union of two libidinous fancies of contrary
+sex characters.
+
+I refrain from giving examples for this axiom. Experience has taught me
+that short analyses compressed into the form of an abstract can never
+make the demonstrable impression for which they were intended. The
+communication of fully analyzed cases must be reserved for another
+place.
+
+I therefore content myself in formulating the axiom and in elucidating
+its significance:
+
+9. An hysterical symptom is the expression, on the one hand, of a
+masculine, and on the other hand of a feminine unconscious sexual fancy.
+
+I expressly observe that I am unable to adjudge to this axiom the
+similar general validity that I claimed for the other formulæ. As far as
+I can see it is met neither in all symptoms of a single case, nor in all
+cases. On the contrary it is not difficult to find cases in which the
+contrary sexual emotions have found separate symptomatic expression, so
+that the symptoms of hetero- and homosexuality can be as sharply
+distinguished from each other as the fancies hidden behind them.
+Nevertheless, the relation claimed in the ninth formula occurs
+frequently enough, and wherever it is found it is of sufficient
+significance to merit a special formulation. It seems to me to signify
+the highest stage of complexity to which the determination of hysterical
+symptoms can reach, and can only be expected in a long standing neurosis
+and where a great amount of organization has occurred.[63]
+
+The demonstrable bisexual significance of hysterical symptoms occurring
+in many cases is indeed an interesting proof for the assertion
+formulated by me that the supposed bisexual predisposition of man can be
+especially recognized in psychoneurotics by means of psychoanalysis.[64]
+Quite an analogous process from the same sphere is that in which the
+masturbator in his conscious fancies attempts to live through in his
+imagination the fancied situations of both the man and the woman. Other
+counterparts are found in certain hysterical crises in which the
+patients play both rôles lying at the basis of sexual fancies; thus, for
+example, one of the cases under my observation presses his garments to
+his body with one arm (as woman), and with the other arm he attempts to
+tear them off (as man). This contradictory simultaneity determines most
+of the incomprehensibility of the situation otherwise so plastically
+represented in the attack, and is excellently suited for the concealment
+of the effective unconscious fancy.
+
+In psychoanalytical treatment it is very important to be prepared for
+the bisexual significance of a symptom. It should not be at all
+surprising or misleading when a symptom remains apparently undiminished
+in spite of the fact that one of its sexual determinants is already
+solved. Perhaps it is still supported by the unsuspected contrary
+sexual. Furthermore, during the treatment of such cases we can observe
+how the patient makes use of this convenience. During the analysis of
+the one sexual significance he continually switches his thoughts into
+the sphere of the contrary significance just as if onto a neighboring
+track.
+
+-----
+
+Footnote 1:
+
+ Studien über Hysterie von Jos. Breuer und Sigm. Freud. Leipzig und
+ Wien, Franz Deuticke, 1895. 2nd ed., 1909.
+
+Footnote 2:
+
+ Sammlung kleiner Schriften zur Neurosenlehre, Vols. I. and II. Leipzig
+ und Wien, Deuticke, 1906, and 1909.
+
+Footnote 3:
+
+ Bleuler, Freudsche Mechanismen in der Symptomatologie der Psychosen,
+ Psychiatrisch-Neurolog. Wochenschrift, 1906, Nrs. 35 and 36.
+
+Footnote 4:
+
+ Jung, The Psychology of Dementia Præcox, Nervous and Mental Disease
+ Monograph Series, Nr. 3.
+
+Footnote 5:
+
+ Riklin, Psychiatrisch-Neurolog. Wochenschrift, 1905, Nr. 46.
+
+Footnote 6:
+
+ Brill, Psychological Factors in Dementia Præcox, Journal of Abnormal
+ Psychology, Vol. III, Nr. 4, and A Case of Schizophrenia, American
+ Journal of Insanity, Vol. LXVI, No. 1.
+
+Footnote 7:
+
+ Freud, Deuticke, 1909.
+
+Footnote 8:
+
+ Freud, Karger, 1907.
+
+Footnote 9:
+
+ Freud, Deuticke, 1905.
+
+Footnote 10:
+
+ Written in collaboration with Dr. Joseph Breuer.
+
+Footnote 11:
+
+ The possibility of such a therapy was clearly recognized by Delboeuf
+ and Binet, as is shown by the accompanying quotations: Delboeuf, Le
+ magnétisme animal, Paris, 1889: “On s’expliquerait des lors comment le
+ magnétiseur aide à guérison. Il remet le sujet dans l’état où le mal
+ s’est manifesté et combat par la parole le même mal, mais renaissant.”
+ (Binet, Les altérations de la personnalité, 1892, p. 243): “...
+ peut-être verra-t-on qu’en reportant le malade par un artifice mental,
+ au moment même ou le symptome a apparu pour la premiere fois, on rend
+ ce malade plus docile a une suggestion curative.” In the interesting
+ book of Janet, L’Automatism Psychologique, Paris, 1889, we find the
+ description of a cure brought about in a hysterical girl by a process
+ similar to our method.
+
+Footnote 12:
+
+ We are unable to distinguish in this preliminary contribution what
+ there is new in this content and what can be found in such other
+ authors as Moebius and Strümpel who present similar views on hysteria.
+ The greatest similarity to our theoretical and therapeutical
+ accomplishments we accidentally found in some published observations
+ of Benedict which we shall discuss hereafter.
+
+Footnote 13:
+
+ The German abreagiren has no exact English equivalent. It will
+ therefore be rendered throughout the text by “ab-react,” the literal
+ meaning is to react away from or to react off. It has different shades
+ of meaning, from defense reaction to emotional catharsis, which can be
+ discerned from the context.
+
+Footnote 14:
+
+ As an example of the technique mentioned above, that is, of
+ investigating in a non-somnambulic state or where consciousness is not
+ broadened, I will relate a case which I analyzed recently. I treated a
+ woman of thirty-eight who suffered from an anxiety neurosis
+ (agoraphobia, fear of death, etc.). Like many patients of that type
+ she had a disinclination to admit that she acquired this disease in
+ her married state and was quite desirous of referring it back to early
+ youth. She informed me that at the age of seventeen when she was in
+ the street of her small city she had the first attack of vertigo,
+ anxiety, and faintness, and that these attacks recurred at times up to
+ a few years ago when they were replaced by her present disease. I
+ thought that the first attacks of vertigo, in which the anxiety was
+ only blurred, were hysterical and decided to analyze the same. All she
+ knows is that she had the first attack when she went out to make
+ purchases in the main street of her city.—“What purchases did you wish
+ to make?”—“Various things, I believe it was for a ball to which I was
+ invited.”—“When was the ball to take place?”—“I believe two days
+ later.”—“Something must have happened a few days before this which
+ excited you, and which made an impression on you.”—“But I don’t know,
+ it is now twenty-one years.”—“That does not matter, you will recall
+ it. I will exert some pressure on your head and when I stop it you
+ will either think of or see something which I want you to tell me.” I
+ went through this procedure, but she remained quiet.—“Well, has
+ nothing come into your mind?”—“I thought of something, but that can
+ have no connection with it.”—“Just say it.”—“I thought of a young girl
+ who is dead, but she died when I was eighteen, that is, a year
+ later.”—“Let us adhere to this. What was the matter with your
+ friend?”—“Her death affected me very much, because I was very friendly
+ with her. A few weeks before another young girl died, which attracted
+ a great deal of attention in our city, but then I was only seventeen
+ years old.”—“You see, I told you that the thought obtained under the
+ pressure of the hands can be relied upon. Well now, can you recall the
+ thought that you had when you became dizzy in the street?”—“There was
+ no thought, it was vertigo.”—“That is quite impossible, such
+ conditions are never without accompanying ideas. I will press your
+ head again and you will think of it. Well, what came to your mind?”—“I
+ thought, ‘now I am the third.’”—“What do you mean?”—“When I became
+ dizzy I must have thought, now I will die like the other two.”—“That
+ was then the idea, during the attack you thought of your friend, her
+ death must have made a great impression on you.”—“Yes, indeed, I
+ recall now that I felt dreadful when I heard of her death, to think
+ that I should go to a ball while she lay dead, but I anticipated so
+ much pleasure at the ball and was so occupied with the invitation that
+ I did not wish to think of this sad event.” (Notice here the
+ intentional repression from consciousness which caused the
+ reminiscences of her friend to become pathogenic.)
+
+ The attack was now in a measure explained, but I still needed the
+ occasional moment which just then provoked this recollection, and
+ accidentally I formed a happy supposition about it.—“Can you recall
+ through which street you passed at that time?”—“Surely, the main
+ street with its old houses, I can see it now.”—“And where did your
+ friend live?”—“In the same street. I had just passed her house and was
+ two houses farther when I was seized with the attack.”—“Then it was
+ the house which you passed that recalled your dead friend, and the
+ contrast which you then did not wish to think about that again took
+ possession of you.”
+
+ Still I was not satisfied, perhaps there was something else which
+ provoked or strengthened the hysterical disposition in a hitherto
+ normal girl. My suppositions were directed to the menstrual
+ indisposition as an appropriate moment, and I asked, “Do you know when
+ during that month you had your menses?”—She became indignant: “Do you
+ expect me to know that? I only know that I had them then very rarely
+ and irregularly. When I was seventeen I only had them once.”—“Well let
+ us enumerate the days, months, etc., so as to find when it
+ occurred.”—She with certainty decided on a month and wavered between
+ two days preceding a date which accompanied a fixed holiday.—Does that
+ in any way correspond with the time of the ball?—She answered quietly:
+ “The ball was on this holiday. And now I recall that I was impressed
+ by the fact that the only menses which I had had during the year
+ occurred just when I had to go to the ball. It was the first
+ invitation to a ball that I had received.”
+
+ The combination of the events can now be readily constructed and the
+ mechanism of this hysterical attack readily viewed. To be sure the
+ result was gained after painstaking labor. It necessitated on my side
+ full confidence in the technique and individual directing ideas in
+ order to reawaken such details of forgotten experiences after
+ twenty-one years in a sceptical and awakened patient. But then
+ everything agreed.
+
+Footnote 15:
+
+ A better description of this peculiar state in which one knows
+ something and at the same time does not know it, I could never obtain.
+ It can apparently be understood only if one has found himself in such
+ a state. I have at my disposal a very striking recollection of this
+ kind which I can vividly see. If I make the effort to recall what
+ passed through my mind at that time my output seems very poor. I saw
+ at that time something which was not at all appropriate to my
+ expectations, and what I saw did not in the least divert me from my
+ definite purpose, whereas this perception ought to have done away with
+ my purpose. I did not become conscious of this contradiction nor did I
+ remark the affect of the repulsion to which it was undoubtedly due
+ that this perception did not attain any psychic validity. I was struck
+ with that form of blindness in seeing eyes, which one admires so much
+ in mothers towards their daughters, in husbands towards their wives,
+ and in rulers towards their favorites.
+
+Footnote 16:
+
+ It will be shown that, notwithstanding, I erred.
+
+Footnote 17:
+
+ Die Abwehr-Neuropsychosen, Neurologisches Centralblatt, 1 June, 1894.
+
+Footnote 18:
+
+ I can neither exclude nor prove that this pain, especially of the
+ thighs, was of a neurasthenic nature.
+
+Footnote 19:
+
+ To my surprise I once discovered that such subsequent
+ ab-reaction—through other impressions than nursing—may form the
+ content of an otherwise enigmatic neurosis. It was the case of a
+ pretty girl of nineteen, Miss Matilda H. whom I first saw with an
+ incomplete paralysis of the legs, and months afterward I was again
+ called because her character had changed. She was depressed and tired
+ of living, entertaining lack of consideration for her mother, and was
+ irritable and inapproachable. The whole picture of the patient did not
+ seem to me to be that of an ordinary melancholia. She could easily be
+ put into a somnambulic state, and I made use of this peculiarity to
+ impart to her each time commands and suggestions to which she listened
+ in her profound sleep and responded with profuse tears, but which,
+ however, caused but little change in her condition. One day while
+ hypnotized she became talkative and informed me that the reason for
+ her depression was the breaking of her betrothal many months before.
+ She stated that on closer acquaintance with her fiance the things
+ displeasing to her and her mother became more and more evident. On the
+ other hand, the material advantages of the engagement were too
+ tangible to make the decision of a rupture easy, thus, both of them
+ hesitated for a long time. She then merged into a condition of
+ indecision in which she allowed everything to pass apathetically, and
+ finally her mother pronounced for her the decisive “no.” Shortly
+ after, she awoke as from a dream and began to occupy herself fervently
+ with the thoughts about the broken betrothal, she began to weigh the
+ pros and cons, a process which she continued for some time. At present
+ she continues to live in that time of doubt, and entertains daily the
+ moods and the thoughts which would have been appropriate for that day.
+ The irritability against her mother could only be explained if we took
+ into consideration the circumstances that existed on that decisive
+ day. Next to this thought activity she found her present life a mere
+ phantom just like a dream. I did not again succeed in getting the girl
+ to talk—I continued my exhortations during deep somnambulism. I saw
+ her each time burst into tears without however receiving any answer
+ from her. But one day, it was near the anniversary of the engagement,
+ the whole state of depression disappeared. This was attributed to my
+ great hypnotic cure.
+
+Footnote 20:
+
+ It is different in a hypnoid-hysteria. Here the content of the
+ separate psychic groups may never have been in the ego consciousness.
+
+Footnote 21:
+
+ I had under my observation another case in which a contracture of the
+ masseters made it impossible for the artist to sing. The young lady in
+ question through painful experiences in the family was forced to go on
+ the stage. While in Rome rehearsing, in great excitement she suddenly
+ perceived the sensation of being unable to close her opened mouth and
+ sank fainting to the floor. The physician who was called closed her
+ jaws forcibly, but the patient since that time was unable to open her
+ jaws more than a finger’s breadth and had to give up her newly chosen
+ profession. When she came under my care many years later, the motives
+ for that excitement were apparently over for some time, for massage in
+ a light hypnosis sufficed to open her mouth widely. The lady has since
+ sung in public.
+
+Footnote 22:
+
+ But perhaps spinal neurasthenic?
+
+Footnote 23:
+
+ See Studien über Hysterie, p. 57, footnote.
+
+Footnote 24:
+
+ l. c.
+
+Footnote 25:
+
+ The literal translation of Auftreten is to press down by treading.
+
+Footnote 26:
+
+ In conditions of profounder psychic changes we apparently find a
+ symbolic stamp (mark) of the more artificial usage of language in the
+ form of emblematic pictures and sensations. There was a time in Mrs.
+ Cäcilie M. during which every thought was changed into an
+ hallucination, and which solution frequently afforded great humor. She
+ at that time complained to me of being troubled by the hallucination
+ that both her physicians, Breuer and I, were hanged in the garden on
+ two nearby trees. The hallucination disappeared after the analysis
+ revealed the following origin: The evening before Breuer refused her
+ request for a certain drug. She then placed her hopes on me but found
+ me just as inflexible. She was angry at both of us, and in her affect
+ she thought, “They are worthy of each other, the one is a pendant of
+ the other!”
+
+Footnote 27:
+
+ E. Hecker, Centralblatt für Nervenheilkunde, Dec., 1893.
+
+Footnote 28:
+
+ See Breuer und Freud, Studien über Hysterie. Deuticke, Leipzig und
+ Wien, 1895, p. 15.
+
+Footnote 29:
+
+ See Breuer und Freud, Studien über Hysterie. Deuticke, Leipzig und
+ Wien, 1895, p. 106.
+
+Footnote 30:
+
+ See Breuer und Freud, Studien über Hysterie. Deuticke, Leipzig und
+ Wien, 1895, p. 15.
+
+Footnote 31:
+
+ As mentioned in the preface the author has long since discarded this
+ pressure procedure.—Translator’s note.
+
+Footnote 32:
+
+ See Breuer und Freud, Studien über Hysterie. Deuticke, Leipzig und
+ Wien, 1895, p. 85.
+
+Footnote 33:
+
+ l. c., p. 15.
+
+Footnote 34:
+
+ See Breuer und Freud, Studien über Hysterie. Deuticke, Wien und
+ Leipzig, 1895, p. 28.
+
+Footnote 35:
+
+ See Breuer und Freud, Studien über Hysterie. Deuticke, Leipzig und
+ Wien, 1895, p. 55.
+
+Footnote 36:
+
+ État mental des hystériques, Paris, 1893 and 1894. Quelques
+ définitions récentes de l’hystérie, Arch. de Neurol., 1893, XXXV-VI.
+
+Footnote 37:
+
+ Oppenheim: Hysteria is an exaggerated expression of emotion. But the
+ “expression of emotion” represents that amount of psychic excitement
+ which normally experiences conversion.
+
+Footnote 38:
+
+ Strümpel: The disturbance of hysteria lies in the psycho-physical,
+ there where the physical and psychical are connected with each other.
+
+Footnote 39:
+
+ Janet, in the second chapter of his spirited essay “Quelques
+ definitions,” etc., has treated the objection that the splitting of
+ consciousness belongs also to the psychoses and the so called
+ psychaesthenia, but in my opinion he has not satisfactorily solved it.
+ It is essentially this objection which urged him to call hysteria a
+ form of degeneration. But through no characteristic is he able to
+ separate sufficiently the hysterical splitting of consciousness from
+ the psychopathic, etc.
+
+Footnote 40:
+
+ The group of typical phobias, for which agoraphobia is a prototype,
+ cannot be reduced to the psychic mechanisms here developed.
+ Furthermore the mechanism of agoraphobia deviates in one decisive
+ point from that of the real obsessions and from phobias based on such.
+ Here there is no repressed idea from which the affect of fear has been
+ separated. The fear of this phobia has another origin.
+
+Footnote 41:
+
+ E. Hecker, Über larvierte und abortive Angstzustände bei Neurasthenie,
+ Centralblatt für Nervenheilkunde, December, 1893.—Anxiety is made
+ particularly prominent among the chief symptoms of neurasthenia by
+ Kaan, Der neurasthenische Angstaffekt bei Zwangsvorstellungen und der
+ primordiale Grübelzwang, Wien, 1893.
+
+Footnote 42:
+
+ Die Abwehr-Neuropsychosen, Neurol. Centralbl., 1894, Nr. 10 u. 11.
+
+Footnote 43:
+
+ Obsession et phobies, Révue neurologique, 1895.
+
+Footnote 44:
+
+ Moebius, Neuropathologische Beiträge, 1894, 2. Heft.
+
+Footnote 45:
+
+ Peyer, Die nervösen Affektionen des Darmes, Wiener Klinik, Jänner,
+ 1893.
+
+Footnote 46:
+
+ Freud, Abwehr-Neuropsychosen.
+
+Footnote 47:
+
+ Neurologisches Centralblatt, 1896, Nr. 10.
+
+Footnote 48:
+
+ I myself surmise that the so frequently fabricated assaults of
+ hysterical persons are obsessional confabulations emanating from the
+ memory traces of infantile traumas.
+
+Footnote 49:
+
+ In an article on the anxiety neurosis (Neurologisches Centralblatt,
+ 1895, Nr. 2) I stated that “an anxiety neurosis which can almost
+ typically be combined with hysteria can be evoked in maturing girls at
+ the first encounter with the sexual problem.” I know today that the
+ occasion in which such virginal anxiety breaks out does not really
+ correspond to the first encounter with sexuality, but that in such
+ persons there was in childhood a precedent experience of sexual
+ passivity which memory was awakened at the “first encounter.”
+
+Footnote 50:
+
+ A psychological theory of the repression ought also to inform us why
+ only ideas of a sexual content can be repressed. It may be formulated
+ as follows: It is known that ideas of a sexual content produce
+ exciting processes in the genitals resembling the actual sexual
+ experience. It may be assumed that this somatic excitement becomes
+ transformed into psychic. As a rule the activity referred to is much
+ stronger at the time of the occurrence than at the recollection of the
+ same. But if the sexual experience takes place during the time of
+ sexual immaturity and the recollection of the same is awakened during
+ or after maturity, the recollection then acts disproportionately more
+ exciting than the previous experience, for puberty has in the mean
+ time incomparably increased the reactive capacity of the sexual
+ apparatus. But such an inverse proportion seems to contain the
+ psychological determination of repression. Through the retardation of
+ the pubescent maturity in comparison with the psychic function, the
+ sexual life offers the only existing possibility for that inversion of
+ the relative efficacy. The infantile traumas subsequently act like
+ fresh experiences, but they are then unconscious. Deeper psychological
+ discussions I will have to postpone for another time. I moreover call
+ attention to the fact that the here considered time of “sexual
+ maturity” does not coincide with puberty, but occurs before the same
+ (eight to ten years).
+
+Footnote 51:
+
+ One example instead of many: An eleven-year-old boy has obsessively
+ arranged for himself the following ceremonial before going to bed: He
+ could not fall asleep unless he related to his mother most minutely
+ all experiences of the day; not the smallest scrap of paper or any
+ other rubbish was allowed in the evening on the carpet of his bedroom.
+ The bed had to be moved close to the wall, three chairs had to stand
+ in front of it, and the pillows had to lie in just such a position. In
+ order to fall asleep he had to kick with both legs a number of times,
+ and then had to lie on the side. This was explained as follows: Years
+ before while putting this pretty boy to sleep, the servant girl made
+ use of this opportunity to lay over him and assault him sexually. When
+ this reminiscence was later awakened by a recent experience it made
+ itself known to consciousness by the compulsion in the above mentioned
+ ceremonial which sense could really be surmised and the details
+ verified by psychoanalysis. The chairs before the bed which was close
+ to the wall—so that no one could have access to it; the arrangement of
+ the pillows in a definite manner—so that they should be differently
+ arranged than they were on that evening; the motion with the legs—to
+ kick away the person lying on him; sleeping on the side—because during
+ that scene he lay on his back; the detailed confession to his
+ mother—because in consequence of the prohibition of his seductress he
+ concealed from his mother this and other sexual experiences; finally,
+ keeping the floor of his bedroom clean—because this was the main
+ reproach which he had to hear from his mother up to that time.
+
+Footnote 52:
+
+ When the meagre success of this treatment was later removed by an
+ exacerbation, she did not again see the offensive pictures of strange
+ genitals, but she had the idea that strangers saw her genitals as soon
+ as they were behind her.
+
+Footnote 53:
+
+ Lecture delivered before the Vienna Medic. Doktorenkollegium, on
+ December 12, 1904.
+
+Footnote 54:
+
+ From Löwenfeld, “Sexualleben und Nervenleiden,” IV ed., 1906.
+
+Footnote 55:
+
+ See Chapter VII, and Zur Aetiologie der Hysterie, Wiener, Klinische
+ Rundschau, 1896.
+
+Footnote 56:
+
+ An English translation in preparation.
+
+Footnote 57:
+
+ Zeitschrift für Sexualwissenschaft, herausgegeben von Hirschfeld, I,
+ 1908.
+
+Footnote 58:
+
+ Compare Breuer and Freud Studien über Hysterie, 1895. P. Janet,
+ Névroses et ideés fixes, I (Les rêveries subconscientes), 1898.
+ Havelock Ellis, Sexual Impulse and Modesty (German by Kötscher), 1900.
+ Freud, Traumdeutung, 1906, 2d ed., 1909. A. Pick, Über pathologische
+ Träumerei und ihre Beziehungen zur Hysteria, Jahrbuch für Psychiatrie
+ und Neurologie, XIV, 1896.
+
+Footnote 59:
+
+ H. Ellis similarly expresses himself, l. c., p. 185.
+
+Footnote 60:
+
+ Compare Freud, Traumdeutung, 2d ed., p. 302.
+
+Footnote 61:
+
+ Compare Freud, Three Contributions to the Sexual Theory, 1895.
+
+Footnote 62:
+
+ The same thing holds true for the relation between the “latent”
+ thoughts of the dream and the elements of the manifest content of the
+ dream. See the Chapter on the “Work of the Dream” in the author’s
+ Traumdeutung.
+
+Footnote 63:
+
+ Indeed J. Sadger, who recently discovered this sentence in question,
+ independently by psychoanalysis, claims for it a general validity (Die
+ Bedeutung der psychoanalytische Methode nach Freud, Centralbl. f.
+ Nerv. u. Psych., Nr. 229.)
+
+Footnote 64:
+
+ Three Contributions to the Sexual Theory.
+
+------------------------------------------------------------------------
+
+
+
+
+ TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES
+
+
+ Page Changed from Changed to
+
+ 10 the so called χατ’ εξοχὴν of the so called κατ’ ἐξοχὴν of
+ traumatic hysteria or of a traumatic hysteria or of a
+ series of series of
+
+ 65 scenes like the one of being scenes like the one of being
+ forced to hold our her hand in forced to hold out her hand in
+
+ 123 be identified with personel or be identified with personal or
+ hereditary “degeneration.” hereditary “degeneration.”
+
+ ● Typos fixed; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+ ● Used numbers for footnotes, placing them all at the end of the last
+ chapter.
+ ● Enclosed italics font in _underscores_.
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75132 ***
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+ <body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75132 ***</div>
+
+<div class='tnotes covernote'>
+
+<p class='c000'><strong>Transcriber’s Note:</strong></p>
+
+<p class='c000'>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the public domain.</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='titlepage'>
+
+<div>
+ <h1 class='c001'>SELECTED PAPERS ON HYSTERIA<br> <span class='small'>AND</span><br> <span class='xlarge'>OTHER PSYCHONEUROSES</span></h1>
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c002'>
+ <div>BY</div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='large'>PROF. SIGMUND FREUD</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'>VIENNA</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'>AUTHORIZED TRANSLATION</div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='large'>A. A. BRILL, <span class='sc'>Ph.D.</span>, M.D.</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='xsmall'>CHIEF OF NERVOUS DISPENSARY, BETH ISRAEL HOSPITAL; CLINICAL ASSISTANT, DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHIATRY AND NEUROLOGY, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY; ASSISTANT IN MENTAL AND NERVOUS DISEASES, O. P. D., BELLEVUE HOSPITAL; ASSISTANT VISITING PHYSICIAN, HOSPITAL FOR NERVOUS DISEASES.</span></div>
+ <div class='c003'>NEW YORK</div>
+ <div class='c002'>THE JOURNAL OF NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASE</div>
+ <div>PUBLISHING COMPANY</div>
+ <div class='c002'>1909</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div><span class='small'>Copyright 1909, by</span></div>
+ <div class='c002'><span class='small'><span class='sc'>The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease Publishing Company</span>.</span></div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CONTENTS.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c006'></th>
+ <th class='c007'>&#160;</th>
+ <th class='c008'><span class='sc'>Page.</span></th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007' colspan='2'><span class='sc'>Translator’s Preface</span></td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_iii'>iii</a></td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c007' colspan='3'><span class='sc'>Chapter.</span></td></tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c006'>I.</td>
+ <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Psychic Mechanism of Hysterical Phenomena</span></td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_1'>1</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c006'>II.</td>
+ <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Case of Miss Lucy R.</span></td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_14'>14</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c006'>III.</td>
+ <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Case of Miss Elisabeth v. R.</span></td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_31'>31</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c006'>IV.</td>
+ <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Psychotherapy of Hysteria</span></td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_75'>75</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c006'>V.</td>
+ <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>The Defense Neuro-psychoses.</span> A Tentative Psychological Theory of Acquired Hysteria, many Phobias and Obsessions, and Certain Hallucinatory Psychoses</td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_121'>121</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c006'>VI.</td>
+ <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>On the Right to Separate from Neurasthenia a Definite Symptom-complex as “Anxiety Neurosis”</span></td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_133'>133</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c006'>VII.</td>
+ <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Further Observations on the Defense Neuropsychoses</span></td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_155'>155</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c006'>VIII.</td>
+ <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>On Psychotherapy</span></td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_175'>175</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c006'>IX.</td>
+ <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>My Views on the Rôle of Sexuality in the Etiology of the Neuroses</span></td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_186'>186</a></td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c006'>X.</td>
+ <td class='c007'><span class='sc'>Hysterical Fancies and their Relations to Bisexuality</span></td>
+ <td class='c008'><a href='#Page_194'>194</a></td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_iii'>iii</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>TRANSLATOR’S PREFACE.</h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>In the first place I wish to express my gratitude to Doctors
+Frederick Peterson, William A. White, and Ernest Jones, for
+their many helpful suggestions in the translation of this work.
+This does not, however, imply that they are in any way responsible
+for the numerous barbarisms found in the translation,
+for this I, alone, ask the reader’s indulgence. For one thing, it
+must be borne in mind that, aside from the subject-matter, Freud
+is not easy to read, even in the original. Indeed, I feel quite
+certain that only those who have read the original will best appreciate
+the task of the translator. But no matter how devoid
+of literary excellencies this translation may be, it can at least
+claim one merit, to wit, it is a faithful reproduction of the
+author’s thoughts. This is really all that should be required of a
+translation.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The chapters contained in this book were taken from three
+different volumes of the author’s works, published at different
+intervals within the last fifteen years. Although the first four
+chapters appear in the “Studien über Hysterie” which was published
+by Breuer and Freud,<a id='r1'></a><a href='#f1' class='c012'><sup>[1]</sup></a> still only the first chapter, “The
+Psychic Mechanism of Hysterical Phenomena,” was written conjointly
+by both authors. The authorship of the other three
+chapters belongs exclusively to Freud. The remaining six
+chapters of the book were taken from Freud’s Collection of
+Small Articles.<a id='r2'></a><a href='#f2' class='c012'><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It was by no means an easy task to compile in a single limited
+volume Freud’s theories of the actual- and psychoneuroses.
+Freud’s views are not only new and revolutionary, being based
+on an entirely new psychology, but unless one is thoroughly
+familiar with their development one is apt to misunderstand them.
+To obviate this it was thought best to collect those chapters from
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_iv'>iv</span>the author’s works which fully illustrate his theories and at the
+same time show the gradual evolution of his psychology.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>That Freud’s views have undergone some changes, or rather
+modifications, within the last fifteen years we readily admit; but
+who will blame the surgeon for modifying or rejecting some
+technique of his operation, if after years of careful work he
+feels justified in so doing? Surely such an action merits applause
+rather than reproach. It was only after carefully investigating
+for years that Freud saw fit to change some of his
+views, yet nothing was really totally discarded.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It is quite unnecessary to discuss here the whys and wherefores
+of the modifications in question, these are fully explained in the
+text. But it will not be <span lang="fr">mal à propos</span> to say a few words concerning
+the technique of the treatment.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>For reasons given in the book the author has abandoned
+hypnotism and used the pressure procedure, but this in turn was
+given up because it was cumbersome for both doctor and patient
+and proved to be utterly needless.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The technique is as follows: The patient lies on his back on a
+lounge, the physician sitting behind the patient’s head at the head
+of the lounge. In this way the patient remains free from all
+external influences and impressions. The object is to avoid all
+muscular exertion and distraction, thus allowing thorough concentration
+of attention on the patient’s own psychic activities.
+The patient is then asked to give a detailed account of his
+troubles, after having been told before to repeat everything that
+occurs to his mind, even such thoughts as may cause him embarrassment
+or mortification. On listening to such a history one
+invariably notices many memory gaps, both in reference to time
+and causal relations. These the patient is urged to fill in by concentration
+of attention on the subject in question, and by repeating
+all the unintentional thoughts originating in this connection.
+This is the so called method of “free association!” The patient
+is required to relate all his thoughts in the order of their sequence
+even if they seem irrelevant to him. He must do away with all
+critique and remain perfectly passive. It is in this way that we
+fathom the original meaning of the symptom. But as the
+thoughts which originate in this manner are of a disagreeable
+and painful nature they are pushed back with the greatest resistance.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_v'>v</span>This is further enhanced by the fact that the hysterical
+symptom is the symbolic expression of the realization of a repressed
+wish, and serves as a gratification for the patient. He
+strives very hard, unconsciously of course, to retain the symptom,
+as it is the only thing left to him from his former unattainable
+conscious wishes and strivings. The object of the psychanalytic
+treatment is to overcome all these resistances, and to
+reconduct to the patient’s consciousness the thoughts underlying
+the symptoms. Here lies the greatest difficulty, for just as in
+the normal life and the dream, a psychoneurotic symptom is
+merely a symbolic or cryptic expression of the original repressed
+thoughts. Every hysterical symptom, every obsession, and every
+phobia, has a definite meaning, and as was shown by Bleuler,<a id='r3'></a><a href='#f3' class='c012'><sup>[3]</sup></a>
+Jung,<a id='r4'></a><a href='#f4' class='c012'><sup>[4]</sup></a> Riklin,<a id='r5'></a><a href='#f5' class='c012'><sup>[5]</sup></a> and others,<a id='r6'></a><a href='#f6' class='c012'><sup>[6]</sup></a> the same holds true for the psychoses
+proper.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>To discover the hidden mechanism, one must make use of the
+author’s developed method of interpretation, that is, one must
+look for symbolic actions, lapses in speech, memory, etc., and
+above all, one must resort to the analysis of dreams, as they
+give the most direct access to the unconscious. No one is really
+qualified to use or judge Freud’s psychanalytic method who has
+not thoroughly mastered the Traumdeutung,<a id='r7'></a><a href='#f7' class='c012'><sup>[7]</sup></a> the Psychopathologie
+des Alltagsleben,<a id='r8'></a><a href='#f8' class='c012'><sup>[8]</sup></a> and the Drei Abhandlungen zur Sexualtheorie,<a id='r9'></a><a href='#f9' class='c012'><sup>[9]</sup></a>
+and has not had considerable experience in analyzing his own
+and other’s dreams and psychopathological actions. It is especially
+in the Traumdeutung that Freud has fully developed his
+psychanalytic technique and a perfect knowledge of which is the
+sine qua non in the treatment. It is only by following Freud in
+this manner that one can hope to solve the hitherto unsolved
+riddles of the psychoneuroses and psychoses.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_vi'>vi</span>This treatment is more difficult than one can describe in a
+preface. It not only presupposes a thorough knowledge of Freud
+but an equal knowledge of normal and abnormal psychology.
+Those who have not acquired this knowledge by reason of time
+or otherwise may remember the words of the younger Pliny:
+<i><span lang="la">Ut enim de pictore scalptore fictore nisi artifex indicare, ita nisi
+sapiens non potest perspicere sapientem</span></i>.</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-r'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><span class='sc'>A. A. Brill.</span></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER I.<br> <span class='c013'><span class='sc'>The Psychic Mechanism of Hysterical Phenomena.</span><a id='r10'></a><a href='#f10' class='c012'><sup>[10]</sup></a><br> (<span class='sc'>Preliminary Communication.</span>)</span></h2>
+</div>
+<h3 class='c014'>I.</h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>Instigated by a number of accidental observations we have
+investigated for a number of years the different forms and symptoms
+of hysteria in order to discover the cause and the process
+which provoked the phenomena in question for the first time,
+in a great many cases years back. In the great majority of cases
+we did not succeed in elucidating this starting point from the
+mere history, no matter how detailed it might have been, partly
+because we had to deal with experiences about which discussion
+was disagreeable to the patients, but mainly because they really
+could not recall them; often they had no inkling of the causal
+connection between the occasioning process and the pathological
+phenomenon. It was generally necessary to hypnotize the
+patients and reawaken the memory of that time in which the
+symptom first appeared, and we thus succeeded in exposing that
+connection in a most precise and convincing manner.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This method of examination in a great number of cases has
+furnished us with results which seem to be of theoretical as well
+as of practical value.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It is of theoretical value because it has shown to us that in
+the determination of the pathology of hysteria the accidental
+moment plays a much greater part than is generally known and
+recognized. It is quite evident that in “traumatic” hysteria it is
+the accident which evokes the syndrome. Moreover in hysterical
+crises, if patients state that they hallucinate in each attack the
+same process which evoked the first attack, here too, the causal
+connection seems quite clear. The state of affairs is more obscure
+in the other phenomena.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Our experiences have shown us <em>that the most varied symptoms
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>which pass as spontaneous, or so to say idiopathic attainments
+of hysteria, stand in just as stringent connection with the causal
+trauma as the transparent phenomena mentioned</em>. To such causal
+moments we were able to refer neuralgias as well as the different
+kinds of anesthesias often of years duration, contractures and
+paralyses, hysterical attacks and epileptiform convulsions which
+every observer has taken for real epilepsy, petit mal and tic-like
+affections, persistent vomiting and anorexia, even the refusal
+of nourishment, all kinds of visual disturbances, constantly recurring
+visual hallucinations, and similar affections. The disproportion
+between the hysterical symptom of years duration
+and the former cause is the same as the one we are regularly
+accustomed to see in the traumatic neurosis. Very often they
+are experiences of childhood which have established more or
+less intensive morbid phenomena for all succeeding years.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The connection is often so clear that it is perfectly manifest
+how the causal event produced just this and no other phenomenon.
+It is quite clearly determined by the cause. Thus let us take the
+most banal example; if a painful affect originates while eating
+but is repressed, it may produce nausea and vomiting and continue
+for months as a hysterical symptom. A girl was anxiously
+distressed while watching at a sick bed. She fell into a dreamy
+state and experienced a frightful hallucination, and at the same
+time her right arm hanging over the back of a chair became
+numb. This resulted in a paralysis, contracture, and anesthesia
+of that arm. She wanted to pray but could find no words, but
+finally succeeded in uttering an English prayer for children.
+Later, on developing a very grave and most complicated hysteria,
+she spoke, wrote, and understood only English, whereas her
+native tongue was incomprehensible to her for a year and a half.
+A very sick child finally falls asleep. The mother exerts all her
+will power to make no noise to awaken it, but just because she
+resolved to do so she emits a clicking sound with her tongue
+(“hysterical counter-will”). This was later repeated on another
+occasion when she wished to be absolutely quiet, developing into
+a tic which in the form of tongue clicking accompanied every
+excitement for years. A very intelligent man was present while
+his brother was anesthetized and his ankylosed hip stretched.
+At the moment when the joint yielded and crackled he perceived
+severe pain in his own hip which continued for almost a year.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>In other cases the connection is not so simple, there being only
+as it were a symbolic relation between the cause and the pathological
+phenomenon, just as in the normal dream. Thus psychic
+pain may result in neuralgia, or the affect of moral disgust may
+cause vomiting. We have studied patients who were wont to
+make the most prolific use of such symbolization. In still other
+cases such a determination is at first sight incomprehensible, yet
+to this group belong the typical hysterical symptoms such as
+hemianesthesia, contraction of visual field, epileptiform convulsions
+and many others. The explanation of our views on this
+group we have to reserve for the more detailed discussion of the
+subject.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><em>Such observations seem to demonstrate the pathogenic analogy
+between simple hysteria and traumatic neurosis and justify a
+broader conception of “traumatic hysteria.”</em> The active etiological
+factor in traumatic neurosis is really not the insignificant
+bodily injury but the affect of the fright, that is, the psychic
+trauma. In an analogous manner our investigations show that
+the causes of many, if not of all, cases of hysteria can be
+designated as psychic traumas. Every experience which produces
+the painful affect of fear, anxiety, shame or of psychic
+pain may act as a psychic trauma. Whether an experience becomes
+of traumatic importance naturally depends on the person
+affected as well as on the determination to be mentioned later. In
+ordinary hysteria instead of one big trauma we not seldom find
+many partial traumas, grouped causes which can be of traumatic
+significance only when summarized and which belong together
+in so far as they form small fragments of the sorrowful tale.
+In still other cases apparently indifferent circumstances gain traumatic
+dignity through their connection with the real effective
+event or with a period of time of special excitability which they
+then retain but which otherwise would have no significance.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Nevertheless the causal connection between the provoking
+psychic trauma and the hysterical phenomena does not perhaps
+resemble the trauma which as the <em>agent provocateur</em> would call
+forth the symptom which would become independent and continue
+to exist. We have to claim still more, namely, that the
+psychic trauma or the memory of the same acts like a foreign
+body which even long after its penetration must continue to influence
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>like a new causative factor. The proof of this we see
+in a most remarkable phenomenon which at the same time gives
+to our discoveries a distinct practical interest.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>We found, at first to our greatest surprise, <em>that the individual
+hysterical symptoms immediately disappeared without returning
+if we succeeded in thoroughly awakening the memories of the
+causal process with its accompanying affect, and if the patient
+circumstantially discussed the process giving free play to the
+affect</em>. Affectless memories are almost utterly useless. The
+psychic process originally rebuffed must be reproduced as vividly
+as possible so as to bring it back into the <i><span lang="la">statum nascendi</span></i> and
+then be thoroughly “talked over.” At the same time if we deal
+with such exciting manifestations as convulsions, neuralgias and
+hallucinations they appear once more with their full intensity
+and then vanish forever. Functional attacks like paralyses and
+anesthesias likewise disappear, but naturally without any appreciable
+distinctness of their momentary aggravation.<a id='r11'></a><a href='#f11' class='c012'><sup>[11]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It is quite reasonable to suspect that one deals here with an
+unintentional suggestion. The patient expects to be relieved of
+his suffering and it is this expectation and not the discussion
+that is the effectual factor. But this is not so. The first observation
+of this kind in which a most complicated case of hysteria
+was analyzed and the individual causal symptoms separately abrogated,
+occurred in the year 1881, that is in a “pre-suggestive”
+time. It was brought about through a spontaneous autohypnosis
+of the patient and caused the examiner the greatest surprise.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In reversing the sentence: <i><span lang="la">cessante causa cessat effectus</span></i>, we
+may conclude from this observation that the causal process continues
+to act in some way even after years, not indirectly by means
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>of a chain of causal connecting links but directly as a provoking
+cause, just perhaps as in the awakened consciousness where the
+memory of a psychic pain may later call forth tears. <em>The hysteric
+suffers mostly from reminiscences.</em><a id='r12'></a><a href='#f12' class='c012'><sup>[12]</sup></a></p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>II.</h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>It would seem at first rather surprising that long-forgotten
+experiences should effect so intensively, and that their recollections
+should not be subject to the decay into which all our
+memories merge. We will perhaps gain some understanding of
+these facts by the following examinations.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The blurring or loss of an affect of memory depends on a
+great many factors. In the first place it is of great consequence
+whether there was an energetic reaction to the affectful experience
+or not. By reaction we here understand a whole series of
+voluntary or involuntary reflexes, from crying to an act of
+revenge, through which according to experience affects are discharged.
+If the success of this reaction is of sufficient strength
+it results in the disappearance of a great part of the affect.
+Language attests this fact of daily observation, in such expressions
+as “to give vent to one’s feeling,” to be “relieved by
+weeping,” etc.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>If the reaction is suppressed the affect remains united with the
+memory. An insult retaliated, be it only in words, is differently
+recalled than one that had to be taken in silence. Language
+also recognizes this distinction between the psychic and physical
+results and designates most characteristically the silently endured
+suffering as “grievance.” The reaction of the person injured
+to the trauma has really no perfect “cathartic” effect unless
+it is an adequate reaction like revenge. But man finds a substitute
+for this action in speech through which help the affect can
+well nigh be ab-reacted<a id='r13'></a><a href='#f13' class='c012'><sup>[13]</sup></a> (“abreagirt”). In other cases talking
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>in the form of deploring and giving vent to the torments of the
+secret (confession) is in itself an adequate reflex. If such reaction
+does not result through deeds, words, or in the lightest
+case through weeping, the memory of the occurrence retains
+above all the affective accentuation.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The ab-reaction (abreagiren), however, is not the only form
+of discharge at the disposal of the normal psychic mechanism of
+the healthy person who has experienced a psychic trauma. The
+memory of the trauma even where it has not been ab-reacted
+enters into the great complex of the association. It joins the
+other experiences which are perhaps antagonistic to it and thus
+undergoes correction through the other ideas. For example,
+after an accident the memory of the danger and (dimmed)
+repetition of the fright is accompanied by the recollection of the
+further course, the rescue, and the consciousness of present
+security. The memory of a grievance may be corrected by a
+rectification of the state of affairs by reflecting upon one’s own
+dignity and similar things. Thus the normal person is able to
+cause a disappearance of the accompanying affect by means of
+association.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In addition there appears that general blurring of impressions,
+that fading of memories which we call “forgetting,” and which
+above all wears out the affective ideas no longer active.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It follows from our observations that those memories which
+become the causes of hysterical phenomena have been preserved
+for a long time with wonderful freshness and with their perfect
+emotional tone. As a further striking and a later realizable fact
+we have to mention that the patients do not perhaps have the
+same control of these as of their other memories of life. On the
+contrary, <em>these experiences are either completely lacking from
+the memory of the patients in their usual psychic state or at most
+exist greatly abridged</em>. Only after the patients are questioned in
+the hypnotic state do these memories appear with the undiminished
+vividness of fresh occurrences. Thus one of our
+patients in a hypnotic state reproduced with hallucinatory vividness
+throughout half a year all that excited her during an acute
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>hysteria on the same days of the preceding year. Her mother’s
+diary which was unknown to the patient proved the faultless accuracy
+of the reproduction. Another patient, partly in hypnosis
+and partly in spontaneous attacks, went through with a hallucinatory
+distinctness all experiences of a hysterical psychosis which
+she passed through ten years before and for the greatest part of
+which she was amnesic until its reappearance. She also showed
+with surprising integrity and sentient force some etiologically
+important memories of fifteen to twenty-five years’ duration
+which on their return acted with the full affective force of new
+experiences.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The reason for this we can only find in the fact that in all
+the aforesaid relations these memories assume an exceptional
+position in reference to disappearance. <em>It was really shown that
+these memories correspond to traumas which were not sufficiently
+ab-reacted to</em> (“abreagirt”). On closer investigation of the
+reasons for this prevention we can find at least two series of
+determinants through which the reaction to the trauma was discontinued.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>To the first group we add those cases in which the patient
+has not reacted to psychic traumas because the nature of
+the trauma precluded a reaction as in the case of an irremediable
+loss of a beloved person or because social relations made the
+reaction impossible, or because it concerned things which the
+patient wished to forget and which he therefore intentionally
+inhibited and repressed from his conscious memory. It is just
+those painful things which in the hypnotic state are found to
+be the basis of hysterical phenomena (hysterical delirium of
+saints, nuns, abstinent women, and well-bred children).</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The second series of determinants is not conditioned by the
+content of the memories but by the psychic states with which the
+corresponding experiences in the patient have united. As a cause
+of hysterical symptoms one really finds in hypnosis presentations
+which are insignificant in themselves but which owe their preservation
+to the fact that they originated during a severe paralyzing
+affect like fright or directly in abnormal psychic conditions,
+as in the semi-hypnotic dreamy states of reveries, in autohypnosis
+and similar states. Here it is the nature of these conditions
+which make a reaction to the incident impossible.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>To be sure both determinants may unite, and as a matter
+of fact they often do. This is the case when a trauma in itself
+effective occurs in a state of a powerful paralyzing affect or in a
+transformed consciousness. But due to the psychic trauma it
+may also happen that in many persons one of these abnormal
+states occurs which in turn makes a reaction impossible.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>What is common to both groups of determinants is the fact
+that those psychic traumas which are not rectified by reaction are
+also prevented from adjustment by associative elaboration. In
+the first group it is due to the resolution of the patient who
+wishes to forget the painful experiences and in this way, if
+possible, to exclude them from association, and in the second
+group the associative elaboration does not succeed because there
+is no productive associative relationship between the normal and
+pathological state of consciousness in which these presentations
+originated. We shall soon have occasion to discuss more fully
+these relationships.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Hence we can say, <em>that the reason why the pathogenically
+formed presentations retain their freshness and affective force is
+because they are not subject to the normal waste through ab-reaction
+and reproduction in conditions of uninhibited association</em>.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>III.</h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>When we discussed the conditions which, according to our
+experience, are decisive in the development of hysterical phenomena
+from psychic traumas, we were forced to speak of abnormal
+states of consciousness in which such pathogenic presentations
+originate, and we had to emphasize the fact that the
+recollection of the effective psychic trauma is not to be found in
+the normal memory of the patient but in the hypnotized memory.
+The more we occupied ourselves with these phenomena the more
+certain became our convictions <em>that the splitting of consciousness,
+so striking in the familiar classical cases of double consciousness,
+exists rudimentarily in every hysteria, and that the tendency to
+this dissociation, and with it the tendency towards the appearance
+of abnormal states of consciousness which we comprehend
+as “hypnoid states,” is the chief phenomenon of this neurosis</em>. In
+this view we agree with Binet and with both the Janets about
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>whose most remarkable findings in anesthetics we have had no
+experience.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Hence, to the often cited axiom, “Hypnosis is artificial
+hysteria,” we would like to add another: “The existence of
+hypnoid states is the basis and determination of hysteria.” These
+hypnoid states in all their diversities agree among themselves and
+with hypnosis in the fact that their emerged presentations are
+very intensive but are excluded from the associative relations of
+the rest of the content of consciousness. The hypnoid states are
+associable among themselves, and their ideation may thus attain
+various high degrees of psychic organization. In other respects
+the nature of these states and the degree of their exclusiveness
+differ from the rest of the conscious processes as do the various
+states in hypnosis, which range from light somnolence to somnambulism,
+and from perfect memory to absolute amnesia.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>If such hypnoid states already exist before the manifested
+disease they prepare the soil upon which the affect establishes the
+pathogenic memories and their somatic resulting manifestations.
+This behavior corresponds to the predisposed hysteria. But the
+results of our observations show that a severe trauma (like that
+of a traumatic neurosis) or a painful suppression (perhaps of a
+sexual affect) may bring about a splitting of presentation groups
+even in persons otherwise not predisposed. This would then be
+the mechanism of the psychically acquired hysteria. Between
+the extremes of these two forms we have to admit a series in
+which the facility of dissociation in the concerned individuals and
+the magnitude of the affect of the trauma vary inversely.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>We are unable to give anything new concerning the formation
+of the predisposed hypnoid states. We presume that they often
+develop from “reveries” very common to the normal for which,
+for example, the feminine handwork offers so much opportunity.
+The questions why “the pathological associations” formed in
+such states are so firm and why they exert a stronger influence
+on the somatic processes than other presentations, all fall together
+with the problem of the effectivity of hypnotic suggestions in
+general. Our experiences in this matter do not show us anything
+new, on the other hand they throw light on the contradiction
+between the sentence “Hysteria is a psychosis” and the
+fact that among hysterics one may meet persons of the clearest
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>intellects, the strongest wills, greatest principles, and of the
+subtlest minds. In these cases such characteristics are only
+true for the waking thought of the person, for in his hypnotic
+state he is alienated just as we are in the dream. Yet, whereas
+our dream psychoses do not influence our waking state, the
+products of hypnotic states project as hysterical phenomena into
+the waking state.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>IV.</h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>Almost the same assertions that we have advanced in reference
+to the continuous hysterical symptoms we may also repeat concerning
+hysterical crises. As is known we have Charcot’s
+schematic description of the “major” hysterical attack which
+when complete shows four phases: (1) The epileptoid, (2) the
+grand movements, (3) the emotional—<i><span lang="fr">attitudes passionnelles</span></i>
+(hallucinatory phase), and (4) the delirious. By shortening or
+prolonging the attack and by isolating the individual phases
+Charcot caused a succession of all those forms of the hysterical
+attack which are really observed more frequently than the complete
+<i><span lang="fr">grande attaque</span></i>.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Our attempted explanation refers to the third phase, that is
+the <i><span lang="fr">attitudes passionnelles</span></i>. Wherever it is prominent it contains
+the hallucinatory reproduction of a memory which was significant
+for the hysterical onset. It is the memory of a grand trauma,
+the so called <a id='t10'></a>κατ’ ἐξοχὴν of traumatic hysteria or of a series of
+connected partial traumas found at the basis of the common
+hysteria. Finally the attack may bring back that occurrence
+which on account of its meeting with a moment of special predisposition
+was raised to a trauma.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>There are also attacks which ostensibly consist only of motor
+phenomena and lack the passionnelle phase. If it is possible during
+such an attack of general twitching, cataleptic rigidity or an
+<i><span lang="fr">attaque de sommeil</span></i>, to put one’s self <em>en rapport</em> with the patient,
+or still better, if one succeeds in evoking the attack in a hypnotic
+state, it will then be found that here, too, the root of it is the
+memory of a psychic trauma, or of a series of traumas which
+make themselves otherwise prominent in an hallucinatory phase.
+A little girl had suffered for years from attacks of general convulsions
+which could be and were taken for epileptic. She was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>hypnotized for purposes of differential diagnosis and she immediately
+merged into one of her attacks. On being asked what
+she saw she said, “The dog, the dog is coming,” and it was really
+found that the first attack of this kind appeared after she was
+pursued by a mad dog. The success of the therapy then verified
+our diagnosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>An official who became hysterical as a result of ill treatment
+on the part of his employer suffered from attacks, during which
+he fell to the floor raging furiously without uttering a word or
+displaying any hallucinations. The attack was provoked in a
+state of hypnosis and he then stated that he lived through the
+scene during which his employer insulted him in the street and
+struck him with a cane. A few days later he came to me complaining
+that he had the same attack, but this time it was shown
+in the hypnosis that he went through the scene which was really
+connected with the onset of his disease; it was the scene in the
+court room when he was unable to get satisfaction for the ill
+treatment which he received, etc.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The memories which appear in hysterical attacks or which
+can be awakened in them correspond in all other respects to the
+causes which we have found as the basis of the continuous
+hysterical symptoms. Like these they refer to psychic traumas
+which were prevented from alleviation by ab-reaction or by
+associative elaboration, like these they lack entirely or in their
+essential components the memory possibilities of normal consciousness
+and appear to belong to the ideation of hypnoid states
+of consciousness with limited associations. Finally they are
+also amenable to therapeutic proof. Our observations have often
+taught us that a memory which has always evoked attacks becomes
+incapacitated when in a hypnotic state it is brought to
+reaction and associative correction.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The motor phenomena of the hysterical attack can partly be
+interpreted as the memory of a general form of reaction of the
+accompanying affect, or partly as a direct motor expression of
+this memory (like the fidgeting of the whole body which even
+infants make use of), and partly, like the hysterical stigmata—the
+continuous symptoms—they are inexplainable on this assumption.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Of special significance for the hysterical attack is the aforementioned
+theory, namely, that in hysteria there are presentation
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>groups which come to light in hypnoid states which are
+excluded from the rest of the associative process but are associable
+among themselves, thus representing a more or less
+highly organized rudimentary second consciousness, a <i><span lang="fr">condition
+seconde</span></i>. A persistent hysterical symptom therefore corresponds
+to a projection of this second state into a bodily innervation
+otherwise controlled by the normal consciousness. A hysterical
+attack gives evidence of a higher organization of this second
+state, and if of recent origin it signifies a moment in which this
+hypnoid consciousness gained control of the whole existence, and
+hence we have an acute hysteria, but if it is a recurrent attack
+containing a memory we simply have a repetition of the same.
+Charcot has already given utterance to the fact that the hysterical
+attack must be the rudiment of a <i><span lang="fr">condition seconde</span></i>. During
+the attack the control of the whole bodily innervation is transferred
+to the hypnoid consciousness. As familiar experiences
+show, the normal consciousness is not always repressed, it may
+even perceive the motor phenomena of the attack while the
+psychic processes of the same escape its cognizance.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The typical course of a grave hysteria, as everybody knows, is
+as follows: At first an ideation is formed in the hypnoid state
+which after sufficient development gains control in a period of
+“acute hysteria” of the bodily innervation and the existence of
+the patient thus forming persistent symptoms and attacks, and
+then with the exception of some remnants there is a recovery.
+If the normal personality can regain the upper hand, all that
+survived the hypnoid ideation then returns in hysterical attacks
+and at times it reproduces, in the personality, states which are
+again amenable to influences and capable of being affected by
+traumas. Frequently a sort of equilibrium then results among
+the psychic groups which are united in the same person; attack
+and normal life go hand in hand without influencing each other.
+The attack then comes spontaneously just as memories are wont
+to come, it may also be provoked just as memories may be by
+the laws of association. The provocation of the attack results
+either through stimulating a hysterogenic zone or through a new
+experience which by similarity recalls the pathogenic experience.
+We hope to be able to show that there is no essential difference
+between the apparently two diverse determinants, and that in both
+cases the hyperesthetic memory is touched. In other cases there
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>is a great lability of equilibrium, the attack appears as a manifestation
+of the hypnoid remnant of consciousness as often as the
+normal person becomes exhausted and incapacitated. We cannot
+disregard the fact that in such cases the attack becomes denuded
+of its original significance and may return as a contentless motor
+reaction.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It remains a task for future investigation to discover what
+conditions are decisive in determining whether a hysterical individuality
+should manifest itself in attacks, in persistent symptoms,
+or in a mingling of both.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>V.</h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>We can now understand in what manner the psychotherapeutic
+method propounded by us exerts its curative effect. <em>It abrogates
+the efficacy of the original not ab-reacted presentation of affording
+an outlet to the strangulated affect through speech. It
+brings it to associative correction by drawing it into normal consciousness
+(in mild hypnosis) or it is done away with through
+the physician’s suggestion just as happens in somnambulism with
+amnesia.</em></p>
+
+<p class='c011'>We maintain that the therapeutic gain obtained by applying
+this process is quite significant. To be sure we do not cure the
+hysterical predisposition as we do not block the way for the
+recurrence of hypnoid states; moreover, in the productive stage
+of acute hysteria our procedure is unable to prevent the replacement
+of the carefully abrogated phenomena by new ones. But
+when this acute stage has run its course and its remnants continue
+as persistent hysterical symptoms and attacks, our radical
+method usually removes them forever, and herein it seems to
+surpass the efficacy of direct suggestion as practiced at present
+by psychotherapists.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>If by disclosing the psychic mechanisms of hysterical phenomena
+we have taken a step forward on the path so successfully
+started by Charcot with his explanation and experimental imitation
+of hystero-traumatic paralysis, we are well aware that in
+doing this we have only advanced our knowledge in the mechanisms
+of hysterical symptoms and not in the subjective causes of
+hysteria. We have but touched upon the etiology of hysteria
+and could only throw light on the causes of the acquired forms,
+the significance of the accidental moments in the neurosis.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER II.<br> <span class='c013'><span class='sc'>The Case of Miss Lucy R.</span></span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Towards the end of 1892 a friendly colleague recommended to
+me a young lady whom he had been treating for chronic recurrent
+purulent rhinitis. It was later found that the obstinacy of her
+trouble was caused by a caries of the ethmoid. She finally complained
+of new symptoms which this experienced physician could
+no longer refer to local affections. She had lost all perception of
+smell and was almost constantly bothered by one or two subjective
+sensations of smell. This she found very irksome. In addition
+to this she was depressed in spirits, weak, and complained of a
+heavy head, loss of appetite, and an incapacity for work.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This young lady visited me from time to time during my office
+hours—she was a governess in the family of a factory superintendent
+living in the suburbs of Vienna. She was an English
+lady of rather delicate constitution, anemic, and with the exception
+of her nasal trouble was in good health. Her first statements
+concurred with those of her physician. She suffered
+from depression and lassitude, and was tormented by subjective
+sensations of smell. Of hysterical signs, she showed a quite distinct
+general analgesia without tactile impairment, the fields of
+vision showed no narrowing on coarse testing with the hand, the
+nasal mucous membrane was totally analgesic and reflexless,
+tactile sensation was absent, and the perception of this organ was
+abolished for specific as well as for other stimuli, such as ammonia
+or acetic acid. The purulent nasal catarrh was then in
+a state of improvement.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>On first attempting to understand this case the subjective sensations
+of smell had to be taken as recurrent hallucinations interpreting
+persistent hysterical symptoms. The depression was
+perhaps the affect belonging to the trauma and there must have
+been an episode during which the present subjective sensations
+were objective. This episode must have been the trauma, the
+symbols of which recurred in memory as sensations of smell.
+Perhaps it would be more correct to consider the recurring
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>hallucinations of smell with the accompanying depression as
+equivalents of hysterical attacks. The nature of recurrent hallucinations
+really makes them unfit to take the part of continuous
+symptoms, and this really did not occur in this rudimentarily developed
+case. On the other hand it was absolutely to be expected
+that the subjective sensations of smell would show such a specialization
+as to be able to correspond in its origin to a very definite
+and real object.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This expectation was soon fulfilled, for on being asked what
+odor troubled her most she stated that it was an odor of burned
+pastry. I could then assume that the odor of burned pastry really
+occurred in the traumatic event. It is quite unusual to select
+sensations of smell as memory symbols of traumas, but it is
+quite obvious why these were here selected. She was afflicted
+with purulent rhinitis, hence the nose and its perceptions were
+in the foreground of her attention. All I knew about the life
+of the patient was that she took care of two children whose
+mother died a few years ago from a grave and acute disease.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>As a starting point of the analysis I decided to use the “odor
+of burned pastry.” I will now relate the history of this analysis.
+It could have occurred under more favorable conditions, but as
+a matter of fact what should have taken place in one session was
+extended over a number of them. She could only visit me during
+my office hours, during which I could devote to her but little of
+my time. One single conversation had to be extended for over
+a week as her duties did not permit her to come to me often from
+such a distance, so that the conversation was frequently broken
+off and resumed at the next session.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>On attempting to hypnotize Miss Lucy R. she did not merge
+into the somnambulic state. I therefore was obliged to forego
+somnambulism and the analysis was made while she was in a
+state not perhaps differing much from the normal.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I feel obliged to express myself more fully about the point
+of the technique of my procedure. While visiting the Nancy
+clinics in 1889 I heard Dr. Liébeault, the old master of hypnotism,
+say, “Yes, if we had the means to put everybody into the somnambulic
+state, hypnotism would then be the most powerful therapeutic
+agent.” In Bernheim’s clinic it almost seemed that such
+an art really existed and that it could be learned from Bernheim.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>But as soon as I tried to practice it on my own patients I noticed
+that at least my powers were quite limited in this respect. Whenever
+a patient did not merge into the somnambulistic state after
+one to three attempts I possessed no means to force him into it.
+However, the percentage of somnambulists in my experience were
+far below that claimed by Bernheim.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Thus I had my choice, either to forbear using the cathartic
+method in most of the cases suitable for it, or to venture the
+attempt without somnambulism by using hypnotic influence in
+light or even doubtful cases. It made no difference of what
+degree (following the accepted scales of hypnotism) the hypnotism
+was which did not correspond to somnambulism, for every
+direction of suggestibility is independent of the other and nothing
+is prejudicial towards the evocation of catalepsy, automatic
+movements and similar phenomena for the purpose of facilitating
+the awakening of forgotten recollections. I soon relinquished
+the habit of deciding the degree of hypnotism, as in a great
+number of cases it incited the patients’ resistance, and clouded the
+confidence which I needed for the more important psychic work.
+Moreover, in mild grades of hypnotism I soon tired of hearing,
+after the assurance and command, “You will sleep, sleep now!”
+such protests as, “But, Doctor, I am not sleeping.” I was then
+forced to bring in the very delicate distinction, saying, “I do not
+mean the usual sleep, I mean the hypnotic,—you see, you are
+hypnotized, you cannot open your eyes”; or, “I really don’t
+want you to sleep.” I, myself, am convinced that many of my
+colleagues using psychotherapy know how to get out of such
+difficulties more skilfully than I; they can proceed differently.
+I, however, believe that if through the use of a word one can so
+frequently become embarrassed, it is better to avoid the word
+and the embarrassment. Wherever the first attempt did not produce
+either somnambulism or a degree of hypnotism with pronounced
+bodily changes, I dropped the hypnosis and demanded
+only “concentration,” I ordered the patient to lie on his back
+and close his eyes as a means of reaching this “concentration.”
+With little effort I obtained as profound a degree of hypnotism
+as was possible.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>But inasmuch as I forbore using somnambulism, I perhaps
+robbed myself of a preliminary stipulation without which the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>cathartic method seems inapplicable. For it is based on the
+fact that in the altered state of consciousness the patients have at
+their disposal such recollections and recognize such connections
+which do not apparently exist in their normal conscious state.
+Wherever the somnambulic broadening of consciousness lacks
+there must also be an absence of the possibility of bringing about
+a causal relation which the patient cannot give to the doctor as
+something known to him, and it is just the pathogenic recollections
+“which are lacking from the memory of the patients
+in their usual psychic states or only exist in a most condensed
+state” (preliminary communication).</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>My memory helped me out of this embarrassment. I, myself,
+saw Bernheim adduce proof that the recollections of somnambulism
+are only manifestly forgotten in the waking state and can
+be readily reproduced by slight urging accompanied by hand
+pressure which is supposed to mark another conscious state. He,
+for instance, imparted to a somnambulist the negative hallucination
+that he was no more present, and then attempted to make
+himself noticeable to her by the most manifold and regardless
+attacks, but was unsuccessful. After the patient was awakened
+he asked her what he did to her during the time that she thought
+he was not there. She replied very much astonished, that she
+knew nothing, but he did not give in, insisting that she would
+recall everything; and placed his hand on her forehead so that
+she should recall things, and behold, she finally related all that
+she did not apparently perceive in the somnambulic state and
+about which she ostensibly knew nothing in the waking state.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This astonishing and instructive experiment was my model. I
+decided to proceed on the supposition that my patients knew
+everything that was of any pathogenic significance, and that all
+that was necessary was to force them to impart it. When I
+reached a point where to the question “Since when have you this
+symptom?” or, “Where does it come from?” I receive the
+answer, “I really don’t know this,” I proceeded as follows: I
+placed my hand on the patient’s forehead or took her head between
+my hands and said, “Under the pressure of my hand it
+will come into your mind. In the moment that I stop the
+pressure you will see something before you, or something will
+pass through your mind which you must note. It is that which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>we are seeking. Well, what have you seen or what came into
+your mind?”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>On applying this method for the first time (it was not in the
+case of Miss Lucy R.) I was surprised to find just what I wanted,
+and I may say that it has since hardly ever failed me, it always
+showed me the way to proceed in my investigations and enabled
+me to conclude all such analyses without somnambulism. Gradually
+I became so bold that when a patient would answer, “I see
+nothing,” or “Nothing came into my mind,” I insisted that it
+was impossible. They probably had the right thought but did
+not believe it and repudiated it. I would repeat the procedure
+as often as they wished, and every time they saw the same thing.
+Indeed, I was always right; the patients had not as yet learned
+to let their criticism rest. They repudiated the emerging recollection
+or fancy because they considered it as a useless intruding
+disturbance, but after they imparted it, it was always shown that
+it was the right one. Occasionally after forcing a communication
+by pressing the head three or four times I got such answer
+as, “Yes, I was aware of it the first time, but did not wish to
+say it,” or, “I hoped that it would not be this.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>By this method it was far more laborious to broaden the
+alleged narrowed consciousness than by investigating in the
+somnambulic state, but it made me independent of somnambulism
+and afforded me an insight into the motives which are frequently
+decisive for the “forgetting” of recollections. I am in position
+to assert that this forgetting is often intentional and desired. It
+is always only manifestly successful.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It appeared to me even more remarkable that apparently long
+forgotten numbers and dates can be reproduced by a similar
+process, thus proving an unexpected faithfulness of memory.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The insignificant choice which one has in searching for numbers
+and dates especially allows us to take to our aid the familiar
+axiom of the theory of aphasia, namely, that recognition is a
+slighter accomplishment of memory than spontaneous recollection.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Hence to a patient who is unable to recall in what year, month
+or day a certain event took place, enumerate the years during
+which it might have occurred as well as the names of the twelve
+months and the thirty-one days of the month, and assure him
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>that at the right number or name his eyes will open themselves
+or that he will feel which number is the correct one. In most
+cases the patients really decide on a definite date and frequently
+enough (as in the case of Mrs. Cäcilie N.) it could be ascertained
+from existing notes of that time that the date was correctly
+recognized. At other times and in different patients it was
+shown from the connection of the recollected facts that the dates
+thus found were incontestable. A patient, for instance, after a
+date was found by enumerating for her the dates, remarked,
+“This is my father’s birthday,” and added “Of course I expected
+this episode [about which we spoke] because it was my father’s
+birthday.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I can only slightly touch upon this theme. The conclusion
+which I wished to draw from all these experiences is that the
+pathogenic important experiences with all their concomitant circumstances
+are faithfully retained in memory, even where they
+seem forgotten, as when the patient seems unable to recall them.<a id='r14'></a><a href='#f14' class='c012'><sup>[14]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>After this long but unavoidable digression I now return to the
+history of Miss Lucy R. As aforesaid, she did not merge into
+somnambulism when an attempt was made to hypnotize her, but
+lay calmly in a degree of mild suggestibility, her eyes constantly
+closed, the features immobile, the limbs without motion. I asked
+her whether she remembered on what occasion the smell perception
+of burned pastry originated.—“Oh, yes, I know it well. It
+was about two months ago, two days before my birthday. I
+was with the children (two girls) in the school room playing and
+teaching them to cook, when a letter just left by the letter carrier
+was brought in. From its postmark and handwriting I recognized
+it as one sent to me by my mother from Glasgow and I
+wished to open it and read it. The children then came running
+over, pulled the letter out of my hand and exclaimed, ‘No you
+must not read it now, it is probably a congratulatory letter for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>your birthday and we will keep it for you until then.’ While the
+children were thus playing there was a sudden diffusion of an
+intense odor. The children forgot the pastry which they were
+cooking and it became burned. Since then I have been troubled
+by this odor, it is really always present but is more marked during
+excitement.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>“Do you see this scene distinctly before you?”—“As clearly
+as I experienced it.”—“What was there in it that so excited
+you?”—“I was touched by the affection which the children
+displayed towards me.”—“But weren’t they always so affectionate?”—“Yes,
+but I just got the letter from my mother.”—“I
+can’t understand in what way the affection of the little ones and
+the letter from the mother contrasted, a thing which you appear
+to intimate.”—“I had the intention of going to my mother and
+my heart became heavy at the thought of leaving those dear
+children.”—“What is the matter with your mother? Was she
+so lonesome that she wanted you, or was she sick just then and
+you expected some news?”—“No, she is delicate but not really sick,
+and has a companion with her.”—“Why then were you obliged
+to leave the children?”—“This house had become unbearable to
+me. The housekeeper, the cook, and the French maid seemed
+to be under the impression that I was too proud for my position.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>They united in intriguing against me and told the grandfather of
+the children all sorts of things about me, and when I complained
+to both gentlemen I did not receive the support which I expected.
+I then tendered my resignation to the master (father of the children)
+but he was very friendly, asking me to reconsider it for
+two weeks before taking any definite steps. It was while I was
+in that state of indecision that the incident occurred. I thought
+that I would leave the house but have remained.”—“Aside from
+the attachment of the children is there anything particular which
+attracts you to them?”—“Yes, my mother is distantly related to
+their mother and when the latter was on her death bed I promised
+her to do my utmost in caring for the children, that I would not
+forsake them, and be a mother to them, and this promise I broke
+when offering my resignation.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The analysis of the subjective sensation of smell seemed completed.
+It was once objective and intimately connected with an
+experience, a small scene, in which contrary affects conflicted,
+sorrow at forsaking the children, and the mortification which
+despite all urged her to this decision. Her mother’s letter
+naturally recalled the motives of this decision because she thought
+of returning to her mother. The conflict of the affects raised
+this moment to a trauma and the sensation of smell which was
+connected with it remained as its symbol. The only thing to be
+explained was the fact that out of all the sensory perceptions
+of that scene, the perception of smell was selected as the symbol,
+but I was already prepared to use the chronic nasal affliction as
+an explanation. On being directly questioned she stated that
+just at that time she suffered from a severe coryza and could
+scarcely smell anything but in her excitement she perceived the
+odor of burned pastry, it penetrated the organically motived
+anosmia.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>As plausible as this sounded it did not satisfy me; there seemed
+to be something lacking. There was no acceptable reason wherefore
+this series of excitements and this conflict of affects should
+have led to hysteria. Why did it not all remain on a normal
+psychological basis? In other words, what justified the conversion
+under discussion? Why did she not recall the scenes themselves
+instead of the sensations connected with them which she
+preferred as symbols for her recollection? Such questions
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>might seem superfluous and impertinent when dealing with old
+hysterias in whom the mechanism of conversion was habitual, but
+this girl first acquired hysteria through this trauma, or at least
+through this slight distress.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>From the analysis of similar cases I already knew that where
+hysteria is to be newly acquired one psychic determinant is indispensible;
+namely, that some presentation must intentionally be
+repressed from consciousness and excluded from associative
+elaboration.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In this intentional repression I also find the reason for the
+conversion of the sum of excitement, be it partial or total. The
+sum of excitement which is not to enter into psychic association
+more readily finds the wrong road to bodily innervation. The
+reason for the repression itself could only be a disagreeable feeling,
+the incompatibility of one of the repressible ideas with the
+ruling presentation-mass of the ego. The repressed presentation
+then avenges itself by becoming pathogenic.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>From this I concluded that Miss Lucy R. merged into that
+moment of hysterical conversion, which must have been under the
+determinations of that trauma which she intentionally left in the
+darkness and which she took pains to forget. On considering her
+attachment for the children and her sensitiveness towards the
+other persons of the household, there remained but one interpretation
+which I was bold enough to impart to her. I told her that
+I did not believe that all these things were simply due to her
+affection for the children, but that I thought that she was rather
+in love with her master, perhaps unwittingly, that she really nurtured
+the hope of taking the place of the mother, and it was for
+that reason that she became so sensitive towards the servants
+with whom she had lived peacefully for years. She feared lest
+they would notice something of her hope and scoff at her.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>She answered in her laconic manner: “Yes, I believe it is so.”—“But
+if you knew that you were in love with the master, why
+did you not tell me so?”—“But I did not know it, or rather, I
+did not wish to know it. I wished to crowd it out of my mind,
+never to think of it, and of late I have been successful.”<a id='r15'></a><a href='#f15' class='c012'><sup>[15]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span>“Why did you not wish to admit it to yourself? Were you
+ashamed because you loved a man?”—“O, no, I am not unreasonably
+prudish; one is certainly not responsible for one’s
+own feelings. I only felt chagrined because it was my employer
+in whose service I was and in whose house I lived, and toward
+whom I could not feel as independent as towards another. What
+is more, I am a poor girl and he is a rich man of a prominent family,
+and if anybody should have had any inkling about my feelings
+they would have ridiculed me.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>After this I encountered no resistances in elucidating the origin
+of this affection. She told me that the first years of her life in
+that house were passed uneventfully. She fulfilled her duties
+without thinking about unrealizable wishes. One day, however,
+the serious, and very busy and hitherto very reserved master,
+engaged her in conversation about the exigencies of rearing the
+children. He became milder and more cordial than usual, he
+told her how much he counted on her in the bringing up of his
+orphaned children, and looked at her rather peculiarly. It was
+in this moment that she began to love him, and gladly occupied
+herself with the pleasing hopes which she conceived during that
+conversation. However, as this was not followed by anything
+else, and despite her waiting and persevering no other confidential
+heart-to-heart talk followed, she decided to crowd it out of
+her mind. She quite agreed with me that the look in connection
+with the conversation was probably intended for the memory of
+his deceased wife. She was also perfectly convinced that her
+love was hopeless.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>After this conversation I expected a decided change in her condition
+but for a time it did not take place. She continued depressed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>and moody—a course of hydrotherapy which I ordered
+for her at the same time refreshed her somewhat mornings. The
+odor of burned pastry did not entirely disappear; though it became
+rarer and feebler it appeared only, as she said, when she
+was very much excited.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The continuation of this memory symbol led me to believe that
+besides the principal scene it represented many smaller side traumas
+and I therefore investigated everything that might have been
+in any way connected with the scene of the burned pastry. We
+thus passed through the theme of family friction, the behavior
+of the grandfather and others, and with that the sensation of
+burned odor gradually disappeared. Just then there was a
+lengthy interruption occasioned by a new nasal affliction which
+led to the discovery of the caries of the ethmoid.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>On her return she informed me that she received many Christmas
+presents from both gentlemen as well as from the household
+servants, as if they were trying to appease her and wipe away
+the recollection of the conflicts of the last months. These frank
+advances made no impression on her.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>On questioning her on another occasion about the odor of
+burned pastry she stated that it had entirely disappeared, but
+instead she was now bothered by another and similar odor like
+the smoke of a cigar. This odor really existed before; it was
+only concealed by the odor of the pastry but now appeared by
+itself.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I was not very much pleased with the success of my treatment.
+What occurred here is what a mere symptomatic treatment is
+generally blamed for, namely, that it removes one symptom only
+to make room for another. Nevertheless, I immediately set forth
+to remove this new memory symbol by analysis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This time I did not know whence this subjective sensation of
+smell originated, nor on what important occasion it was objective.
+On being questioned she said, “They constantly smoke at home,
+I really don’t know whether the smell which I feel has any particular
+significance.” I then proposed that she should try to
+recall things under the pressure of my hands. I have already
+mentioned that her recollections were plastically vivid, that she
+was a “visual.” Indeed under the pressure of my hands a
+picture came into her mind—at first only slowly and fragmentarily.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>It was the dining room of the house in which she waited
+with the children for the arrival of the gentlemen from the factory
+for dinner.—“Now we are all at the table, the gentlemen,
+the French maid, the housekeeper, the children and I. It is the
+same as usual.”—“Just keep on looking at that picture. It will
+soon become developed and specialized.”—“Yes, there is a guest,
+the chief accountant, an old gentleman who loves the children
+like his own grandchildren, but he dines with us so frequently that
+it is nothing unusual.”—“Just have patience, keep on looking
+at the picture, something will certainly happen.”—“Nothing
+happens. We leave the table, the children take leave and go with
+us up to the second floor as usual.”—“Well?”—“It really is
+something unusual, I now recognize the scene. As the children
+take leave the chief accountant attempts to kiss them, but my
+master jumps up and shouts at him, ‘Don’t kiss the children!’
+I then experienced a stitch in the heart, and as the gentlemen
+were smoking, this odor remained in my memory.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This, therefore, was the second, deeper seated scene causing
+the trauma and leaving the memory symbol. But why was this
+scene so effective? I then asked her which scene happened first,
+this one or the one with the burned pastry?—“The last scene happened
+first by almost two months.”—“Why did you feel the stitch
+at the father’s interference? The reproof was not meant for
+you.”—“It was really not right to rebuke an old gentleman in
+such manner who was a dear friend and a guest, it could have
+been said quietly.”—“Then you were really affected by your master’s
+impetuosity? Were you perhaps ashamed of him, or have
+you thought, ‘If he could become so impetuous to an old friend
+guest over such a trifle, how would he act towards me if I were
+his wife?’”—“No, that is not it.”—“But still it was about his
+impetuosity?”—“Yes, about the kissing of the children, he never
+liked that.” Under the pressure of my hands there emerged a
+still older scene which was the real effective trauma and which
+bestowed on the scene with the chief accountant the traumatic
+effectivity.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>A few months before a lady friend visited the house and on
+leaving kissed both children on the lips. The father, who was
+present, controlled himself and said nothing to the lady, but
+when she left he was very angry at the unfortunate governess.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>He said that he held her responsible for this kissing; that it was
+her duty not to tolerate it; that she was neglecting her duties
+in allowing such things, and that if it ever happened again he
+would entrust the education of his children to some one else.
+This occurred while she believed herself loved and waited for a
+repetition of that serious and friendly talk. This episode shattered
+all her hopes. She thought: “If he can upbraid and
+threaten me on account of such a trifle, of which I am entirely
+innocent, I must have been mistaken, he never entertained any
+tenderer feelings towards me, else he would have been considerate.”—It
+was evidently this painful scene that came to her as the
+father reprimanded the chief accountant for attempting to kiss
+the children.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>On being visited by Miss Lucy R. two days after the last
+analysis I had to ask her what pleasant things happened to her.
+She looked as though transformed, she smiled and held her head
+aloft. For a moment I thought that after all I probably mistook
+the conditions and that the governess of the children had now
+become the bride of the master. But she soon dissipated all my
+suppositions, saying, “Nothing new happened. You really do
+not know me. You have always seen me while I was sick and
+depressed. I am otherwise always cheerful. On awaking yesterday
+morning my burden was gone and since then I feel well.”—“What
+do you think of your chances in the house?”—“I am
+perfectly clear about that. I know that I have none, and I am
+not going to be unhappy about it.”—“Will you now be able to get
+along with the others in the house?”—“I believe so, because most
+of the trouble was due to my sensitiveness.”—“Do you still love
+the master?”—“Certainly I love him, but that does not bother
+me much. One can think and feel as one wishes.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I now examined her nose and found that the pain and the
+reflex sensations had almost completely reappeared. She could
+distinguish odors, but she was uncertain when they were very
+intense. What part the nasal trouble played in the anosmia I
+must leave undecided.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The whole treatment extended over a period of nine weeks.
+Four months later I accidentally met the patient at one of our
+summer resorts—she was cheerful and stated that her health
+continued to be good.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>
+ <h3 class='c016'><span class='sc'>Epicrisis.</span></h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>I would not underestimate the aforesaid case even though it
+only represents a young and light hysteria presenting but few
+symptoms. Moreover, it seems to me instructive that even such
+a slight neurotic affliction requires so many psychic determinants,
+and on a more exhaustive consideration of this history I am
+tempted to put it down as an illustration of that form of hysteria
+which even persons not burdened by heredity may acquire if their
+experiences favor it. It should be well noted that I do not speak
+of a hysteria which may be independent of all predisposition;
+such form does not probably exist, but we speak of such a predisposition
+only after the person became hysterical, as nothing
+pointed to it before this. A neuropathic disposition as commonly
+understood is something different. It is determined even before
+the disease by a number of hereditary burdens, or a sum of individual
+psychic abnormalities. As far as I know none of these
+moments could be demonstrated in the case of Miss Lucy R.
+Her hysteria could therefore be called acquired and presupposes
+nothing except probably a very marked susceptibility to acquire
+hysteria, a characteristic about which we know hardly anything.
+The chief importance in such cases lies in the nature of the
+trauma, to be sure in connection with the reaction of the person
+to the trauma. It is an indispensable condition for the acquirement
+of hysteria that there should arise a relation of incompatibility
+between the ego and some of its approaching presentations.
+I hope to be able to show in another place how a variety of neurotic
+disturbances originate from the different procedures which the
+“ego” pursues in order to free itself from that incompatibility.
+The hysterical form of defence, for which a special adaptation is
+required, consists in converting the excitement into physical innervation.
+The gain brought about by this process is the crowding
+out of the unbearable presentation from the ego consciousness,
+which then contains instead the physical reminiscences produced
+by conversion—in our case the subjective sensation of smell—and
+suffers from the affect which is more or less distinctly adherent
+to these reminiscences. The situation thus produced is no
+longer changeable, for changing and conversion annihilate the
+conflict which helped towards the adjustment of the affect. Thus
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>the mechanism producing hysteria corresponds on the one hand
+to an act of moral faint heartedness, on the other hand it presents
+itself as a protective arrangement at the command of the ego.
+There are many cases in which it must be admitted that the defense
+of the increased excitement through the production of hysteria
+may actually have been most expedient, but more frequently
+one will naturally come to the conclusion that a greater measure
+of moral courage would have been an advantage to the individual.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Accordingly the real traumatic moment is that, in which the
+conflict thrusts itself upon the ego and the latter decides to banish
+it. Such banishment does not annihilate the opposing presentation
+but merely crowds it into the unconscious. This process,
+occurring for the first time, forms a nucleus and point of crystallization
+for the formation of a new psychic group separated from
+the ego, around which, in the course of time, everything collects
+in accord with the opposing presentation. The splitting of consciousness
+in such cases of acquired hysteria is thus a desired
+and intentional one, and is often initiated by at least one arbitrary
+act. But literally, something different happens than the individual
+expects, he would wish to eliminate a presentation as though
+it never came to pass but only succeeds in isolating it psychically.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The traumatic moment in the history of our patient corresponds
+to the scene created by the master on account of the kissing of
+the children. For the time being this scene remained without any
+palpable effects, perhaps it initiated the depression and sensitiveness,
+but I leave this open;—the hysterical symptoms, however,
+commenced later in moments which can be designated as “auxiliary,”
+and which may be characterized by the fact that in them
+there is a simultaneous flowing together of both separated groups
+just as in the broadened somnambulic consciousness. The first
+of these moments in which the conversion took place in Miss
+Lucy R., was the scene at the table when the chief accountant
+attempted to kiss the children. The traumatic memory helped
+along, and she acted as though she had not entirely banished her
+attachment for her master. In other cases we find that these
+different moments come together and the conversion occurs directly
+under the influence of the trauma.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The second auxiliary moment repeated almost precisely the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>mechanism of the first. A strong impression transitorily reestablished
+the unity of consciousness and the conversion takes
+the same route opened to it in the first. It is interesting to note
+that the symptom occurring second concealed the first so that
+it could not be distinctly perceived until the second was eliminated.
+The reversal of the succession of events to which also the
+analysis must be adapted seems to me quite remarkable. In a
+whole series of cases I found that the symptoms which came
+later covered the first, and only the last thing in the analysis
+contained the key to the whole.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The therapy here consisted in forcing the union of the dissociated
+psychic groups with the ego consciousness. It is remarkable
+that the success did not run parallel with the accomplished
+work, the cure resulted suddenly only after the last part was
+accomplished.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER III.<br> <span class='c013'><span class='sc'>The Case of Miss Elisabeth v. R.</span></span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>In the fall of 1892 I was requested by a friendly colleague to
+examine a young lady who had suffered from pains in her legs
+for over two years and who walked badly. He also added that he
+diagnosed the case as hysteria, though none of the usual symptoms
+of the neurosis could be found. He stated that he knew
+something of the family and that the last few years had brought
+them much misfortune and little pleasure. At first the father
+of the patient died, then the mother underwent a serious operation
+for the eyes, and soon thereafter a married sister succumbed to a
+chronic cardiac affection after childbirth. Our patient had taken
+an active part in all the afflictions and in all the nursings of the
+sick. I made no further progress into the case after I had seen
+the twenty-four-year-old patient for the first time. She seemed
+intelligent and psychically normal and her affliction, which interfered
+with her social relations and pleasure, she bore with a happy
+mien, thus vividly recalling the “belle indifference” of hysterics.
+She walked with the upper part of her body bent forward, but
+without any support; her gait did not correspond to any known
+pathological gait and it was in no way strikingly bad. She complained
+of severe pains on walking, of early fatigue in walking
+as well as standing, and after a brief period she would seek rest
+in which the pains became diminished but they by no means
+disappeared. The pain was of an indefinite nature—one could
+assume it to be a painful fatigue. The seat of the pain was given
+as a quite extensive but indefinitely circumscribed location on the
+superficial surface of the right thigh. It was from this area that
+the pains radiated and where they were of the greatest intensity.
+Here, too, the skin and muscles were especially sensitive to pressure
+and pinching, while needle pricks were rather indifferently
+perceived. The same hyperalgesia of the skin and muscles was
+demonstrable, not only in this area, but over almost the entire surface
+of both legs. The muscles were perhaps more painful than
+the skin, but both kinds of pains were unmistakably most pronounced
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>over the thighs. The motor power of the legs was not
+diminished, the reflexes were of average intensity and all other
+symptoms were lacking, so that there was no basis for the assumption
+of a serious organic affection. The disease developed
+gradually during two years and changed considerably in its intensity.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I did not find it easy to determine the diagnosis, but for two
+reasons I concluded to agree with my colleague. First, because
+it was rather peculiar that such a highly intelligent patient should
+not be able to give anything definite about the character of her
+pains. A patient suffering from an organic pain, if it is not accompanied
+by any nervousness will be able to describe it definitely
+and calmly; it may perhaps be lancinating, appearing at certain
+intervals, extending from this to that location, and in his opinion
+it may be evoked by this or that influence. The neurasthenic
+describing his pain gives the impression of being occupied with
+some difficult mental problem reaching far beyond his powers.
+His features are tense and distorted as though under the domination
+of a painful affect, his voice becomes shriller, he struggles for
+expression, he rejects all designations that the physician makes for
+his pains, even though they are undoubtedly afterwards found
+as appropriate. He is ostensibly of the opinion that language is
+too poor to give expression to his feelings. His sensations are
+something unique, they never existed before so that they can not
+be exhaustively described. He never tires of constantly adding
+new details and when he has to stop he is surely controlled by the
+impression that he was unsuccessful in making himself understood
+to the physician. All this is due to the fact that his pains
+absorb his whole attention. In the case of Miss v. R. we had
+just the opposite behavior and we had to conclude from this that
+she attributed sufficient significance to the pain, but that her attention
+was concentrated on something else of which the pains
+were the accompanying phenomena, perhaps on thoughts and
+sensations which were connected with the pain.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>A still greater determination for the conception of the pain
+must however, be found in a second moment. If we irritate a
+painful area in a patient suffering from an organic disease or neurasthenia
+his physiognomy will show a definite expression of discomfort
+or of physical pain. Furthermore, the patient winces,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>refuses to be examined and assumes a defensive attitude. With
+Miss v. R. when the hyperalgesic skin or muscles of her legs were
+pinched or pressed her face assumed a peculiar expression approaching
+nearer pleasure than pain, she cried out and—I had to
+think of a pleasurable tickling—her face reddened, she threw
+her head backward, closed her eyes, and her body bent backward;
+all this was not very distinct but sufficiently marked so that it
+could only agree with the conception that her affliction was a hysteria
+and that the irritation touched a hysterogenic zone.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Her mien was not in accord with the pain which the pinching
+of the muscles and skin were supposed to excite. It probably
+harmonized better with the content of the thoughts which were
+behind the pain and which were evoked in the patient by irritating
+that part of the body associated with them. I have repeatedly
+observed similar significant expressions on irritating hyperalgesic
+zones in unmistakable cases of hysteria. The other gestures
+evidently corresponded to the slightest indications of a hysterical
+attack.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>We could not at that time find any explanation for the unusual
+localization of the hysterogenic zone. That the hyperalgesia
+chiefly concerned the muscles gave material for reflection. The
+most frequent affliction causing the diffuse and local pressure sensitiveness
+of the muscles is the rheumatic infiltration of the same,
+the common chronic muscular rheumatism about which aptitude
+to mask nervous affections I have already spoken. The consistency
+of the painful muscles in Miss v. R. did not contradict this
+assumption, as there were many hard cords in the muscle masses
+which seemed to be especially sensitive. There was probably
+also an organic change in the muscles, in the assumed sense, upon
+which the neurosis rested and which significance was markedly
+exaggerated by the neurosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The therapy followed out was based on a supposition of a
+mixed affection. We recommended the continuation of a systematic
+massage and faradization of the sensitive muscles without
+regard to the pain produced, and in order to remain in communication
+with the patient I undertook the treatment of her legs by
+means of strong Franklin’s sparks. To her question whether she
+should force herself to walk we answered decidedly in the affirmative.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>We thus attained a slight improvement. She particularly liked
+the painful shocks of the influence machine and the stronger they
+were the more they seemed to suppress her pains. My colleague
+meanwhile prepared the soil for the psychic treatment, and when
+after four weeks of sham treatment I proposed the same and gave
+the patient some explanations concerning the procedures and its
+effects I found a ready understanding and only slight resistances.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The work which then began became eventually the most arduous
+that ever befell my lot, and the difficulty of giving an account
+of this work ranks well with the obstacles that had to be overcome.
+For a long time, too, I did not understand the connection
+between the history of the disease and the affliction, a thing which
+should really have been caused and determined by this row of
+events.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>When one undertakes a cathartic treatment he at first asks himself
+whether the patient understands the origin and cause of her
+suffering. If that is so one does not need any special technique
+to cause her to reproduce the history of her ailment. The interest
+shown in her, the understanding which we foreshadow, the
+hope of recovery extended to her, all these will induce the patient
+to give up her secrets. With Miss Elisabeth it seemed
+probable to me right from the very beginning that she was conscious
+of the reasons for her suffering, that she had only a secret
+but no foreign body in consciousness. On looking at her one had
+to think of the poet’s words,</p>
+
+<div class='lg-container-b c017'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'>“That mask indicates a hidden meaning.”<a id='r16'></a><a href='#f16' class='c012'><sup>[16]</sup></a></div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c011'>At first I could thus forego hypnosis, reserving it, however,
+for future use if in the course of the confession conditions should
+arise for which explanation the memory would not perhaps
+suffice. Thus in this first complete analysis of a hysteria which
+I had undertaken, I reached a process of treatment which later
+I raised into a method and employed it consciously in the process
+of removing by strata the pathogenic psychic material which we
+used to compare with the technique of excavating a buried city.
+I at first allowed the patient to relate to me what was known to
+her, paying careful attention wherever a connection remained
+enigmatical or where a link in the chain of causation seemed to be
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>lacking. Later I penetrated into the deeper strata of memory by
+using for those locations hypnotic investigation or a similar technique.
+The presupposition of the whole work was naturally the
+expectation that a perfect and sufficient determination could be
+demonstrated. The means of the deeper investigation will soon
+be discussed.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The history which Miss Elisabeth gave was very dull and was
+woven of manifold painful experiences. During this recital she
+was not in a hypnotic state; I merely asked her to lie down and
+keep her eyes closed. I however made no objection if she from
+time to time opened her eyes, changed her position or sat up.
+Whenever she entered more deeply into a part of her history she
+seemed to merge spontaneously into a condition resembling a
+hypnotic state. She then remained motionless and kept her eyes
+firmly closed.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I shall now reproduce the results of the superficial strata of
+her memory. As the youngest of three daughters she spent her
+youth with her parents, to whom she was devotedly attached, on
+their estate in Hungary. Her mother’s health was frequently
+disturbed by an affliction of her eyes and also by nervous conditions.
+It thus happened that she became especially and devotedly
+attached to her jovial and broadminded father who was wont to
+say that this daughter took the place of both a son and friend
+with whom he could exchange his thoughts. As much as the
+girl gained in mental stimulation in consequence of this intercourse
+it did not escape the father that her psychic constitution
+deviated from that ideal which one so much desires to see in a
+girl. Jocosely he called her pert and disputatious. He warned
+her against being too confident in her judgments, against her tendencies
+to tell the truth regardlessly to everybody, and expressed
+his opinion that she would find it difficult to get a husband. As
+a matter of fact she was very discontented with her girlhood;
+she was filled with ambitious plans, wishing to study or obtain a
+musical education, and revolted at the thought of being forced
+to give up her inclination to sacrifice her freedom of judgment
+on account of marriage. Meanwhile she was proud of her father,
+of the regard and social position of her family, and jealously
+guarded everything connected with these matters. The indifference
+with which she treated her mother and older sisters, as will
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>be shown, was considered by her parents to be due to the blunter
+side of her character.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The age of the girls impelled the family to move into the
+metropolis, where for a time Elisabeth enjoyed the richer and
+gayer life. But then came the calamity which destroyed the
+happiness of the home. The father either concealed or overlooked
+a chronic cardiac affection, and one day he was brought
+home in an unconscious state after the first attack of edema of the
+lungs. This was followed by an illness of one and a half years,
+during which Elisabeth took the most prominent part in nursing
+him. She slept in her father’s room, awoke at night at his call,
+watched over him faithfully during the day, and forced herself
+to appear cheerful while he went through a hopeless condition
+with amiable resignation. The beginning of her affection must
+have been connected with this time of her nursing, for she could
+recall that during the last half year of this care she had to remain
+in bed on one occasion for a day and a half on account of severe
+pain in the leg. She maintained, however, that these pains soon
+passed away and excited neither worry nor attention. As a matter
+of fact it was two years after the death of her father that she
+began to feel sick and became unable to walk on account of pain.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The gap which the father left in the life of this family consisting
+of four women, the social solitude, the cessation of so many
+relations which promised stimulation and pleasure, the increased
+infirmity of the mother, all these clouded the mood of our patient,
+but simultaneously stimulated a warm desire that the family might
+soon find a substitute for the lost happiness and urged her to concentrate
+her entire devotion and care on the surviving mother.
+At the end of the mourning year the eldest sister married a talented
+and ambitious man of notable position, who by his mental
+capacity seemed to be destined for a great future, but who, however,
+very soon developed a morbid sensitiveness and egotistic
+perseveration of moods, and dared to show his disregard for the
+old lady in the family circle. That was more than Elisabeth
+could endure. She felt herself called upon to take up the fight
+against her brother-in-law whenever he gave occasion for it,
+while the other women took lightly the outburst of his excited
+temperament. To her it was a painful disillusionment to find that
+the reconstruction of the old family happiness experienced such
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>a disturbance. She could not forgive her married sister because
+with feminine docility she strove to avoid espousing her cause.
+Thus a whole series of scenes remained in Elisabeth’s memory to
+which were attached a number of partially uttered grievances
+against her first brother-in-law. But what she reproached him
+most for was the fact that for the sake of a promotion in view
+he moved with his small family to a distant city in Austria and
+thus increased the lonesomeness of her mother. On this occasion
+Elisabeth distinctly felt her inability and helplessness to afford her
+mother a substitute for the lost happiness, and the impossibility of
+following out the resolution made at the death of her father.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The marriage of the second sister seemed to promise more for
+the future of the family. The second brother-in-law, although
+not of the same mental calibre as the first, was a man after the
+heart of delicate ladies, and his behavior reconciled Elisabeth to
+the matrimonial institution and to the thought of the sacrifice
+connected with it. What is more the second couple remained
+near her mother, and the child of this brother-in-law and the
+second sister became Elisabeth’s pet. Unfortunately the year
+during which the child was born was clouded by another event.
+The visual affliction of the mother demanded many weeks’ treatment
+in a dark room, in which Elisabeth participated. Following
+this an operation proved necessary and the excitement connected
+with this occurred at the same time that the first brother-in-law
+made preparations to move. Finally the operation, skilfully
+performed, proved successful, and the three families met at
+a summer resort. There Elisabeth, exhausted by the worries of
+the past months, had the first opportunity to recuperate from the
+effects of the suffering and anxiety that the family had undergone
+since the death of her father.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>But during the time spent at this resort Elisabeth was attacked
+by the pain and weakness. Afterwards, the pains, which had
+become noticeable for a short while some time previously, manifested
+themselves severely for the first time after taking a warm
+bath at a small watering place. In connection with this it was
+thought that a long walk, really a walk of half a day, a few days,
+previously, had some connection with the onset of the pains. This
+readily produced the impression that Elisabeth at first became
+“fatigued” and then “caught cold.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>From this time on Elisabeth became the patient in the family.
+Following the advice of the physician she spent the rest of the
+summer in the watering place at Gastein, whither she went with
+her mother, but not without having a new worriment to think
+about. The second sister was again pregnant and information
+as to her condition was quite unfavorable, so that Elisabeth could
+hardly decide to take the journey to Gastein. After barely two
+weeks at Gastein both mother and sister were recalled as the
+patient at home did not feel well.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>An agonizing journey, which for Elisabeth was a mixture of
+pain and anxious expectations, was followed by certain signs at
+the home railroad station which forebode the worst, and then
+on entering the chamber of the patient they were confronted with
+the reality—that they arrived too late to take leave of the dying
+one.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Elisabeth not only suffered from the loss of this sister whom
+she dearly loved but was also grieved by the thoughts caused by
+her death and the changes which it caused. The sister had succumbed
+to heart trouble which was aggravated by the pregnancy.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>She then conceived the thought that the heart trouble was the
+paternal inheritance. It was then recalled that in her early
+childhood the deceased went through an attack of chorea with a
+slight heart affection. The family then blamed themselves and
+the physicians for permitting the marriage. They could not spare
+reproaches to the unfortunate widower for impairing the health
+of his wife by two successive pregnancies without any pause.
+The sad thought that this happiness should terminate thus, after
+the rare conditions for a happy marriage had been found, thereafter
+constantly occupied Elisabeth’s mind. Moreover, she again
+saw everything fail that she had planned for her mother. The
+widowed brother-in-law was inconsolable and withdrew from his
+wife’s family. It seemed that his own family from whom he was
+estranged during his short and happy married life took advantage
+of the opportunity to again draw him into their own circle.
+There was no way of maintaining the former union; to live
+together with the mother-in-law was improper out of regard for
+the unmarried sister-in-law, and inasmuch as he refused to relinquish
+the child, the only legacy of the deceased, to the two
+ladies, he for the first time gave them the opportunity of accusing
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>him of heartlessness. Finally, and that was not the least
+painful thing, Elisabeth received some indefinite information concerning
+a disagreement between the two brothers-in-law, the
+occasion for which she could only surmise. It seemed as if the
+widower made some requests concerning financial matters which
+the other brother-in-law considered unjustifiable, and thought,
+that in view of the recent sorrow of his mother, it was nothing
+but an evil extortion. This then was the history of the young
+woman of ambitious and loving disposition. Resentful of her
+fate, embittered over the failures of her little plans to restore
+the lustre of the home; of her beloved ones, some being dead,
+some away, and some estranged— without any inclination to seek
+refuge in the love of a strange man, she lived thus for a year and
+a half nursing her mother and her pains, separated from almost,
+all social intercourse.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>If we forget the greater sufferings and place ourselves in this
+girl’s position, we can but extend to Miss Elisabeth our hearty
+sympathy. But what is the physician’s interest in this sorrowful
+tale; what is its relation to her painful and her weak gait; what
+outlook is there for explaining and curing this case by the
+knowledge which we perhaps obtained from these psychic
+traumas?</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>For the physician this confession of the patient signified at
+first a great disappointment, for to be sure it was a history composed
+of banal mental shocks from which we could neither
+explain why the patient became afflicted with hysteria nor how
+the hysteria assumed the form of the painful abasia. It explained
+neither the causation nor the determination of the hysteria
+in question. We could perhaps assume that the patient had
+formed an association between her psychically painful impressions
+and bodily pains which she accidentally perceived simultaneously,
+and that now she made use in her memory of the
+physical sensation as a symbol for the psychic. What motive she
+had for this substitution and in what moment this came about
+remained unexplained. To be sure, these were questions whose
+nature was not familiar to the physicians. For it was customary
+to content one’s self with the information and to assume that the
+patient was constitutionally hysterical and that under the intensive
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>pressure of any kind of excitement hysterical symptoms could
+develop.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Even less than for the explanation did this confession offer
+for the treatment of the case. One could not conceive what
+beneficial influence Miss Elisabeth could derive from recounting
+sad familiar family experiences of the past years to a stranger
+who could give her in return only moderate sympathy, nor could
+we perceive any improvement after the confession. During the
+first period of the treatment the patient never failed to repeat
+to her physician: “I continue to feel ill, I have the same pains as
+before,” and when she accompanied this by a crafty and malicious
+glance, I could perhaps recall the words which old Mr. v. R. was
+wont to utter concerning his favorite daughter: “She is frequently
+pert and disputatious,” but after all I had to confess that
+she was right.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Had I given up the patient at this stage of the psychic treatment
+the case of Miss Elisabeth v. R. would have been quite
+unimportant for the theory of hysteria. Nevertheless, I continued
+my analysis because I felt sure that an understanding of
+the causation as well as the determination of the hysterical symptoms
+could be gained from the deeper strata of consciousness.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I therefore decided to put the direct question to the broadened
+consciousness of the patient, in order to find out with what
+psychic impression the origin of the pain in the legs was connected.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>For this purpose the patient should have been put in deep
+hypnosis. But unhappily I had to realize that all my procedures
+in that direction could put the patient in no other state of consciousness
+than that in which she gave me her confession. Still I
+was very pleased that this time she abstained from triumphantly
+remonstrating with the words: “You see, I really do not sleep,
+I cannot be hypnotized.” In such despair I conceived the idea
+of making use of the trick of pressing the head, the origin of
+which I have thoroughly discussed in the preceding contribution
+concerning Miss Lucy. This was done by requesting the patient
+to unfailingly inform me of what came before her mind’s eye
+or passed through her memory at the moment of the pressure.
+For a long time she was silent, and then admitted that on my
+pressure she thought of an evening in which a young man had
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>accompanied her home from some social affair. She also thought
+of the conversation that passed between them, and her feelings on
+returning home to nurse her father.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>With this first mention of the young man a new shaft was
+opened, the content of which I now gradually brought out. We
+dealt here rather with a secret, for with the exception of a
+mutual friend, no one knew anything of the relation and the
+hopes connected with it. It concerned the son of an old friend
+who was formerly one of their neighbors. The young man having
+become an orphan attached himself with great devotion to
+her father; he was guided in his career by his advice, and this
+veneration for the father was extended to the ladies of the
+family. Numerous reminiscences of repeated joint readings, exchange
+of thoughts and utterances on his side marked the gradual
+growth of her conviction that he loved and understood her and
+that a marriage with him would not impose the sacrifice that
+she feared. Unhappily he was but little older than she and as
+yet was far from being independent. She however firmly resolved
+to wait for him.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>With the serious illness of her father, and the necessity of her
+nursing him their relations became less frequent. The evening
+which she at first recalled marked the height of her feeling, but
+even then there was no exchange of ideas between them on the
+subject. It was only at the urging of her family that she consented
+to leave the sick bed that evening and go to an affair
+where she was to meet him. She wished to hasten home early
+but was forced to remain, only yielding on his promising to
+accompany her home. At no time had she entertained such a
+tender regard for him as during this walk, but after returning
+home at a late hour in this blissful state and finding the condition
+of her father aggravated she bitterly reproached herself for
+having sacrificed so much time for her own amusement. It was
+the last time that she left her sick father for a whole evening; her
+friend she saw but seldom after this. After the death of her
+father he seemed to hold himself aloof out of respect for her
+sorrow and then business affairs drew him into other spheres.
+Gradually she came to the realization that his interest in her was
+suppressed by other feelings and that he was lost to her. This
+failure of her first love pained her as often as she thought of it.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>In this relationship and in the scene caused by it, I was to
+seek the causation of the first hysterical pain. A conflict, or a
+state of incompatibility arose through the contrast between the
+happiness which she had not at that time denied herself and the
+sad condition in which she found her father upon her arrival
+home. As a result of this conflict the erotic presentations were
+repressed from the associations, and the affect connected with them
+was made use of in aggravating or reviving a simultaneously (or
+somewhat previously) existing physical pain. It was therefore
+the mechanism of a conversion for the purpose of defense as I
+have shown circumstantially in another place.<a id='r17'></a><a href='#f17' class='c012'><sup>[17]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'>To be sure, we have room here for all kinds of observations. I
+must assert that I was unsuccessful in demonstrating from her
+memory that the conversion took place in the moment of her
+returning home. I therefore investigated for similar experiences
+which might have occurred while she was nursing her father,
+and I evoked a number of scenes, among which was one during
+which she had to jump out of bed with bare feet in a cold room
+to respond to the repeated calls of her father. I was inclined
+to attribute to this moment a certain significance, for in addition
+to complaining of pain in her legs she also complained of tormenting
+sensations of coldness. Nevertheless, here, too I could not
+with certainty lay hold of the scene which could be indicated as
+the scene of conversion. This led me to admit that there was
+here some gap, when I recalled the fact that the hysterical pains
+in the legs were really not present at the time she nursed her
+father. From her memory she recalled only a single attack of
+pain lasting a few days to which at that time she paid no attention.
+I then directed my attention to the first appearance of the
+pains. In this respect I was successful in awakening a perfect
+memory. They came on just at the time of a relative’s visit
+whom she could not receive because she was ill in bed, and who
+had the misfortune to find her ill in bed on another occasion two
+years later. But the search for the psychic motive of these first
+pains failed as often as repeated. I believed that I could assume
+that these first pains were due to a slight rheumatic attack and
+really had no psychic basis, and I also discovered that this organic
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>trouble was the model for the later hysterical imitation, at all
+events that it occurred before the scene of being accompanied
+home. That these mild organic pains could continue for some
+time without her paying much attention to them is quite possible
+when we consider the nature of the disease. The obscurity resulting
+from this, namely, that the analysis pointed to a conversion
+of psychic excitement into bodily pain at a time when
+such pain was certainly not perceived and not recalled—this
+problem I hope to be able to solve in later considerations and by
+other examples.<a id='r18'></a><a href='#f18' class='c012'><sup>[18]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'>With the discovery of the motive for the first conversion we
+began a second more fruitful period of the treatment. In the
+first place very soon afterward the patient surprised me with the
+statement that she now knew why the pains always radiated from
+that definite location on the right thigh and were most painful
+there. This is really the place upon which her father’s leg rested
+every morning while she changed the bandages of his badly
+swollen leg. That occurred hundreds of times, and strange to
+say she did not think of this connection until today. She thus
+gave me the desired explanation of the origin of an atypical
+hysterogenic zone. Furthermore during our analysis her painful
+legs always commenced to “join in the discussion.” I mean
+the following remarkable state of affairs: The patient was as a
+rule free from pain when we began our work, but as soon as I
+evoked some recollection by question or by pressure of the head
+she at first reported some pain usually of a very vivid nature, and
+then winced and placed her hand on the painful area. This
+awakened pain remained constant as long as the patient was controlled
+by the recollection, reaching its height when she was about
+to utter the essential and critical part of her communication, and
+disappearing with the last words of the statement. I gradually
+learned to use this awakened pain as a compass. Whenever she
+was moody or claimed to have pains I knew that she had not told
+me everything, and urged a continuation of the confession until
+the pain was “spoken away.” Then only did I awaken a new
+recollection.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>During this period of ab-reaction, the patient’s condition
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>showed such a striking improvement both somatically and
+psychically that I used to remark half jokingly that during each
+treatment I carried away a certain number of pain motives, and
+that when I had cleaned them all out she would be well. She
+soon reached a stage during which she had no pain much of the
+time; she consented to walk a great deal and to give up her
+hitherto condition of isolation. During the analysis I followed up
+now the spontaneous fluctuations of her condition and now some
+fragments of her sorrowful tale which in my opinion I had not
+sufficiently exhausted. In this work I made some interesting discoveries
+the principles of which I could later verify in other
+patients.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In the first place it was found that the spontaneous fluctuations
+never occurred unless provoked associatively by the events
+of the day. On one occasion she heard of an illness in the circle
+of her acquaintances which recalled to her a detail in the illness
+of her father. On another occasion the child of her deceased
+sister visited her and its resemblance to its mother recalled many
+painful incidents. On still another occasion it was a letter from
+her absent sister showing distinctly the influence of the inconsiderate
+brother-in-law, and this awakened a pain causing the reproduction
+of a family scene heretofore not reported.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>As she never reproduced the same pain motives twice we were
+justified in the expectation that the stock would in time become
+exhausted. I never prevented her from merging into a situation
+tending to evoke new memories which had not as yet come to the
+surface. Thus for example I sent her to the grave of her sister,
+or I urged her to go in society where she was apt to meet her
+youthful friend who happened to be in the city.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In this manner I obtained an insight into the mode of origin
+of a hysteria which could be designated as monosymptomatic. I
+found, for example, that the right leg became painful during
+our hypnosis when we dealt with memories relating to the nursing
+of her father, to her young friend, and to other memories
+occurring during the first period of the pathogenic term; while
+the pain in the left leg came on as soon as I evoked the memory
+of her lost sister, of both brothers-in-law, in brief of any impression
+relating to the second half of the history. My attention
+having been called to that by this constant behavior I went further
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>in my investigations and gained the impression that perhaps detailization
+went still further and that every new psychic cause of
+painful feeling might have some connection with a differently
+located painful area in the legs. The original painful location on
+the right thigh referred to the nursing of her father, and as the
+result of new traumas the painful area then grew by apposition
+so that strictly speaking we had here not one single physical
+symptom connected with a multiform psychic memory complex
+but a multiplicity of similar symptoms which on superficial examination
+seemed to be fused into one. To be sure I have not
+followed out the demarcations of the individual psychic causes
+corresponding to the pain zones for I found that the patient’s
+attention was turned away from these relations.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Notwithstanding this I directed further interest to the mode of
+construction of the whole symptom-complex of the abasia upon
+this painful zone, and with this view in mind I asked such questions
+as this: “What is the origin of the pains in walking and
+standing, or on lying?” She answered these questions partially uninfluenced,
+partially under the pressure of my hand. We thus
+obtained two results. In the first place she grouped all scenes
+connected with painful impressions according to their occurrence,
+sitting, standing, etc. Thus, for example, she stood at the
+door when her father was brought home with his cardiac attack
+and in her fright remained as though rooted to the spot. To
+this first quotation “fright while standing” she connected more
+recollections up to the overwhelming scene when she again stood
+as if pinned near the death bed of her sister. The whole chain
+of reminiscences should justify the connection of the pain with
+standing up, and could also serve as an association proof, only
+one had to bear in mind the fact that in all these occasions we
+must demonstrate another moment which had served to direct the
+attention—and as a further result the conversion—just on the
+standing, walking, sitting, etc. The explanation for this direction
+of attention could hardly be sought in other connections than
+in the fact that walking, standing, and lying are connected with
+capabilities and conditions of those members which here bore the
+painful zones; namely, the legs. We could then easily understand
+the connection between the astasia-abasia and the first scene
+of conversion in this history.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>Among the scenes which in consequence of this review had
+made the walking painful one which referred to a walk she had
+taken in company, at the watering place, which apparently lasted
+too long, stood out most prominently. The deeper circumstances
+of this occurrence revealed themselves only hesitatingly and left
+many a riddle unsolved. She was in an especially good humor
+and gladly joined the circle of friendly persons; it was a lovely
+day, not too warm, her mother remained at home; her older sister
+had already departed, the younger one felt indisposed but did not
+wish to mar her pleasure. The husband of the second sister at
+first declared that he would remain at home with his wife, but
+finally went along for her (Elisabeth’s) sake. This scene
+seemed to have a great deal to do with the first appearance of the
+pains, for she recalled that she returned home from the walk
+very fatigued and with severe pains, she could not however say
+definitely whether she had perceived the pains before this. I
+took for granted that if she had suffered any pain she would have
+hardly resolved to enter upon this long walk. On being questioned
+whence the pains originated on this walk she answered
+rather indefinitely saying that the contrast between her solitude
+and the married happiness of her sick sister, of which she was
+constantly reminded by the behavior of her brother-in-law, was
+painful to her.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Another closely related scene played a part in the connection
+of the pain with sitting. It was a few days later, her sister and
+brother-in-law had already departed and she found herself in an
+excitable longing mood. She arose in the morning and ascended
+a small hill which they were wont to visit together and which
+afforded the only pretty view. There she sat down on a stone
+bench giving free play to her thoughts. Her thoughts again
+concerned her lonesomeness, the fate of her family, and she now
+frankly admitted that she entertained the eager wish to become as
+happy as her sister. After this morning’s meditation she returned
+home with severe pains. In the evening of the same day
+she took the bath, after which the pains definitely appeared and
+continued persistently.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>We could further ascertain with great certainty that the pains
+on walking and standing diminished in the beginning on lying
+down. Only after hearing of her sister’s illness and on leaving
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>Gastein in the evening, spending a sleepless night in the sleeping
+car, and being tormented simultaneously by the worries concerning
+her sister and violent pains, it was only then that the pains
+appeared for the first time while she was lying down, and throughout
+that time lying down was even more painful than walking
+or standing.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Thus the painful sphere grew by apposition first because every
+new pathogenically affecting theme occupied a new region of the
+legs, second, every one of the impressionable scenes left a trace
+because it produced a lasting, always more cumulative, “occupation”
+of the different functions of the legs, thus connecting these
+functions with the sensations of pain. There was unmistakably,
+however, still a third mechanism which furthered the production
+of astasia-abasia. When the patient finished the recitation of a
+whole series of events with the plaint that she then perceived pain
+in “standing alone,” and when in another series referring to the
+unfortunate attempt of bringing about new conditions in the
+family she was not tired of repeating that the painful in that was
+the feeling of her helplessness, the sensation that she “could make
+no headway,” I had to admit that her reflections influenced the
+formation of the abasia, and had to assume that she directly
+sought a symbolic expression for her painfully accentuated
+thoughts and had found it in the aggravation of her pains. That
+somatic symptoms of hysteria could originate through such
+symbolization we have already asserted in our Preliminary Communication,
+and in the epicrisis to this history. I will give some
+examples of conclusive evidence. In Miss Elisabeth v. R. the
+psychic mechanism of the symbolization was not in the foreground,
+it had not produced the abasia, but everything pointed to
+the fact that the already existing abasia had in this way undergone
+a considerable reinforcement. Accordingly this abasia as I
+met it in the stage of development was not only to be compared
+to a psychically associative paralysis of function but also to a
+symbolic paralysis of function.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Before I continue with the history of my patient I will add
+something about her behavior during the second period of the
+treatment. Throughout this whole analysis I made use of the
+method of evoking pictures and ideas by pressing the head, a
+method therefore, which would be inapplicable without the full
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>cooperation and voluntary attention of the patient. At times it
+was really surprising how promptly and how infallibly the individual
+scenes belonging to one theme succeeded each other in
+chronological order. It was as if she read from a long picture
+book the pages of which passed in review before her eyes. At
+other times there seemed to be inhibitions, of what kind I could
+not at that time surmise. When I exerted some pressure she
+maintained that nothing came into her mind. I repeated the
+pressure and told her to wait, but still nothing would come. At
+first when such obstinacy manifested itself I determined to discontinue
+the work and to try again, as the day seemed unpropitious.
+Two observations, however, caused me to change my
+procedure. Firstly, because such failure of this method only
+occurred when I found Elisabeth cheerful and free from pain
+and never when she had a bad day; secondly, because she frequently
+made assertions of seeing nothing after the lapse of a
+long pause during which her tense and occupied mind betrayed
+to me some psychic process within. I therefore decided to assume
+that the method had never failed, that under the pressure of my
+hands Elisabeth had each time perceived some idea or had seen
+some picture but that she was not always ready to inform me of
+it and attempted to repress the thing evoked. I could think of
+two motives for such concealment; either Elisabeth subjected the
+idea that came to her mind to a criticism to which she was not
+entitled, thinking it not sufficiently important and unfit as an
+answer to the question, or she feared to say it because that statement
+was too disagreeable to her. I therefore proceeded as if
+I were perfectly convinced of the reliability of my technique.
+Whenever she asserted that nothing came into her mind, I did
+not let that pass. I assured her that something must have come
+to her but that perhaps she was not attentive enough, that I was
+quite willing to repeat the pressure. I also told her not to entertain
+any doubts concerning the correctness of the idea presenting
+itself to her mind, that that was not any of her concern; that it
+was her duty to remain perfectly objective and to tell whatever
+came into her mind, be it suitable or not, and I ended by saying
+that I knew well that something did come which she concealed
+from me and that as long as she would continue to do so she
+would not get rid of her pains. After such urging I found that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>there was really no pressure that remained unsuccessful. I then
+had to assume that I correctly recognized the state of affairs, and
+indeed I won through this analysis perfect confidence in my technique.
+It often happened that only after the third pressure did
+she make a statement then added “Why I could have told you that
+the first time”—“Indeed why did you not say it”—“I thought
+that it was not correct:” or “I thought that I could avoid it,
+but it recurred each time.” During this difficult work I began to
+attach a profounder significance to the resistance which the
+patient showed in the reproduction of her recollections, and I
+carefully compared those occasions in which it was especially
+striking.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I now come to the description of the third period of our
+treatment. The patient felt better, she was psychically unburdened
+and more capable, but the pains were manifestly not
+removed, reappearing from time to time with the old severity.
+The imperfect cure went hand in hand with the imperfect analysis,
+as yet I did not know in what moment and through what
+mechanisms the pains originated. During the reproduction of
+the most manifold scenes of the second period and the observation
+of the patient’s resistance towards the reproduction, I formed a
+definite suspicion which I did not then dare to use as a basis for
+my action. An accidental observation turned the issue. While
+working with the patient one day I heard the steps of a man in
+the adjacent room and a rather pleasant voice asking some questions.
+My patient immediately arose requesting me to discontinue
+the treatment for the day because she heard her brother-in-law
+who just arrived asking for her. Before this disturbance
+she was free from pains, but thereafter she betrayed by her mien
+and gait the sudden appearance of violent pains. This strengthened
+my suspicion and I decided to elicit the decisive explanation.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I questioned her concerning the circumstances and causes of
+the first appearance of the pains. Her thoughts were directed to
+the summer resort in that watering place where she had been
+before taking the journey to Gastein. A number of scenes were
+reproduced which had already been treated less exhaustively.
+They recalled her frame of mind at that time, the exhaustion following
+the worriment about her mother’s vision and the nursing
+of her mother during the time of the operation and her final
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>despair at being unable as a lonesome girl to enjoy life or to
+accomplish anything in life. Until then she felt strong enough to
+dispense with the help of a man, but now she was controlled by a
+feeling of her womanly weakness, a yearning for love in which,
+to put it in her own words, “her obdurate self began to soften.”
+In such humor the happy marriage of her younger sister made
+the profoundest impression on her. She thought how affectionately
+he cared for her, how they understood each other with a
+mere glance, and how sure they seemed to be of each other. It
+was truly regrettable that the second pregnancy followed so
+quickly the first and her sister knew that this was the cause of her
+suffering but how willingly she endured it and all because he was
+the cause of it. The brother-in-law did not at first wish to
+participate in the walk which was so intimately connected with
+Elisabeth’s pain; he preferred to remain home with his sick wife,
+but the latter urged him with a glance to go because she thought
+that would give Elisabeth pleasure. Elisabeth remained with him
+throughout the whole walk; they spoke about the most varied
+and intimate things; she found herself in thorough accord with
+all he said, and she became overwhelmed with the desire to
+possess a man like him. This was followed by a scene a few
+days later, when, on the morning after their departure, she visited
+the point commanding the beautiful view which had been their
+favorite walk. There she seated herself upon a stone and again
+dreamed of her sister’s happiness and of a man like her brother-in-law
+who could engage her affections. When she arose she
+had pains which again disappeared, and only in the afternoon
+after having taken the warm bath did they reappear, remaining
+ever since. I attempted to investigate the thoughts which occupied
+her mind while taking the bath, but all I could obtain was
+that the bath house recalled her absent sister because she had
+lived in the same house.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>For some time the state of affairs was clear to me. Absorbed
+in painfully sweet recollections she was wholly unconscious of
+the drift of her thoughts and continued to reproduce her reminiscences,
+the time in Gastein, the worry connected with the expectations
+of the letter, finally the information of her sister’s
+illness, the long wait until the evening when she could first leave
+Gastein, the journey with its tormenting uncertainties during a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>sleepless night—all these moments were accompanied by a violent
+aggravation of the pain. I asked her if during the journey she
+thought of the sad possibility which she afterward found realized.
+She answered that she carefully avoided the thought but that in
+her opinion her mother expected the worst from the very beginning.
+This was followed by the reminiscences of her arrival in
+Vienna—the impressions which she received from the relatives at
+the station, the short journey from Vienna to the neighboring
+summer resort where her sister lived, the arrival in the evening,
+the hasty walk through the garden to the door of the little garden
+pavilion—a silence in the house, the oppressive darkness, the fact
+of not having been received by the brother-in-law. She then
+recalled standing before the bed seeing the deceased, and in the
+moment of the awful certainty that the beloved sister had died
+without having taken leave of them and without having her last
+days eased through their nursing—in that very moment another
+thought flashed through Elisabeth’s brain which now peremptorily
+repeated itself. The thought which flashed like dazzling
+lightning through the darkness was, “Now he is free again, and
+I can become his wife.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Of course, now everything was clear. The analyzer’s effort
+was richly repaid. The ideas of the “defense” (abwehr)
+against an unbearable presentation, the origin of hysterical symptoms
+through conversion of psychic into physical excitement, the
+formation of a separate psychic group by an arbitrary act, leading
+to the defense—all these were in that moment palpably presented
+before my eyes. Thus and thus alone did things happen
+here. This girl entertained an affectionate regard for her
+brother-in-law against the acceptance of which into her consciousness
+her whole moral being struggled. She succeeded in
+sparing herself the painful consciousness that she was in love
+with her sister’s husband by creating for herself instead bodily
+pains, and in the moment when this certainty wished to thrust
+itself into her consciousness (while she walked with him, during
+that morning reverie, in the bath, and before her sister’s bed)
+her pains originated by means of a successful conversion into the
+somatic. When she came under my care there was already a
+complete isolation from her consciousness of the presentation
+group referring to this love, else, I believe that she would never
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>have agreed to such a treatment. The resistance which she repeatedly
+brought forth during the reproduction of traumatically
+produced scenes really corresponded to the energy with which the
+unbearable presentation had been crowded out from the association.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>For the therapeutist there now came a sorry time. The effect
+of the resumption of that repressed presentation was a crushing
+one for the poor child. When I summed up the whole situation
+with these prosaic words: “you were really for a long time in
+love with your brother-in-law,” she complained of the most
+horrible pains at that moment; she made another despairing effort
+to reject the explanation, saying that it was not true, that I suggested
+it to her, it could not be, she was incapable of such baseness,
+and that she would never forgive herself for it. It was
+quite easy to prove to her that her own information allowed no
+other interpretation, but it took a long time before the two
+reasons that I offered for consolation, namely, that one is not
+responsible for one’s feelings and that her behavior, her sickness
+under those circumstances was sufficient proof of her moral
+nature—I say it took a long time before these consolations made
+an impression on her. I was now forced to pursue more than
+one course in order to calm the patient. In the first place I
+wished to give her the opportunity to rid herself by ab-reaction
+of the material long since accumulated. We investigated the
+first impressions of the relations with her brother-in-law, the
+beginning of those unconsciously kept affectionate regards. We
+found here all those little indications and forebodings which on a
+retrospective view showed a fully developed passion. On his
+first visit to the house he mistook her for his destined bride and
+greeted her before he greeted her older and homely sister. One
+evening they entertained each other so vivaciously and seemed to
+understand each other so well that the bride interrupted them
+with this half serious remark: “You two, indeed, would have
+suited each other very nicely.” On another occasion while in a
+gathering who were ignorant of the engagement the conversation
+drifted to the young man, and a young lady indiscreetly remarked
+about a blemish in his shape, a juvenile joint affliction.
+The bride herself remained calm while Elisabeth flew into a
+passion, and with an ardor which even she herself could not afterward
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>understand she defended the straight form of her future
+brother-in-law. While we worked our way through these reminiscences
+it became clear to Elisabeth that her affection for her
+brother-in-law had slumbered in her for a long time, perhaps
+since the beginning of their relations, and had concealed itself
+so long under the mask of a mere kinsmanlike affection as only
+her very delicate family feeling would allow.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This ab-reaction benefited her much but I was able to give
+her still more relief by taking a friendly interest in her present
+state of affairs. With this object in view I sought an interview
+with Mrs. v. R. whom I found to be an intelligent and refined
+lady whose courage to face life, however, was somewhat lessened
+through the last misfortune. From her I learned that the accusation
+of rude extortion which the older brother-in-law had
+brought against the widower, and which was so painful to Elisabeth,
+had to be retracted on closer investigation. The character
+of the young man remained untarnished, it was merely a misunderstanding,
+an easily conceived difference of opinion concerning
+the valuation of money that could arise between the merchant,
+to whom money is only a working tool, and the official—that is
+all there was to this seemingly so painful incident. I begged the
+mother to give Elisabeth all explanations that she might hereafter
+need, and to offer her in the future that opportunity for unburdening
+her mind to which I had accustomed her.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Naturally I was also anxious to know what chance there was
+for the fulfilment of the girl’s present conscious wish. Here
+things were less favorable! The mother stated that for some
+time she had had an inkling of Elisabeth’s affection for her
+brother-in-law, of course she did not know that it existed during
+the lifetime of her sister. Whoever saw them both in friendly
+intercourse—of late, to be sure, only seldom—could entertain no
+doubt of the girl’s anxiety to please him. However, neither she,
+her mother, nor the advisers of the family showed any particular
+inclination to bring about a matrimonial union between the two.
+The health of the young man had not been very good and had
+received a setback through the death of his beloved wife, and it
+was not at all certain that he had sufficiently recovered from the
+shock to enter into a new matrimony. It was quite probable that
+this was the reason for his reserve, perhaps also because he was
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>not sure of his position, and wished to avoid all obvious gossip.
+With such a reserve on both sides the solution for which Elisabeth
+was yearning was likely to fail.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I informed the girl of everything that I had heard from her
+mother and had the satisfaction of seeing her benefited by the
+explanation concerning the money affair. On the other hand, I
+expected her to bear calmly the uncertainties of her future which
+could not be set aside. The advancing summer compelled us to
+bring the treatment to an end. She now felt better, and since
+we had discussed the causes to which the pain could be traced she
+no longer complained of pain. We both felt that the work was
+done, although I thought that the ab-reaction of the suppressed
+love was really not as complete as it should have been. I regarded
+her as cured and urged her to continue independently
+the solution after the way had been cleared, to which she agreed.
+She left with her mother for a summer resort where they were to
+join the older sister and her family.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I still have something more to report about the further course
+of Miss Elisabeth v. R.’s disease. A few weeks after our parting
+I received a despairing letter from her mother informing me
+that at the first attempt to draw Elisabeth into a conversation
+about her love affairs she became very excited and refused to
+talk, and since then had suffered from violent pains. She was
+very indignant at my having betrayed her confidence and was
+perfectly inaccessible so that the treatment seemed a complete
+failure. She wished to know what was to be done, for of me
+she would hear nothing. I made no reply. It was to be expected
+that after she was relieved from my discipline she would make
+another attempt to reject her mother’s interference and return to
+her inaccessibility. I was, however, quite certain that everything
+would adjust itself and that my efforts had not been in vain.
+Two months later they returned to Vienna and the colleague to
+whom I was grateful for the case informed me that Elisabeth
+was perfectly well, and that her behavior was normal although
+occasionally she had slight pains. Since then she has repeatedly
+sent me similar messages, each time promising to visit me, which
+she has never done. This is quite characteristic of the personal
+relationship formed during such treatment. My colleague then
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>assured me that she could be considered cured. The relation of
+the brother-in-law to the family underwent no change.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In the spring of 1894 I was informed that she would be present
+at a private ball to which I could gain access. I did not let the
+opportunity escape me and saw my former patient gliding along
+in a rapid dance. Since then, following her own inclination, she
+has married a stranger.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'><span class='sc'>Epicrisis.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>I was not always a psychotherapist but like other neuropathologists
+I was educated to the use of focal diagnosis and electrical
+prognosis so that even I myself am struck by the fact that the
+histories of the diseases which I write read like novels and, as it
+were, dispense with the serious features of the scientific character.
+Yet I must console myself with the fact that the nature of the
+subject is apparently more responsible for this issue than my
+own predilection. Focal diagnosis and electrical reactions are
+really not important in the study of hysteria, whereas a detailed
+discussion of the psychic processes, as one is wont to receive it
+from the poet, and the application of a few psychological formulæ,
+allows one to gain an insight into the course of events of hysteria.
+Such histories should be considered like psychiatrical ones, but
+they have the advantage over the latter in the fact that they give
+the intimate connection between the history of the disease and the
+morbid symptoms, a thing for which we still look in vain in the
+biographies of other psychoses.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>With the description of the treatment I endeavored to interweave
+the explanations which I gave about the case of Miss
+Elisabeth v. R. and it will perhaps be superfluous to summarize
+here the essential features. I have discussed the character of the
+patient and the features which repeat themselves in so many
+hysterics, and which we really can not consider as degenerative.
+I mentioned the talent, the ambition, the moral sensitiveness, the
+immense yearning for love which found its gratification in the
+family, the independence of her nature reaching beyond the
+womanly ideal which manifested itself largely by obstinacy, readiness
+for fight, and inaccessibility. According to the information
+of my colleague no hereditary taints could be shown on either
+side of the family. Her mother, to be sure, suffered for years
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>from some indefinite neurotic depression, but her brothers and
+sisters, her father and his family belonged to the even-tempered
+and not to the nervous. There was no serious case of neuropsychosis
+in the nearest relatives.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This nature was acted upon by painful emotions, the foremost
+of which was the debilitating influence of a long attendance upon
+her beloved sick father.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>That nursing of the sick plays such a significant rôle in the
+histories of hysterias has its good reasons. A number of
+effective moments which are found here are quite obvious,
+namely, the disturbance of the physical health through interrupted
+sleep, neglect of nourishment, and the reaction of a constantly
+gnawing worriment on the vegetative functions; but the
+most important factor, however, is, in my estimation, to be found
+elsewhere. He whose mind is occupied with the hundred different
+tasks of nursing which succeed each other continuously for
+weeks and months, becomes accustomed, on the one hand, to suppress
+all signs of his own emotions, and on the other, his attention
+is soon turned away from his own impressions because he has
+neither the time nor strength to do them justice. Thus the nurse
+accumulates for himself an over abundance of affective impressions
+which he barely perceived clearly enough, at any rate they
+were not weakened by ab-reaction, that is, he creates for himself
+the material for a retention hysteria. If the patient recovers
+these impressions naturally become reduced in value, but
+if he dies and the period of mourning comes during which only
+that which refers to the deceased seems of value, the impressions
+waiting for discharge appear in turn, and after a brief pause
+of exhaustion the hysteria, the germ of which originated during
+the nursing, bursts forth.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The same subsequent discharge of traumas accumulated during
+nursing is occasionally encountered where the general impression
+of the disease does not ensue, and yet the mechanism of hysteria
+can be noticed. Thus, I know a highly gifted but slightly
+nervous lady whose whole personality suggests the hysteric
+though she never became a burden to the doctor and was never
+obliged to interrupt the exercise of her duties. This lady had
+nursed three or four of her beloved ones until their death, causing
+her each time complete physical exhaustion, yet these sad
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>duties never made her ill. However, shortly after the death of
+the patient she began the work of reproduction, bringing again
+to her view the scenes of the disease and death. Each day—one
+might say at her leisure—she went over again every impression,
+crying and consoling herself. Such adjustment she passed
+through daily in conjunction with her usual duties, without, however
+confusing the two activities. Everything passed before her
+chronologically. Whether the memory work of one day precisely
+corresponded to a day of the past I am unable to say.
+I presume that it depended on the leisure which was allowed to
+her by the current affairs of the household.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Aside from this “subsequent tear” which attached itself to these
+deaths at short intervals, this lady periodically observed annual
+anniversaries representing the time of the various catastrophes,
+and here her vivid visual reproduction and her affective manifestations
+followed faithfully the date. Thus, for example, I found
+her in tears, and on sympathetic inquiry as to what occurred that
+day, she half irritably remarked, “Nothing on that day except
+that Professor N. was again here and gave us to understand that
+things were hopeless—at that time I had no time to cry.” She referred
+to the last illness of her husband who died three years before.
+It would have been very interesting to know whether she
+always repeated the same scenes on these recurring anniversaries,
+or whether as I suppose in the interest of my theory other
+details presented themselves each time for ab-reaction. I was
+however, unable to find anything definite about that; the wise and
+courageous woman was ashamed of the intensity with which those
+reminiscences acted upon her.<a id='r19'></a><a href='#f19' class='c012'><sup>[19]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>I again repeat that this woman was not sick, that subsequent
+ab-reaction, despite all resemblance, is still not a hysterical
+process; one may ask why, after one nursing there results a
+hysteria and after another none. It cannot lie in personal predisposition
+for the lady that I have in mind showed it very remarkably.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I now return to Miss Elisabeth v. R. While nursing her
+father there occurred for the first time an hysterical symptom in
+the form of a pain in a definite location on the right thigh. The
+mechanism of this symptom is fully explained on an analytical
+basis. It occurred in a moment during which the ideas of her
+duties towards her sick father came into conflict with the content
+of her erotic yearning which she then entertained. Under vivid
+self reproach she decided in favor of the former and created
+for herself the hysterical pain. According to the conception explained
+by the theory of conversion in hysteria, the process could
+be described as follows: She repressed the erotic idea from her
+consciousness and changed the sum of the affect into somatic sensations
+of pain. Whether this first conflict occurred only once,
+or repeated itself is not clear. The latter is more probable.
+Quite a similar conflict—of a higher moral significance, and even
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>better demonstrated by the analysis—repeated itself after years
+and led to the aggravation of the same pain and to its dissemination
+beyond its original limits. Again, it was an erotic idea which
+came into conflict with all her moral conceptions, for her affection
+for her brother-in-law, both during the life and after the death
+of her sister, and the thought that she should yearn just for this
+man, was to her very disagreeable. This analysis gives detailed
+information about this conflict which represents the pivotal point
+in the history of her malady. The patient’s affection for her
+brother-in-law might have begun to germinate long ago, but in
+favor of its development was the physical exhaustion through
+the recent nursing, and her moral exhaustion through years of
+disillusionment which then began to break down her reserve and
+she confessed to herself the need of the love of a man. During
+a friendly intercourse continuing for weeks (in the summer resort)
+this erotic inclination reached its full development simultaneously
+with the pain. The analysis shows a special psychic
+condition of the patient at that time, which in connection with her
+inclination and the pain, seems to afford an understanding of the
+process in the sense of the conversion theory.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I place reliance on the opinion that the patient’s affection for
+her brother-in-law, intensive as it was, was not clearly known to
+her except on certain rare occasions and then only momentarily.
+If that were not so she would have become conscious of the inconsistency
+between this fondness and her moral ideas and would
+have had to endure the same mental agony which I saw her suffer
+after the analysis. Her reminiscences gave us no information
+concerning such suffering. These she spared herself and as a
+result the love itself did not become clear to her. At that time,
+as well as during the analysis, her love for her brother-in-law
+existed in the form of a foreign body in her consciousness without
+entering into any relationship with her other ideation. In reference
+to this love there existed the peculiar condition of knowing
+and simultaneously not knowing, it was the condition of the split off
+psychic group. When we assert that this love was not
+“clearly known” to her we mean exactly what we say. We do
+not mean a lower quality or a lesser degree of consciousness, but
+a separation of the free associative thinking process from the rest
+of ideation.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>How does it come about that such an intensively accentuated
+presentation group should be kept so isolated? As a rule the
+rôle played by an idea in the association really increases with the
+sum of its affect.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This question can be answered if we bear in mind two facts
+which we can make use of as a safeguard: (1) That the hysterical
+pains originated simultaneously with the formation of these separate
+psychic groups, (2) that the patient exerted great resistance
+against the attempt to bring about the association between the
+separate psychic groups and the rest of the content of consciousness,
+and when the union was finally effected she perceived excessive
+psychic pain. Our conception of hysteria brings together
+these two moments with the fact of the splitting of consciousness,
+for (2) contains the indication for the motive for the splitting
+of consciousness while (1) shows the mechanism of the same.
+The motive was that of defense, it was the striving of the whole
+ego to agree with this presentation group and the mechanism was
+that of conversion, that is, instead of psychic pains which she
+spared herself there appeared physical pains. Thus a transformation
+occurred through which gain the patient had escaped an
+unbearable psychic state, though it was at the cost of a psychic
+anomaly in the form of a splitting of consciousness and a physical
+suffering, pains, upon which an astasia-abasia was constructed.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>To be sure I can give no instruction as to how one can bring
+about such a conversion. It is not apparently done as one intentionally
+does an arbitrary action, it is a process which is executed
+in the individual under the impulse of the motive of defense
+if an adaptation for it exists in his organization or is
+brought about by temporary modification.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>One has the right to attack the theory more closely by asking
+what it is that is transformed into physical pains. The cautious
+reply will be something out of which psychic pains could have and
+should have been formed. If we wish to venture further and
+attempt a kind of algebraic formulation of the presentation mechanism
+we may attribute to the presentation complex of this unconsciously
+remaining love a certain amount of affect and designate
+the latter quantity as the thing converted. Direct deduction
+of this conception would be the fact that the “unconscious love”
+has through such conversion forfeited so much of its intensity that
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>it was reduced to a weak idea. Its existence as a separate psychic
+group would only be made possible through such weakening.
+Yet this present case is not suitable to afford us any clearness
+in this delicate matter. It probably corresponds to an imperfect
+conversion only. From other cases it seems quite probable that
+perfect conversions also occur and that in these the unbearable
+idea actually becomes repressed as only an idea of very little intensity
+could be repressed. After an associative union has been
+consummated the patients assure us that since the origin of the
+hysterical symptoms their unbearable thoughts never occupied
+their minds.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I have stated above that on certain occasions, though only transitorily,
+the patient consciously recognized the love for her
+brother-in-law. Such a moment occurred when for example, at
+the death bed of her sister the thought flashed through her mind,
+“Now he is free and I can become his wife.” I must discuss
+the significance of these moments for the conception of the whole
+neurosis. However, I think that the assumption of a defense
+hysteria (abwehr hysterie) includes the requisite that at least
+one such moment has already occurred. For consciousness does
+not know in advance when such an unbearable idea will present itself.
+The unbearable idea which with its appendix is later excluded
+for the formation of a separate psychic group must have been
+originally in the mind, otherwise no conflict would have resulted
+leading to its exclusion.<a id='r20'></a><a href='#f20' class='c012'><sup>[20]</sup></a> Just such moments should be designated
+as “traumatic.” It is in them that the conversion takes
+place which results in the splitting of consciousness and the hysterical
+symptoms. Everything tends to show that in Miss Elisabeth
+v. R. there were a number of such moments (the scenes
+of the walking, morning meditation, bath, and at the bed of her
+sister) and perhaps new moments of this kind occurred during
+the treatment. The multiplicity of such traumatic moments is
+made possible by the fact that an experience similar to the one
+which at first initiated the unbearable idea, introduces new emotions
+to the separated psychic groups and thus transitorily abolishes
+the success of the conversion. The ego is forced to occupy
+itself with this suddenly enforced and lighted-up idea, and then
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>to restore the former state by means of new conversions. Miss
+Elisabeth who was in constant relation with her brother-in-law
+must have been particularly exposed to the appearance of new
+traumas.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I must now occupy myself with the point which I have designated
+as a difficulty for the understanding of the afore mentioned
+history. On the analytical basis I assume that the first conversion
+took place in the patient while she nursed her father, at the time
+when her duties as nurse came into conflict with her erotic yearnings,
+and that this process was the prototype for the later ones
+which led to the outbreak of the disease in the Alpine watering
+place. But then we have it from the patient’s statement that at
+the time of nursing and the period following which I designated
+as the “first period” she had not suffered at all from the pains
+and weakness. To be sure, during the illness of her father she
+was once bedridden for a few days with pains in her legs, but it is
+doubtful whether this attack already belonged to the hysteria. A
+causal relation between these first pains and any psychic impressions
+could not be demonstrated by analysis; it is possible, even
+probable, that at that time we dealt with a common rheumatic
+muscular pain. Even if we should assume that this first attack
+of pain was the result of a hysterical conversion in consequence of
+the rejection of the erotic thoughts then existing, the fact nevertheless
+remains that the pains disappeared after a few days so
+that the patient actually behaved differently than she did during
+the analysis. During the reproduction of the so called first
+period all her statements concerning the illness and death of her
+father, the impressions relating to her first brother-in-law, etc.,
+all these were accompanied by manifestations of pain, while at
+the time she really experienced these impressions she perceived no
+pains. Is this not a contradiction tending to considerably diminish
+the confidence in the explanatory value of such an analysis?</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I believe that I can explain the contradiction by assuming
+that the pains—the product of the conversion—did not originate
+while the patient experienced the impressions during the first
+period, but subsequently, that is in the second period when the
+patient reproduced these impressions in her mind. The conversion
+did not follow the fresh impressions but the memories
+of them. I even believe that such a process is not at all unusual
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>in hysteria and regularly participates in creating hysterical symptoms.
+Nevertheless, as such an assertion does not seem plausible
+I shall attempt to make it more credible by citing other experiences.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It once happened to me during a similar analysis that a new
+hysterical symptom was formed during the treatment so that I
+could attempt its removal on the day after its origin.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I will describe the essential features of the history of this patient.
+They are simple but not without interest.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Miss Rosalia H., twenty-three years old, who for a number of
+years made great effort to educate herself as a singer, complained
+that her beautiful voice did not obey her in certain notes. There
+appeared choking and tightening sensations in the throat so that
+the tones sounded strained, and her teacher could therefore
+not allow her to appear in public. Although this imperfection
+affected only her middle notes it could not be explained to be
+due to a defect of her vocal organs, for at times this disturbance
+was absent and her teacher was very pleased with her, but at
+other times the slightest excitement, seemingly without any provocation,
+evoked the choking sensation, and prevented free expansion
+of the voice. It was not difficult to recognize in this annoying
+sensation an hysterical conversion. Whether there really
+appeared a contracture of certain muscles of the vocal chords I
+have not verified.<a id='r21'></a><a href='#f21' class='c012'><sup>[21]</sup></a> In the hypnotic analysis which I undertook
+with this girl I found out the following concerning her vicissitudes
+and her ailments occasioned through them. She became
+an orphan at an early age and was brought up at the house of an
+aunt who had many children of her own, and she thus shared
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>the life of a most unfortunate family. The husband of this aunt,
+seemingly a pathological personality, abused his wife and children
+in the most brutal manner and especially pained her by his
+sexual preference for the servant girl in the house. This became
+even more obnoxious as the children grew older. When
+the aunt died Rosalia became the protectress of the orphaned
+children who were harassed by their father. She took her
+duties seriously, fought through all conflicts and had to exert her
+greatest efforts to suppress the manifestations of her contempt
+for her uncle. It was then that the choking sensation in her
+throat originated. Whenever she was compelled to swallow an
+affront, whenever she had to remain silent on hearing a provoking
+accusation she perceived a scratching in her throat, the tightening
+and failure of her voice, in brief she had all the localized
+sensations in her larynx and pharynx which now disturbed her in
+singing. It was conceivable that she sought the possibility of
+making herself independent in order to escape the excitement
+and painful impressions which were daily occurrences in her
+uncle’s house. An efficient music teacher took an unselfish interest
+in her, assuring her that her voice entitled her to choose
+the profession of singing. She began secretly to take lessons of
+him and because she often went for her lessons with the choking
+sensation in her throat following some violent scene in the house,
+a connection was formed between the singing and the hysterical
+paresthesia for which a way was prepared by the sensitiveness of
+the organ during singing. The apparatus of which she should
+have had free control was filled with the remnants of innervation
+after those numerous scenes of repressed excitement. Since
+then she has left the house of her uncle, having moved to another
+city so as to be away from the family, but her ailments were not
+benefited by it. No other hysterical symptoms were discovered
+in this pretty and unusually bright girl.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I endeavored to cure this “retention hysteria” by a reproduction
+of all the exciting impressions and by subsequent ab-reaction.
+I afforded her the opportunity of railing against her uncle
+in long speeches and of telling him the bare truth to his face, etc.
+The treatment benefited her, but unfortunately she lived here under
+quite unfavorable conditions. She had no luck with her relatives.
+She was the guest of another uncle who treated her with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>friendliness, but just for that reason she incurred the displeasure
+of her aunt. The latter believed that her husband evinced too
+marked an interest in his niece and made it a point of opposing
+the girl’s stay in Vienna. She herself in her youth was obliged
+to relinquish a desire of becoming an artist and was now jealous
+of her niece because she had the opportunity to develop her talent
+not considering that it was not mere desire but a wish to become
+independent which led her niece to take this step. Rosalia felt
+so uncomfortable in the house that she for instance, did not dare
+to sing or play the piano when her aunt was within hearing distance,
+and carefully avoided either singing or playing anything
+for her aged uncle—brother of her mother—whenever her aunt
+was home. While I was endeavoring to efface the traces of the
+old excitements, new ones originated through these relations
+with her host and finally interfered with the success of my treatment
+and prematurely interrupted the cure.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>One day the patient came to me with a new symptom hardly
+twenty-four hours old. She complained of a disagreeable prickling
+sensation in the fingertips which had manifested itself every
+few hours since the day before and forced her to make very
+peculiar jerky movements with the fingers. I could not see the
+attack, otherwise I would have guessed its meaning on seeing
+the finger movements but I immediately endeavored to trace
+through hypnotic analysis the causation of this symptom (it was
+really a minor hysterical attack). As the whole thing only existed
+for a short time I hoped to be able to explain it and quickly
+remove it. To my surprise without any hesitation she reproduced
+in chronological order a whole row of scenes beginning in
+her early childhood. All these had perhaps the same characteristics
+in the fact that she had suffered an injustice without
+defense, something which could make her fingers jerk, for example,
+scenes like the one of being forced to hold <a id='t65'></a>out her hand in
+school while her teacher struck it with a ruler. But they were
+all banal causes the right of which to enter into the etiology of
+an hysterical symptom I have already opposed. It was different,
+however, with one scene of her early girlhood which was connected
+with the others. The bad uncle who suffered from rheumatism
+asked her to massage his back. She did not dare refuse
+him. He was in bed while she was doing it and suddenly threw
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>off the covers, jumped up, attempting to get hold of her and
+throw her down. Naturally she stopped the massage and in a
+moment escaped and locked herself within her own room. She
+evidently did not like to recall this experience and could not say
+whether she had seen anything when the man suddenly exposed
+himself. The sensations of the fingers could be explained as due
+to the suppressed impulse to punish him, or it might simply have
+originated from the fact that she was at that time massaging him.
+Only after this scene did she begin to talk about the one experienced
+yesterday after which the sensitiveness and jerkiness of
+the fingers appeared as a recurring memory symbol. The uncle
+with whom she now lived begged her to play something for him.
+She sat at the piano and accompanied herself singing, believing
+that her aunt was out. Suddenly she appeared in the doorway,
+Rosalie jumped up, closed the piano, and flung away the sheet of
+music. We can guess what memories came to her mind, and the
+train of thought which she tried to ward off at that moment, for
+the exasperation brought on by the unjust accusation should have
+really urged her to leave the house, but on account of her illness
+she was forced to remain in Vienna and had no other shelter.
+The movement of the fingers which I saw during the reproduction
+of this scene resembled a continuous jerking as if one literally
+and figuratively would reject something like throwing away a
+sheet of music or rejecting an unreasonable demand.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>She was quite positive in her assurance that she did not perceive
+the symptom before, that it was not caused by the scenes
+previously related. Was there anything else to be assumed
+except that the scene experienced yesterday had in the first place
+awakened the recollection of a former similar content and that
+then the formation of a memory symbol for the whole group of
+recollections took place? The conversion was on the one hand
+furnished with newly experienced affects, on the other with recollected
+affects.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>When we consider this state of affairs we must admit that in
+the origin of hysterical symptoms such a process is the rule rather
+than the exception. Whenever I seek for the determinants of
+such states I frequently find not a single but a group of similar
+traumatic motives. In some cases it could be ascertained that
+this particular symptom had already existed for a short time after
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>the first trauma and then subsided, but reappeared after the next
+trauma and become fixed. Yet no real distinction can be made
+between the temporary appearance and the latency after the first
+motives. In a large majority of cases it was also found that the
+first traumas had left no symptoms, while a later trauma of the
+same kind produced a symptom for the origin of which the cooperation
+of the former motives could not be dispensed with and
+for the solution of which it really required a consideration of all
+the motives. Translating this into the language of the conversion
+theory we will say that this undeniable fact of the summation
+of the traumas and the erstwhile latency of the symptoms
+simply means that the conversion can be brought about from
+a fresh as well as from a remembered affect, and this assumption
+fully explains the contradiction which seems to exist in the history
+and analysis of Miss Elisabeth v. R.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>There is no question that normal persons carry in their consciousness
+in considerable numbers the continuation of ideas with
+unadjusted affects. The theory which I just asserted merely
+approximates the behavior of hysteria to the normal. It is apparently
+reduced to a quantitative moment; it is simply a question
+of how many such affective strains an organization can endure.
+Even a hysterical person will be able to retain a certain amount in
+an unadjusted state, but if through a summation of similar motives
+it increases beyond the individual’s endurance, the impetus
+for conversion is formed. It is therefore no singular theory but
+almost a postulate to say that the formation of hysterical symptoms
+may also be brought about at the cost of recollected affects.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I have now occupied myself with the motive and mechanism of
+this case of hysteria, it still remains to discuss the determination
+of the hysterical symptoms. Why should just the pains in the
+legs be selected to represent the psychic pains? The circumstances
+of the case point to the fact that this somatic pain was not created
+by the neurosis but was merely utilized, aggravated, and retained
+by it. I will add that in most of the cases of hysterical algias into
+which I have been able to gain an insight the conditions were
+similar, that is, there was to begin with always a real organically
+founded pain. It is always the most common, the most widespread
+pains of humanity that seem to be most frequently called
+upon to play a part in hysteria. Among the most common are the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>periosteal and neuralgic pains of the teeth, headaches which
+originate from so many different sources, and not in a lesser degree
+the so often mistaken rheumatic pains of the muscles. The
+first attack of pain which Miss Elisabeth v. R. had while she
+nursed her father, I consider to have been organically determined,
+for I received no information when I investigated for its psychic
+motive, and I admit that I am inclined to attribute differential
+diagnostic significance to my methods of evoking hidden memories
+if they are carefully applied. This original rheumatic pain<a id='r22'></a><a href='#f22' class='c012'><sup>[22]</sup></a>
+became in the patient the memory symbol for her painful psychic
+emotions, and as far as I can see, for more than one reason.
+First and principally because it existed in consciousness almost
+simultaneously with the other excitements, and second because it
+was or could be connected in many ways with the ideation of that
+time. At all events it was perhaps a remote consequence of the
+nursing, of her want of exercise, and the poor nutrition entailed
+by her duties as nurse. But this hardly became clear to the
+patient and what is more important is the fact that she had to
+perceive it during significant moments of the nursing, as for
+example, when she jumped out of bed in the cold room to respond
+to her father’s call. Even more decisive for the direction
+taken by the conversion must have been the other manner of
+associative connection, namely, the fact that for many days one
+of her painful legs came in contact with the swollen leg of her
+father during the changing of bandages. The location on the
+right leg distinguished by this contact remained henceforth the
+focus and starting point of the pains, an artificial hysterogenic
+zone the origin of which can be plainly seen in this case.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>If any one should be surprised at the associative connection between
+physical pain and psychic affect, thinking it to be too manifold
+and artificial, I should answer that such surprise is just as
+unfair as to be surprised over the fact “that just the richest in
+the world possess most money.” Where prolific connections do
+not exist there is naturally no formation of hysterical symptoms,
+and conversion does not find its way. I can also state that in
+reference to determinations the case of Miss Elisabeth v. R. belongs
+to the simpler ones. In the case of Mrs. Cäcilie M.<a id='r23'></a><a href='#f23' class='c012'><sup>[23]</sup></a> particularly,
+I had to solve the most intricate knots of this kind.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>I have already discussed in the history of the case how the astasia-abasia
+of our patient was built up on those pains after the
+conversion had taken definite direction. But there, too, I have
+expressed the opinion that the patient has created or aggravated
+the disturbance of function through symbolization. For her dependence
+and helplessness to change anything in the circumstances
+she found a somatic expression in the astasia-abasia, and
+the expressions “to make no headway,” “to have no support,”
+etc., formed the bridge for this new act of conversion. I will
+endeavor to support this conception by other examples.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Conversion on the basis of coincidence in otherwise existing
+associative connections seems to exert the slightest claims on the
+hysterical predisposition; on the other hand conversion through
+symbolization seems to require a higher grade of hysterical modification,
+a fact also demonstrated in Miss Elisabeth in the later
+stages of her hysteria. The prettiest examples of symbolization
+I have observed in Mrs. Cäcilie M.,<a id='r24'></a><a href='#f24' class='c012'><sup>[24]</sup></a> whom I can call my most
+difficult and most instructive case. I have already mentioned
+that this history does not unfortunately lend itself to detailed
+reproduction.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Among other things Mrs. Cäcilie also suffered from a most
+violent facial neuralgia which appeared suddenly two or three
+times during the year and persisted for from five to ten days,
+resisting every remedy, and ceased as if cut off. It limited itself
+to the second and third branches of the trigeminus, and as there
+was undoubtedly an excess of urates in the urine, and as a not
+very “clear acute rheumatism” played a certain part in the patient’s
+history it was reasonable to assume that we dealt with a
+gouty neuralgia. This opinion was also shared by the consulting
+physicians who saw every attack. The neuralgia was treated
+with the methods in vogue, such as electric pencilling, alkaline
+waters and purgatives, but it always remained uninfluenced until
+it was convenient to make room for another symptom. In former
+years—the neuralgia was fifteen years old—the teeth were
+accused of preserving it and were condemned to extraction, and
+one fine morning under narcosis the execution of seven of the culprits
+took place. That did not run so smoothly as the teeth were
+so firm that most of the roots were left behind. This cruel operation
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>was followed by neither temporary nor permanent relief.
+At that time the neuralgia raged for months. Even while under
+my care whenever she had neuralgia the dentist was called and he
+always declared he found diseased roots. He commenced to get
+ready for such work but usually he was soon interrupted, for the
+neuralgia suddenly ceased and with it the desire for the dentist.
+During the intervals the teeth did not ache at all. One day just
+while another attack was raging I put the patient into a hypnotic
+condition and placed an energetic interdiction on the pains, and
+from that moment they ceased. I then began to doubt the
+genuineness of this neuralgia.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>About a year after this hypnotic remedial success the condition
+of Mrs. Cäcilie M. took a new and surprising turn. There suddenly
+appeared other states than those that had been characteristic
+of the last years, but after some reflection the patient declared
+that all these conditions had existed in her before and were really
+scattered over the long period of her disease (thirty years). Indeed
+a surprising abundance of hysterical incidents were unrolled
+which the patient was able to localize correctly in the past
+and soon the frequently very entangled thought connections
+which determined the sequence of these incidents became recognizable.
+It was like a series of pictures with an explanatory text.
+Pitres, on describing his délire ecmnésique must have had in mind
+a similar case. The way such a hysterical condition belonging to
+the past was reproduced was most remarkable. In the first place
+while the patient was in the best of condition there appeared a
+pathological mood of special coloring which was regularly mistaken
+by the patient and was referred to a banal occurrence of the
+last hours. This increasing obnubilation of consciousness was followed
+by hysterical symptoms, such as hallucinations, pains, convulsions,
+and long declamations, and finally an event of the past
+attached itself to this hallucinatory manifestation which could
+explain the initial mood and determine the occasional symptoms.
+With this last part of the attack lucidity returned, the ailments
+disappeared as if by magic and good health again existed—until
+the next attack which was half a day later. Usually I was
+called at the height of this condition. I produced hypnosis,
+evoked a reproduction of the traumatic events, and by artificial
+aid I curtailed the attack. Having gone through with the patient
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>many hundreds of such cycles, I obtained the most instructive explanations
+concerning the determinants of hysterical symptoms.
+The joint observation with Breuer of this remarkable case was
+also the chief motive for the publication of our “Preliminary
+Communication.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In this connection it finally came to the reproduction of the
+facial neuralgia which I myself had still treated as actual attacks.
+I was desirous of knowing whether we would find here a psychic
+causation. When I attempted to evoke the traumatic scene,
+the patient soon imagined herself in a period during which she
+felt marked psychic sensitiveness against her husband. She related
+a conversation with him and a remark that he made which
+aggravated her very much. She then suddenly grasped her cheek,
+crying aloud with pain, and said, “That was like a slap in the
+face”—with this both the attack and the pain came to an end.
+There is no doubt that here, too, we dealt with a symbolization.
+She had felt as if she really received a slap in the face. Now
+everybody will ask how the sensation of “a slap in the face” can
+lead to the manifestations of a trigeminal neuralgia, to its limiting
+itself to the second and third branch, and to its being aggravated
+on opening the mouth and mastication (not by talking!).</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The following day the neuralgia reappeared, but this time it
+could be solved by the reproduction of another scene the content
+of which equally showed a supposed insult. This process continued
+for nine days; from the result it seemed that for years,
+aggravations, especially through words, produced new attacks of
+this facial neuralgia by way of symbolization.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>But finally we also succeeded in reproducing the first attack of
+the neuralgia which occurred more than fifteen years before.
+Here there was no symbolization but a conversion through coincidence.
+It was a painful sight which recalled to her mind a
+reproach and this caused her to repress another series of thoughts.
+We have here, then, a case of conflict and defense, and the origin
+of the neuralgia in this moment could not be explained if we do
+not wish to assume that she then suffered from slight toothache or
+facial pains, a thing not improbable, as she was then in the first
+months of pregnancy.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The result of the explanation showed that this neuralgia became
+the mark of a definite psychic excitement through the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>usual road of conversion but that afterward it could be awakened
+through associative reminiscences of thoughts and symbolic conversions.
+It was really the same procedure as encountered in
+Miss Elisabeth v. R.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I will now introduce another example which will illustrate the
+efficacy of symbolization under other determinants. On one
+occasion Mrs. Cäcilie M. was tormented by a violent pain in her
+right heel, experiencing stinging sensations which made walking
+impossible. The analysis conducted us to a time when the
+patient was in a foreign institution. For eight days she lay in
+her room, and for the first time the house physician was to take
+her to the dining room. The pain came on while the patient
+took the physician’s arm on leaving the room. It disappeared
+during the reproduction of this scene while she remarked that
+at that time she feared lest she would not make the “proper
+impression” on this strange society<a id='r25'></a><a href='#f25' class='c012'><sup>[25]</sup></a> (“rechte Auftreten”).</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This seems a striking, almost comical example for the origin
+of hysterical symptoms through symbolization by means of an
+expression of speech. But a closer investigation of the circumstances
+of that moment will favor another conception. The
+patient at that time suffered from pain in her feet on account
+of which she remained in bed, and we can only assume that the
+fear which obsessed her on taking the first steps produced from
+the simultaneously existing pains the one symbolically appropriate
+symptom in the right heel so as to form it into a psychic
+algia and to particularly fit it for long duration.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Notwithstanding the fact that the mechanism of symbolization
+in these examples seems to be crowded to second rank, that which
+certainly corresponds to the rule, I have still other examples at
+my disposal which seem to demonstrate the origin of hysterical
+symptoms through symbolization only. One of the best is the
+following example which again refers to Mrs. Cäcilie M. At
+the age of fifteen she once lay in bed watched by her austere
+grandmother. The girl suddenly cried out complaining of having
+perceived a pain in the forehead between the eyes which
+thereafter continued for weeks. On analyzing this pain, which
+was reproduced after almost thirty years, she stated that her
+grandmother gazed at her so “piercingly” that it seemed as if
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span>her look penetrated deeply into her brain. She was really afraid
+of being looked upon suspiciously by this old lady. On reproducing
+this thought she burst into loud laughter and the pain
+ceased. Here I find nothing other than the mechanism of symbolization
+which in a way stands midway between the mechanism
+of auto-suggestion and that of conversion.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The study of Mrs. Cäcilie M. gave me the opportunity to
+gather a collection of such symbolizations. A whole series of
+physical sensations which were otherwise looked upon as organically
+determined were of a psychic origin, or at least furnished
+with a psychic interpretation. A certain number of her experiences
+were accompanied by a piercing sensation in the region of
+the heart (“I felt a stitch in my heart”). The piercing headache
+of hysteria was undoubtedly, in her case, to be interpreted
+as thought pains (“something sticks in my head”), and it disappeared
+each time when the problem in question was solved.
+The sensation of the hysterical aura in the throat, when it manifested
+itself during an aggravation, ran parallel with the thought,
+“I have to swallow that.” There was a whole series of parallel
+running sensations and ideas in which it was now the sensation
+evoking the idea as an interpretation and now the idea which
+produced the sensation by symbolization, and not seldom it remained
+obscure which was the primary element of the two.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In no other patient was I able to find such a prolific application
+of symbolization. To be sure, Mrs. Cäcilie M. was a person
+of quite unusual and of a special artistic temperament whose
+highly developed sense for form manifested itself in very beautiful
+poems. I maintain, however, that if a hysteria creates
+through symbolization a somatic sensation for the emotionally accentuated
+presentation, it is due less to individual and arbitrary
+things than one supposes. When during an offending harangue
+she takes literally such phrases as “stitch in the heart” or “slap
+in the face,” and perceives them as real occurrences she practices
+no facetious misuse but only revives the sensations to which this
+phrase thanks its existence. For how does it happen that in
+speaking of an aggrieved person we use such expressions as “he
+experienced a ‘stitch in his heart,’” if the mortification was not
+actually accompanied by a precordial sensation that could be so
+interpreted and recognized? Is it not probable that the phrase
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>“to swallow something” applied to an unreturned insult really
+originates from the sensation of innervation appearing in the
+pharynx when one forces back his speech thus preventing a reaction
+to the insult? All these sensations and innervations belong
+to the “expression of the emotions,” which as Darwin taught us,
+originally consisted of sensible and expedient actions; at present
+most of them may be so weakened that their expression in speech
+seems to us like a figurative transformation, but very probably
+all this was once meant literally, and hysteria is justified in
+reconstructing the original literal sense for its stronger innervation.
+Indeed, perhaps it is improper to say that it creates such
+sensations through symbolization, perhaps it has not taken the
+usage of speech as a model, but both originated from a common
+source.<a id='r26'></a><a href='#f26' class='c012'><sup>[26]</sup></a></p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IV.<br> <span class='c013'><span class='sc'>The Psychotherapy of Hysteria.</span></span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>In our “Preliminary Communication” we have stated that
+while investigating the etiology of hysterical symptoms we have
+also discovered a therapeutic method which we consider of practical
+significance. “We found, at first to our very greatest
+surprise, that the individual hysterical symptoms immediately
+disappeared without returning if we succeeded in thoroughly
+awakening the memories of the causal process with its accompanying
+affect, and if the patient circumstantially discussed the
+process giving free play to the affect” (p. <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>).</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>We furthermore attempted to explain how our psychotherapeutic
+method acts. “It does away with the effects of the
+original not ab-reacted to ideas by affording an outlet to the
+suppressed affect through speech. It brings it into associative
+correction by drawing it into normal consciousness (in mild
+hypnosis), or it is done away with through the physician’s suggestion
+just as happens in somnambulism with amnesia” (p. <a href='#Page_13'>13</a>).</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Although the essential features of this method have been enumerated
+in the preceding pages, a repetition is unavoidable, and I
+shall now attempt to show connectedly how far reaching this
+method is, its superiority over others, its technique, and its
+difficulties.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>I.</h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>I, for my part, may state that I can adhere to the “Preliminary
+Communication,” but I must confess that after continuous occupation
+for years with the problems therein touched, I was confronted
+with new views, as a result of which the former material
+underwent at least a partial change in grouping and conception.
+It would be unjust to impute too much of the responsibility
+for this development to my honored friend, J. Breuer. I
+therefore take the weight of responsibility upon myself.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In attempting to use Breuer’s method of treating hysterical
+symptoms in a great number of patients by investigation and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>ab-reaction in hypnosis, I encountered two obstacles, the pursuit
+of which led me to change the technique as well as the conception.
+(1) Not all persons were hypnotizable who undoubtedly
+showed hysterical symptoms, and in whom there most probably
+existed the same psychic mechanism. (2) I had to question
+what essentially characterizes hysteria, and in what it differs
+from other neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>How I overcame the first difficulty, and what it taught me,
+I will show later. I will first state what position I have taken in
+my daily practice towards the second problem. It is very difficult
+to examine a case of neurosis before it has been subjected to
+a thorough analysis, such as would result only through the application
+of Breuer’s method. But before we have such a
+thorough knowledge we are obliged to decide upon the diagnosis
+and kind of treatment. Hence the only thing remaining for me
+was to select such cases for the cathartic method which could,
+for the time being, be diagnosed as hysteria, and which showed
+some or many stigmata, or the characteristic symptoms of
+hysteria. Yet it sometimes happened that in spite of the diagnosis
+of hysteria the therapeutic results were very poor, and even
+the analysis revealed nothing of importance. At other times I
+attempted to treat cases which no one took for hysteria by
+Breuer’s method, and I found that I could influence them, and
+even cure them. Such, for example, was my experience with
+obsessions, the real obsessions of Westphal’s type, cases which
+did not show a single feature of hysteria. Thus the psychic
+mechanism revealed in the “Preliminary Communication” could
+not be pathognomonic of hysteria. Nor could I for the sake of
+this mechanism throw so many neuroses into the same pot with
+hysteria. From all the investigated doubts I finally seized upon
+a plan to treat all the other neuroses in question just like hysteria,
+to investigate the etiology and the form of psychic mechanisms,
+and to leave the diagnosis of hysteria to be dependent upon the
+result of this investigation.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It thus happened that, proceeding from Breuer’s methods, I
+occupied myself mostly with the etiology and the mechanism of
+the neuroses. After a relatively brief period I was fortunate in
+obtaining useful results. I then became cognizant of the fact
+that if we may speak of a reason for the acquirement of neuroses
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>the etiology must be sought for in the sexual moments. This
+agrees with the fact that, generally speaking, various sexual
+moments may also produce various pictures of neurotic disease.
+Similarly we now venture to employ the etiology for the characteristics
+of the neuroses, and build up a sharp line of demarcation
+between the morbid pictures of the neuroses. If the
+etiological characters constantly agreed with the clinical ones, this
+was justified.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In this way it was found that neurasthenia really corresponds
+to a monotonous morbid picture in which, as shown by the
+analysis, “psychic mechanisms” play no part. From neurasthenia
+we sharply distinguished the compulsion neurosis
+(Zwangsneurose), [obsessions, doubts, impulses], the neurosis of
+the genuine obsessions, in which we can recognize a complicated
+psychic mechanism, an etiology resembling the one of hysteria,
+and a far reaching possibility of an involution by psychotherapy.
+On the other hand it seemed to me undoubtedly imperative to
+separate from neurasthenia a neurotic symptom-complex which
+depends on a totally divergent, strictly speaking, on a contrary
+etiology. The partial symptoms of this complex have been recognized
+by E. Hecker<a id='r27'></a><a href='#f27' class='c012'><sup>[27]</sup></a> as having a common character. They are
+either symptoms, or equivalents, or rudiments of anxiety manifestations,
+and it is for that reason that this complex, so different
+from neurasthenia, was called by me anxiety neurosis. I
+maintain that it originates from an accumulation of physical tension
+which is in turn of a sexual origin. This neurosis, too, has
+no psychic mechanism, but regularly influences the psychic life,
+so that among its regular manifestations we have anxious expectation,
+phobias, hyperesthesias to pain, and other symptoms.
+This anxiety neurosis, as I take it, certainly corresponds in part
+to the neurosis called hypochondria, which in some features resembles
+hysteria and neurasthenia. Yet in none of the earlier
+works can I consider the demarcation of this neurosis as correct,
+and moreover, I find that the usefulness of the name hypochondria
+is impaired by its close relation to the symptom of
+“nosophobia.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>After I had thus constructed for myself the simple picture of
+neurasthenia, anxiety neuroses, and obsessions, I turned my attention
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>to the commonly occurring cases of neuroses which enter
+into the diagnosis of hysteria. I now said to myself that it
+would not do to mark a neurosis as hysterical on the whole,
+merely because its symptom complex evinced some hysterical
+signs. I could readily explain this practice by the fact that
+hysteria is the oldest, the most familiar, and the most striking
+neurosis under consideration, but still it was an abuse which
+allowed the placing of many features of perversion and degeneration
+under the caption of hysteria. Whenever a hysterical symptom,
+such as anesthesia or a characteristic attack, could be discovered
+in a complicated case of psychic degeneration, the whole
+thing was called “hysteria,” and hence one could naturally find
+united under this same trade mark the worst and most contradictory
+features. As certain as this diagnosis was incorrect it is
+also certain that our classification must be made from the
+neurotic standpoint, and as we know neurasthenia, anxiety neurosis,
+and similar conditions in the pure state, there is no need
+of overlooking them in combination.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It seemed therefore that the following conception was more
+warrantable. The neuroses usually occurring are generally to be
+designated as “mixed.” Neurasthenia and anxiety neurosis can
+be found without effort in pure forms, and most frequently in
+young persons. Pure cases of hysteria and compulsion neurosis
+“Zwangsneurose” (obsessions, doubts, impulses) are rare, they
+are usually combined with an anxiety neurosis. This frequent
+occurrence of mixed neuroses is due to the fact that their etiological
+moments are frequently mixed, now only accidentally, and
+now in consequence of a causal relation between the processes
+which give rise to the etiological moments of the neuroses. This
+can be sustained and proven in the individual cases without any
+difficulty. But it follows from this that it is hardly possible to
+take hysteria out of connection with the sexual neuroses, that
+hysteria as a rule presents only one side, one aspect of the complicated
+neurotic case, and that only, as it were, in the borderline
+case can it be found and treated as an isolated neurosis. In a
+series of cases we can perhaps say a potiori fit denominatio.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I shall now examine the cases reported to see whether they
+speak in favor of my conception of the clinical dependence of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>hysteria. Breuer’s patient, Anna O.,<a id='r28'></a><a href='#f28' class='c012'><sup>[28]</sup></a> seems to contradict this
+and exemplifies a pure hysterical disease. Yet this case which
+became so fruitful for the knowledge of hysteria was never considered
+by its observer under the guise of a sexual neurosis, and
+hence cannot at present be utilized as such. When I began to
+analyze the second patient, Mrs. Emmy v. N., the idea of a
+sexual neurosis on a hysterical basis was far from my mind. I
+had just returned from the Charcot school, and considered the
+connection of hysteria with the sexual theme as a sort of insult—just
+as my patients were wont to do. But when I today review
+my notes on this case there is absolutely no doubt that I have to
+consider it as a severe case of anxiety neurosis with anxious
+expectations and phobias, which was due to sexual abstinence and
+was combined with hysteria.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The third case, Miss Lucy R., could perhaps be called the first
+borderline case of pure hysteria. It is a short episodic hysteria
+based on an unmistakably sexual etiology. It corresponds to an
+anxiety neurosis in an over-ripe, amorous girl, whose love was
+too rapidly awakened through a misunderstanding. Yet the
+anxiety neurosis could either not be demonstrated or had escaped
+me. Case IV, Katharina,<a id='r29'></a><a href='#f29' class='c012'><sup>[29]</sup></a> is really a model of what I have called
+virginal anxiety; it is a combination of an anxiety neurosis and
+hysteria, the former produces the symptoms, while the latter
+repeats them and works with them. At all events, it is a
+typical case of many juvenile neuroses called “hysteria.” Case
+V, Miss Elisabeth v. R., was again not investigated as a sexual
+neurosis. I could only suspect that there was a spinal neurasthenia
+at its basis but I could not confirm it. I must, however,
+add that since then pure hysterias have become still rarer in my
+experience. That in grouping together these four cases of
+hysteria I could disregard in the discussion the decisive factors
+of sexual neuroses was due to the fact that they were older
+cases in which I had not as yet carried out the purposed and
+urgent investigation for the neurotic sexual subsoil. Moreover
+the reason for my reporting four instead of twelve cases of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>hysteria, the analysis of which would have confirmed our claims
+of psychic mechanism for hysterical phenomena, is due to one
+circumstance, namely that the analysis of these cases would have
+simultaneously revealed them as sexual neuroses, though surely
+no diagnostician would have denied them the name “hysteria.”
+However, the discussion of such sexual neuroses would have
+overstepped the limits of our joint publication.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I do not wish to be misunderstood and give the impression that
+I refuse to accept hysteria as an independent neurotic affection,
+that I conceive it only as a psychic manifestation of the anxiety
+neurosis, that I ascribe to it “ideogenous” symptoms only, and
+that I attribute the somatic symptoms, like hysterogenic points
+and anesthesias, to the anxiety neurosis. None of these statements
+are true. I believe that hysteria, purified of all admixtures,
+can be treated independently in every respect except in
+therapy. For in the treatment we deal with a practical purpose,
+namely, we have to do away with the whole diseased state, and
+even if the hysteria occurs in most cases as a component of a
+mixed neurosis, the case merely resembles a mixed infection
+where the task is to preserve life, and not merely to combat the
+effect of one inciting cause of the disease.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I, therefore, find it important to separate the hysterical part in
+the pictures of the mixed neuroses from neurasthenia, anxiety
+neurosis, etc., for after this separation I can express concisely the
+therapeutic value of the cathartic method. I would venture to
+assert that—principally—it can readily dispose of any hysterical
+symptom, whereas, as can be easily understood, it is perfectly
+powerless in the presence of neurasthenic phenomena, and can
+only seldom, and through detours, influence the psychic results of
+the anxiety neurosis. Its therapeutic efficacy in the individual
+case will depend on whether or not the hysterical components of
+the morbid picture can claim a practical and significant position in
+comparison to the other neurotic components.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Another limitation placed on the efficacy of the cathartic method
+we have already mentioned in our “Preliminary Communication.”
+It does not influence the causal determinations of hysteria, and
+hence it can not prevent the origin of new symptoms in the place
+of those removed. Hence, on the whole, I must claim a prominent
+place for our therapeutic method in the realm of the therapy
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>of neuroses, but I would caution against attaching any importance
+to it, or putting it into practice outside of this connection.
+As I am unable to give here a “Therapy of Neuroses” as would
+be required by the practicing physician, the preceding statements
+are put on a level with the deferred reference to a later communication;
+still, for purposes of discussion and elucidation, I can
+add the following remarks:</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>1. I do not claim that I have actually removed all the hysterical
+symptoms which I have undertaken to influence by the cathartic
+method, but I believe that the obstacles were due to the personal
+circumstances of the cases, and not to the general principles. In
+passing sentence, these cases of failure may be left out of consideration,
+just as the surgeon puts aside all cases who die as a
+result of narcosis, hemorrhage, accidental sepsis, etc., when deciding
+upon a new technique. I will again consider the failures of
+such origin in my later discussions on the difficulties and drawbacks
+of this method.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>2. The cathartic method does not become valueless simply
+because it is symptomatic and not causal. For a causal therapy
+is really in most cases only prophylactic; it stops the further
+progress of the injury, but it does not necessarily remove the
+products which have already resulted from it. To do this it
+requires, as a rule, a second agent, and in cases of hysteria the
+cathartic method is really unsurpassable for such purposes.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>3. Where the period of hysterical production, or the acute
+hysterical paroxysm, has subsided, and the only remnant manifestations
+left are hysterical symptoms, the cathartic method fulfills
+all indications, and achieves a full and lasting success. Such
+a favorable constellation for the therapy does not seldom result
+on the basis of the sexual life, in consequence of the marked
+fluctuations in the intensity of the sexual desire and the complications
+of the required determination for a sexual trauma.
+Here the cathartic method accomplishes all that is required of it,
+for the physician can not resolve to change a hysterical constitution.
+He must rest content if he can remove the disease for
+which such a constitution shows a tendency, and which can arise
+through the assistance of external determinants. He must be
+satisfied if the patient will again become capacitated. Moreover,
+he can have some hopes for the future, if the possibility of a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>relapse be considered, for he knows the main character of the
+etiology of the neuroses, namely, that their origin is mostly over-determined,
+and that many moments must unite to produce this
+result. He can hope that this union will not take place very
+soon, if individual etiological moments remain in force.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It may be argued that in such subsided cases of hysteria the
+remaining symptoms would spontaneously disappear without anything
+else, but this can be answered by the fact that such spontaneous
+cures very often terminate neither rapidly nor fully, and
+that the cure will be extraordinarily advanced by the treatment.
+Whether the cathartic treatment cures only that which is capable
+of spontaneous recovery, or incidentally also, that which would
+not cease spontaneously, that question may surely be left open for
+the present.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>4. Where we encounter an acute hysteria during the most
+acute production of hysterical symptoms, and the consecutive
+overwhelming of the ego by the morbid products (hysterical
+psychosis), even the cathartic method will change little the expression
+and course of the disease. One finds himself in the
+same position to the neurosis as the doctor to an acute infectious
+disease. For some time past, now beyond the reach of influence,
+the etiological moments exerted a sufficient amount of effect,
+which becomes manifest after overcoming the interval of incubation.
+The affection can not be warded off, it has to run its
+course, but meanwhile one must bring about the most favorable
+conditions for the patient. If during such an acute period one
+can remove the morbid products, the newly formed hysterical
+symptoms, it may be expected that their places will be taken by
+new ones. The physician will not be spared the depressing impression
+of fruitless effort, the enormous expenditure of exertion,
+and the disappointment of the relatives, to whom the idea of
+the necessary duration of time of an acute neurosis is hardly as
+familiar as in the analogous case of an acute infectious disease;
+these, and many other things, will probably make most impossible
+the consequent application of the cathartic method in the assumed
+case. Nevertheless, it still remains to be considered whether,
+even in an acute hysteria, the frequent removal of the morbid
+products does not exercise a curative influence by supporting the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>normal ego which is occupied with the defense, and thus preventing
+it from merging into a psychosis or into ultimate confusion.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>That the cathartic method can accomplish something, even in an
+acute hysteria, and that it can even reduce the new productions of
+the morbid symptoms quite practically and noticeably, is undoubtedly
+evident from the case of Anna O., in which Breuer
+first learned to exercise this process.<a id='r30'></a><a href='#f30' class='c012'><sup>[30]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'>5. Where we deal with chronic progressive hysterias with
+moderate or continued productions of hysterical symptoms, we
+learn to regret the lack of a causally effective therapy, but we
+also learn to value the indications of the cathartic method as a
+symptomatic remedy. We then deal with an injury produced by
+an etiology which continues to act chronically. We have to
+strengthen the capacity for resistance of the nervous system of
+our patient, and we must bear in mind that the existence of an
+hysterical symptom signifies a weakening of resistance of the
+nervous system, and represents a predisposing moment. From
+the mechanism of monosymptomatic hysteria we know that a new
+hysterical symptom generally originates as an addition to and
+as an analogy of one already in existence. The location once
+penetrated represents the weak spot which can be penetrated
+again. The split off psychic group plays the part of the provoking
+crystal from which a formerly omitted crystallization
+emerges with great facility. To remove the already existing
+symptoms, to do away with the psychic alterations lying at their
+basis, is the return to the patients the full measure of their resistance
+capacity, with which they are successfully able to resist the
+noxious influences. One can do a great deal for the patient by
+such long continued watchfulness and occasional “chimney-sweeping.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>6. I still have to mention the apparent contradiction arising
+between the admission that not all hysterical symptoms are psychogenic,
+and the assertion that they can all be removed by
+psychotherapeutic procedures. The solution lies in the fact that
+some of these non-psychogenic symptoms, though they represent
+morbid symptoms, as, for instance, the stigmata, should nevertheless
+not be designated as affections, and hence it cannot be practically
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>noticed even if they remain after the treatment is finished.
+Other symptoms of a similar nature seem to be taken along indirectly
+by the psychogenic symptoms, for indirectly they really
+depend on some psychic causation.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>I shall now mention those difficulties and inconveniences of
+our therapeutic method which are not evident from the preceding
+histories, or from the following remarks concerning the technique
+of the method.—I will rather enumerate and indicate than
+carry them out. The process is toilsome and wearisome for the
+physician, it presupposes a profound interest for psychological
+incidents, as well as a personal sympathy for the patient. I could
+not conceive myself entering deeply into the psychic mechanism
+of a hysteria in a person who appeared to me common and disagreeable,
+and who would not, on closer acquaintanceship, be able
+to awaken in me human sympathy; whereas I can well treat a
+tabetic or a rheumatic patient regardless of such personal liking.
+Not less are the requisites on the patient’s side. The process is
+especially inapplicable below a certain niveau of intelligence. It
+is rendered extremely difficult wherever there is any tinge of
+weakmindedness. It requires the full consent and the attention
+of the patients, but, above all, their confidence, for the analysis
+regularly leads to the inmost and most secretly guarded psychic
+processes. A large proportion of the patients suitable for such
+treatment withdraw from the physician as soon as they become
+cognizant whither his investigations tend; to them the physician
+remains a stranger. In others who have determined to give
+themselves up to the physician and bestow their confidence upon
+him, something usually voluntarily given but never demanded, in
+all those, I say, it is hardly avoidable that the personal relation
+to the physician should not become unduly prominent, at least for
+some time. Indeed, it seems as if such an influence exerted by
+the physician is a condition under which alone a solution of the
+problem is made possible. I do not believe that it makes any
+essential difference in this condition whether we make use of
+hypnosis or have to avoid or substitute it. Yet fairness demands
+that we emphasize the fact that although these inconveniences are
+inseparable from our method, they, nevertheless, cannot be
+charged to it. It is much more evident that they are formed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>in the preliminary states of the neurosis to be cured, and that
+they then attach themselves to every medical activity which intensively
+concerns itself with the patient, and produce in him a
+psychic change. I could see no harm or danger in the application
+of hypnosis even in those cases where it was used excessively.
+The causes for the harm produced lay elsewhere and deeper.
+When I review the therapeutic efforts of those years since the
+communications of my honored teacher and friend, J. Breuer,
+gave me the cathartic method, I believe that I have more often
+produced good than harm, and brought about some things which
+could not have been produced by any other therapeutic means.
+On the whole it was, as expressed in the “Preliminary Communication,”
+“a distinct therapeutic gain.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I must mention still another gain in the application of this
+method. No severe case of complicated neurosis, with either an
+excessive or slight tinge of hysteria can better be explained than
+by subjecting it to an analysis by Breuer’s method. In making
+this analysis I find that whatever shows the hysterical mechanism
+disappears first, while the rest of the manifestations I meanwhile
+learn to interpret and refer to their etiology. I thereby gained
+the essential factors indicated by the instrument of the therapy of
+the neurosis in question. When I think of the usual differences
+between my opinion of a case of neurosis before and after such
+an analysis, I am almost tempted to maintain that the analysis is
+indispensable for the knowledge of a neurotic disease. I have
+furthermore made it a practice of applying the cathartic psychotherapy
+in conjunction with a rest cure, which when required is
+changed to a full Weir-Mitchell treatment. This advantage lies
+in the fact that, on the one side I avoid the very disturbing intrusion
+of new psychic impressions produced during psychotherapy;
+on the other hand, I exclude the monotony of the Weir-Mitchell
+treatment, during which the patient not seldom merges
+into harmful reveries. One might expect that the very considerable
+psychic labor often imposed upon the patient during the
+cathartic cure, and the excitement resulting from the reproduction
+of traumatic events, would run counter to the sense of the Weir-Mitchell
+rest cure, and would prevent the successes which one
+is wont to obtain from it. But the contrary happens; through
+the combination of the Breuer and the Weir-Mitchell therapy, we
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>obtain all the physical improvements which we expect from the
+latter, and such marked psychic improvement as never occurs in
+the rest cure without psychotherapy.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>II.</h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>I will now add to my former observations that in attempting
+to use Breuer’s method in greater latitude I met this difficulty—although
+the diagnosis was hysteria, and the probabilities spoke
+in favor of the prevalence of the psychic mechanism described by
+us, yet a number of patients could not be put into the hypnotic
+state. The hypnosis was necessary to broaden consciousness so
+as to find the pathogenic reminiscences which do not exist in the
+ordinary consciousness. I, therefore, was forced to either give
+up such patients, or to bring about this broadening by other
+means.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The reason why one person is hypnotizable and another not
+I could no more explain than others, and hence I could not start
+on a causal way towards the removal of the difficulties. I also
+observed that in some patients the obstacle was still more marked,
+as they even refused to submit to hypnosis. The idea then occurred
+to me that both cases might be identical, and that in both
+it might merely be an unwillingness. Those who entertain a
+psychic inhibition against hypnotism are not hypnotizable, it
+makes no difference whether they utter their unwillingness or
+not. It is not fully clear to me whether I can firmly adhere to
+this conception or not.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It was, therefore, important to avoid hypnotism and yet to
+obtain the pathogenic reminiscences. This I attained in the following
+manner:</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>On asking my patients during our first interview whether they
+remembered the first motive for the symptom in question, some
+said that they knew nothing, while others thought of something
+which they designated as an indistinct recollection, yet were
+unable to pursue it. I then followed Bernheim’s example of
+awakening the apparently forgotten impressions obtained during
+somnambulism (see the case of Miss Lucy). I urged them by
+assuring them that they did know it, and that they will recall it,
+etc., and thus some thought of something, while in others the
+recollections went further. I became still more pressing, I
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>ordered the patient to lie down and voluntarily shut his eyes so
+as to “concentrate” his mind, causing thereby at least a certain
+similarity to hypnosis, and I then discovered that without any
+hypnosis there emerged new and retrospective reminiscences
+which probably belonged to our theme. Through such experiences
+I gained the impression that through urging alone it would
+really be possible to bring to light the definitely existing pathogenic
+series of ideas; and as this urging necessitated much exertion
+on my part, and showed me that I had to overcome a resistance,
+I, therefore, formulated this whole state of affairs into the
+following theory: <em>Through my psychic work I had to overcome a
+psychic force in the patient which opposed the pathogenic idea
+from becoming conscious</em> (remembered). It then became clear
+to me that this must really be the same psychic force which
+assisted in the origin of the hysterical symptom, and at that time
+prevented the pathogenic idea from becoming conscious. What
+kind of effective force could here be assumed, and what motive
+could have brought it into activity? I could easily formulate an
+opinion, for I already had some complete analyses at my disposal
+in which I found examples of pathogenic, forgotten, and repressed
+ideas. From these I could judge the general character of
+such ideas. They were altogether of a painful nature, adapted
+to provoke the affects of shame, reproach, of psychic pain, and the
+feeling of injury; they were altogether of that kind which one
+would not like to experience and prefers to forget.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>From all these the thought of defense resulted as if simultaneously.
+Indeed, it is generally admitted by all psychologists
+that the assumption of a new idea (assumption in the sense
+of belief, judgment of reality), depends on the mode and drift of
+the ideas already united in the ego. For the process of the
+censor, to which the newly formed ideas are subjected, special
+technical names have been created. An idea entered into the ego
+of the patient which proved to be unbearable and evoked a power
+of repulsion on the part of the ego, the purpose of which was a
+defense against this unbearable idea. This defense actually succeeded,
+and the idea concerned was crowded out of consciousness
+and out of the memory, so that its psychic trace could not apparently
+be found. Yet this trace must have existed. When
+I made the effort to direct the attention to it, I perceived as a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>resistance the same force which showed itself as repulsion in the
+genesis of the symptom. If I could now make it probable that the
+idea became pathogenic in consequence of the exclusion and
+repression, the chain would seem complete. In many epicrises of
+our histories, and in a small work concerning the defense neuropsychoses
+(1894), I have attempted to indicate the psychological
+hypotheses with the help of which this connection also—the fact
+of conversion—can be made clear.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Hence, a psychic force, the repugnance of the ego, has originally
+crowded the pathogenic idea from the association, and now
+opposes its return into the memory. The not knowing of the
+hysterics was really a—more or less conscious—not willing to
+know, and the task of the therapeutist was to overpower this
+resistance of association by psychic labor. Such accomplishment
+is, above all, brought about by “urging,” that is, by applying a
+psychic force in order to direct the attention of the patient on the
+desired traces of ideas. It does not, however, stop here, but as I
+will show, it assumes new forms in the course of the analysis,
+and calls to aid more psychic forces.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I shall, above all, still linger at “the urging.” One cannot go
+very far with such simple assurances as, “You do know it, just
+say it,” or “It will soon come to your mind.” After a few sentences
+the thread breaks, even in the patient who is in a state of
+concentration. We must not, however, forget that we deal
+everywhere here with a quantitative comparison, with the struggle
+between motives of diverse force and intensity. The urging of
+the strange and inexperienced physician does not suffice for the
+“association resistance” in a grave hysteria. One must resort to
+more forceful means.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In the first place I make use of a small technical artifice. I
+inform the patient that I will in the next moment exert pressure
+on his forehead, I assure him that during this pressure he will see
+some reminiscence in the form of a picture, or some thought will
+occur to him, and I oblige him to communicate to me this picture
+or this thought, no matter what it may be. He is not supposed
+to hold it back because he may perhaps think that it is not the
+desired or the right thing, or because it is too disagreeable to say.
+There should be neither criticism nor reserve on account of affect
+or disregard. Only thus could we find the things desired, and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>only thus have we unfailingly found them. I then exert pressure
+for a few seconds on the forehead of the patient lying in front of
+me, and after stopping the pressure, I ask in a calm tone, as if
+any disappointment is out of the question, “What have you
+seen?” or, “What occurred to your mind?”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This method<a id='r31'></a><a href='#f31' class='c012'><sup>[31]</sup></a> taught me a great deal and led me to the goal
+every time. Of course I know that I can substitute this pressure
+on the forehead by any other sign, or any other physical influence,
+but as the patient lies before me the pressure on the forehead,
+or the grasping of his head between my two hands, is the most
+suggestive and most convenient thing that I could undertake for
+this end. To explain the efficacy of this artifice, I may perhaps
+say that it corresponds to a “momentary reinforced hypnosis”;
+but the mechanism of hypnosis is so enigmatical to me that I
+would not like to refer to it as an explanation. I rather think
+that the advantage of the process lies in the fact that through it
+I dissociate the attention of the patient from his conscious quest
+and reflection, in brief, from everything upon which his will can
+manifest itself. This resembles the process of staring at a
+crystal globe, etc. The fact, that under the pressure of my hand
+there always appears that which I am looking for, teaches that the
+supposedly forgotten pathogenic ideas always lie ready, “close by,”
+being attainable through easily approachable associations, and all
+that is necessary is to clear away some obstacle. This obstacle
+again seems to be the person’s will, and different persons learn
+to discard their premeditations, and to assume a perfectly objective
+attitude toward the psychic processes within them.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It is not always a “forgotten” reminiscence which comes to
+the surface under the pressure of the hand; in the rarest cases
+the real pathogenic reminiscences can be superficially discovered.
+More frequently an idea comes to the surface which is a link between
+the starting idea and the desired pathogenic one of the
+association chain, or it is an idea forming the starting point of a
+new series of thoughts and reminiscences, at the end of which the
+pathogenic idea exists. The pressure, therefore, has really not
+revealed the pathogenic idea, which, if torn from its connections
+without any preparation, would be incomprehensible; but it has
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>shown the way to it, and indicated the direction towards which
+the investigation must proceed. The idea which is at first
+awakened through the pressure may correspond to a familiar
+reminiscence which was never repressed. If the connection becomes
+torn on the road to the pathogenic idea, all that is necessary
+for the reproduction of a new orientation and connection is a
+repetition of the procedure, that is, of the pressure.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In still other cases the pressure of the hand awakens a reminiscence
+well known to the patient, which appearance, however,
+causes him surprise because he had forgotten its relation to the
+starting idea. In the further course of the analysis this relation
+becomes clear. From all these results of the pressure one receives
+a delusive impression of a superior intelligence external to
+the patient’s consciousness, which systematically holds a large
+psychic material for definite purposes, and has provided an ingenious
+arrangement for its return into consciousness. I presume,
+however, that this unconscious second intelligence is really
+only apparent.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In every complicated analysis one works repeatedly, nay continuously,
+with the help of this procedure (pressure on the forehead),
+which leads us from the place where the patient’s conscious
+reconductions become interrupted, showing us the way over
+reminiscences which remained known, and calling our attention to
+connections which have merged into forgetfulness. It also
+evokes and connects memories which have for years been withdrawn
+from the association, but can still be recognized as memories;
+and finally, as the highest performance of reproduction, it
+causes the appearance of thoughts which the patient never wishes
+to recognize as his own, which he does not remember, although
+he admits that they are inexorably demanded by the connection,
+and is convinced that just these ideas cause the termination of the
+analysis and the cessation of the symptoms.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I will now attempt to give a series of examples showing the
+excellent achievements of this procedure. I treated a young
+lady who suffered for six years from an intolerable and protracted
+nervous cough, which apparently was nurtured by every
+common catarrh, but must have had its strong psychic motives.
+Every other remedy had long since shown itself to be powerless,
+and I therefore attempted to remove the symptom by psychoanalysis.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>All that she could remember was that the nervous
+cough began at the age of fourteen while she boarded with her
+aunt. She remembered absolutely no psychic excitement during
+that time, and did not believe that there was a motive for her
+suffering. Under the pressure of my hand, she at first recalled
+a large dog. She then recognized the memory picture; it was
+her aunt’s dog which was attached to her, and used to accompany
+her everywhere, and without any further aid it occurred to
+her that this dog died and that the children buried it solemnly;
+and on the return from this funeral her cough appeared. I asked
+her why she began to cough, and after helping her with the pressure,
+the following thought occurred to her: “Now I am all
+alone in this world; no one loves me here; this animal was my
+only friend, and now I have lost it.” She then continued her
+story. “The cough disappeared when I left my aunt, but reappeared
+a year and a half later.”—“What was the reason for it?”—“I
+do not know.”—I again exerted some pressure on the forehead,
+and she recalled the news of her uncle’s death during which
+the cough again manifested itself, and also recalled a train of
+thought similar to the former. The uncle was apparently the
+only one in the family who sympathized with and loved her.
+That was, therefore, the pathogenic idea: “People do not love
+her; everybody else is preferred; she really does not deserve to be
+loved,” etc. To the idea of love there clung something which
+caused a marked resistance to the communication. The analysis
+was interrupted before this explanation.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Some time ago I attempted to relieve an elderly lady of her
+anxiety attacks, which considering their characteristic qualities,
+were hardly adapted to such influence. Since her menopause
+she had become extremely religious, and always received me as if
+I were the Devil. She was always armed with a small ivory crucifix
+which she hid in her hand. Her attacks of anxiety, which
+bore the hysterical character, could be traced to her early girlhood,
+and were supposed to have originated from the application of
+an iodine preparation used to reduce a moderate swelling of the
+thyroid. I naturally repudiated this origin, and sought to substitute
+it by another which was in better harmony with my views
+concerning the etiology of neurotic symptoms. To the first
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>question for an impression of her youth which would stand in
+causal connection to the attacks of anxiety, there appeared under
+the pressure of my hand the reminiscence of reading a so called
+devotional book wherein piously enough there was some mention
+of the sexual processes. The passage in question made an impression
+on this girl, which was contrary to the intention of the
+author. She burst into tears and flung the book away. That
+was before the first attack of anxiety. A second pressure on the
+forehead of the patient evoked the next reminiscence, it referred
+to her brother’s teacher who showed her great respect, and for
+whom she entertained a warmer feeling. This reminiscence culminated
+in the reproduction of an evening in her parents’ home,
+during which they all sat around the table with the young man,
+and delightfully enjoyed themselves in a lively conversation.
+During the night following this evening she was awakened by
+the first attack of anxiety which surely had more to do with some
+resistance against a sensual feeling than perhaps with the coincidently
+used iodine. In what other way could I have succeeded
+in revealing in this obstinate patient, prejudiced against me and
+every worldly remedy, such a connection contrary to her own
+opinion and assertion?</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>On another occasion I had to deal with a young happily married
+woman, who as early as in the first years of her girlhood,
+was found every morning for some time in a state of lethargy,
+with rigid members, opened mouth, and protruding tongue. Similar
+attacks, though not so marked, recurred at the present time
+on awakening. A deep hypnosis could not be produced, so that
+I began my investigation in a state of concentration, and assured
+her during the first pressure that she would see something that
+would be directly connected with the cause of her condition during
+her childhood. She acted calmly and willingly, she again saw
+the residence in which she had passed her early girlhood, her
+room, the position of her bed, the grandmother who lived with
+them at the time, and one of her governesses whom she dearly
+loved. There was then a succession of small, quite indifferent
+scenes, in these rooms, and among these persons, the conclusion
+of which was the leave taking of the governess who married from
+the home. I did not know what to start with these reminiscences;
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>I could not bring about any connection between them and the
+etiology of the attacks. To be sure the various circumstances
+were recognized as having occurred at the same time at which
+the attacks first appeared.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Before I could continue the analysis, I had occasion to talk to
+a colleague, who, in former years, was my patient’s family physician.
+From him I obtained the following explanation: At the
+time that he treated the mature and physically very well developed
+girl for these first attacks, he was struck by the excessive affection
+in the relations between her and her governess. He became suspicious
+and caused the grandmother to watch these relations.
+After a short while the old lady informed him that the governess
+was wont to pay nightly visits to the child’s bed, and that
+quite regularly after such visits the child was found in the morning
+in an attack. She did not hesitate to bring about the quiet
+removal of this corruptress of youth. The children, as well as
+the mother, were made to believe that the governess left the house
+in order to get married.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The treatment, which was above all successful, consisted in informing
+the young woman of the explanations given to me.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Occasionally the explanations, which one obtains by the pressure
+procedure, follow in very remarkable form, and under circumstances
+which make the assumption of an unconscious intelligence
+appear even more alluring. Thus I recall a lady who
+suffered for years from obsessions and phobias, and who referred
+the origin of her trouble to her childhood, but could mention nothing
+to which it could have been attributed. She was frank and
+intelligent, and evinced only a very slight conscious resistance.
+I will add here that the psychic mechanism of obsessions is very
+closely related to that of hysterical symptoms, and that the technique
+of the analysis in both is the same.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>On asking the lady whether she had seen or recalled anything
+under the pressure of my hand, she answered, “Neither, but a
+word suddenly occurred to me.”—“A single word?”—“Yes, but
+it is too foolish.”—“Just tell it.”—“Teacher.”—“Nothing more?”—“No.”
+I exerted pressure a second time, and again a single
+word flashed through her mind: “Shirt.”—I now observed that
+we have dealt with a new mode of replying, and by repeated pressure
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>I evoked the following apparently senseless series of words:
+Teacher—shirt—bed—city—wagon. I asked, “What does all
+that mean?” She reflected for a moment, and it then occurred
+to her that “it can only refer to this one incident which now
+comes to my mind. When I was ten years old my older sister of
+twelve had an attack of frenzy one night, and had to be bound,
+put in a wagon and taken to the city. I remember distinctly that
+it was the teacher who overpowered her and accompanied her to
+the asylum.”—We then continued this manner of investigation,
+and received from our oracle another series of words which,
+though we could not altogether interpret, could nevertheless be
+used as a continuation of this story, and as an appendix to a second.
+The significance of this reminiscence was soon clear. The
+reason why her sister’s illness made such an impression on her
+was because they both shared a common secret. They slept in the
+same room, and one night they both submitted to a sexual assault
+by a certain man. In discovering this sexual trauma of early
+youth, we revealed not only the origin of the first obsession but
+also the trauma which later acted pathogenically.—The peculiarity
+of this case lies only in the appearance of single catch words
+which we had to elaborate into sentences, for the irrelevance and
+incoherence found in these oracle like uttered words adhere to all
+ideas and scenes which generally occur as a result of pressure.
+On further investigation it is regularly found that the seemingly
+disconnected reminiscences are connected by close streams of
+thought, and that they lead quite directly to the desired pathogenic
+moment.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>With pleasure do I therefore recall a case of analysis in which
+my confidence in the results of pressure was splendidly justified.
+A very intelligent, and apparently very happy, young woman consulted
+me for persistent pain in her abdomen which yielded to no
+treatment. I found that the pain was situated in the abdominal
+wall and was due to palpable muscular hardening, and I ordered
+local treatment.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>After months I again saw the patient who said that “the
+former pain disappeared after following the treatment and remained
+away a long time, but now it has reappeared as a nervous
+pain. I recognize it by the fact that I do not perceive it now on
+motion as before, but only during certain hours, as for example,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>in the morning on awakening, and during certain excitements.”
+The patient’s diagnosis was quite correct. It was now important
+to discover the cause of this pain, but in this she could not assist
+me in her uninfluenced state. When, in a state of concentration
+and under the pressure of my hand, I asked her whether anything
+occurred to her, or whether she saw anything, she began to
+describe her visual pictures. She saw something like a sun with
+rays, which I naturally had to assume to be a phosphene produced
+by pressure on the eyes. I expected that the useful pictures
+would follow, but she continued to see stars of a peculiar
+pale blue light, like moonlight, etc., and I believed that she merely
+saw glittering, shining, and twinkling spots before the eyes. I
+was already prepared to add this attempt to the failures, and I
+was thinking how I could quietly withdraw from this affair,
+when my attention was called to one of the manifestations which
+she described. She saw a big black cross which was inclined,
+the edges of which were surrounded by a subdued moonlike light
+in which all the pictures thus far seen were shining, and upon the
+arm there flickered a little flame that was apparently no longer a
+phosphene. I continued to listen. She saw numerous pictures in
+the same light, peculiar signs resembling somewhat sanscrit. She
+also saw figures like triangles, among which there was one big
+triangle, and again the cross. I now thought of an allegorical interpretation,
+and asked, “What does this cross mean?”—“It is
+probably meant to interpret pain,” she answered. I argued, saying,
+that “by cross one usually understands a moral burden,”
+and asked her what was hidden behind that pain. She could not
+explain that and continued looking. She saw a sun with golden
+rays which she interpreted as God, the primitive force; she then
+saw a gigantic lizard which she examined quizzically but without
+fear; then a heap of snakes, then another sun but with mild silvery
+rays, and in front of it, between her own person and this
+source of light, there was a barrier which concealed from her the
+center of the sun.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I knew for some time that we dealt here with allegories,
+and I immediately asked for an explanation of the last picture.
+Without reflecting she answered: “The sun is perfection, the
+ideal, and the barrier represents my weaknesses and failings
+which stand between me and the ideal.”—“Indeed, do you reproach
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>yourself? Are you dissatisfied with yourself?”—“Yes.”—“Since
+when?”—“Since I became a member of the Theosophical
+Society and read the writings edited by it. I have always
+had a poor opinion of myself.” “What was it that made the
+last strongest impression upon you?”—“A translation from the
+sanscrit which now appears in serial numbers.” A minute later
+I was initiated into her mental conflicts, and into her self reproaches.
+She related a slight incident which gave occasion
+for a reproach, and in which, as a result of an inciting conversion,
+the former organic pain at first appeared.—The pictures which I
+had at first taken for phosphenes were symbols of occultistic
+streams of thought, perhaps plain emblems from the title pages
+of occultistic books.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>I have thus far so warmly praised the achievements of the pressure
+procedure, and have so entirely neglected the aspect of the
+defense or the resistance, that I certainly must have given the
+impression that by means of this small artifice one is placed in
+position to become master of the psychic resistances against the
+cathartic cure. But to believe this would be a gross mistake.
+Such advantages do not exist in the treatment so far as I can see;
+here, as everywhere else, great change requires much effort. The
+pressure procedure is nothing but a trick serving to surprise for
+awhile the defensive ego, which in all graver cases recalls its
+intentions and continues its resistance.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I need only recall the various forms in which this resistance
+manifested itself. In the first place, the pressure experiment usually
+fails the first or second time. The patient then expresses
+himself disappointed, saying, “I believed that some idea would
+occur to me, but I only thought so; as attentive as I was nothing
+came.” Such attitudes assumed by the patient are not yet to be
+counted as a resistance; we usually answer to that, “You were
+really too anxious, the second time things will come.” And they
+really come. It is remarkable how completely the patients—even
+the most tractable and the most intelligent—can forget the agreement
+which they have previously entered into. They have promised
+to tell everything that occurs to them under the pressure of
+the hand, be it closely related to them or not, and whether it is
+agreeable to them to say it or not; that is, they are to tell everything
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>without any choice, or influence by critique or affect. Yet
+they do not keep their promise, it is apparently beyond their
+powers. The work repeatedly stops, they continue to assert that
+this time nothing came to their mind. One needs not believe
+them, and one must always assume, and also say, that they hold
+back something because they believe it to be unimportant, or perceive
+it as painful. One must insist, repeat the pressure, and assume
+an assured attitude until one really hears something. The
+patient then adds, “I could have told you that the first time.”—“Why
+did you not say it?”—“I could not believe that that could
+be it. Only after it returned repeatedly have I decided to tell it;”
+or, “I had hoped that it would not be just that, that I could
+spare myself from saying it, but only after it could not be repressed
+have I noticed that I could not avoid it.”—Thus the patient
+subsequently betrays the motives of a resistance which he
+did not at first wish to admit. He apparently could not help
+offering resistances.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It is remarkable under what subterfuges these resistances are
+frequently hidden. “I am distracted today”; “the clock or the
+piano playing in the next room disturbs me,” they say. I became
+accustomed to answer to that, “Not at all, you simply
+struck against something that you do not willingly wish to say.
+That does not help you at all. Just stick to it.”—The longer the
+pause between the pressure of my hand and the utterance of the
+patient, the more suspicious I become, and the more is it to be
+feared that the patient arranges what comes to his mind, and distorts
+it in the reproduction. The most important explanations
+are frequently ushered in as superfluous accessories, just as the
+princes of the opera who are dressed as beggars. “Something
+now occurred to me, but it has nothing to do with it. I only tell
+it to you because you wish to know everything.” With this introduction
+we usually obtain the long desired solution. I always
+listen when I hear a patient talk so lightly of an idea. That the
+pathogenic idea should appear of so little importance on its reappearance
+is a sign of the successful defense. One can infer from
+this of what the process of defense consisted. Its object was to
+make a weak out of a strong idea, that is, to rob it of its affect.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Among other signs the pathogenic memories can also be recognized
+by the fact that they are designated by the patient as unessential,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span>and yet are only uttered with resistance. There are also
+cases where the patient seeks to disavow the recollections, even
+while they are being reproduced, with such remarks as these:
+“Now something occurred to me, but apparently you talked it
+into me;” or, “I know what you expect to this question, you
+surely think that I thought of this and that.” An especially
+clever way of shifting is found in the following expression:
+“Now something really occurred to me, but it seems to me as if
+I added it, and that it is not a reproduced thought.”—In all these
+cases I remain inflexibly firm, I admit none of these distinctions,
+but explain to the patient that these are only forms and subterfuges
+of the resistance against the reproduction of a recollection
+which in spite of all we are forced to recognize.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>One generally experiences less trouble in the reproduction of
+pictures than thoughts. Hysterical patients who are usually
+visual are easier to manage than patients suffering from obsessions.
+Once the picture emerges from the memory we can hear
+the patient state that as he proceeds to describe it, it proportionately
+fades away and becomes indistinct; the patient wears it out,
+so to speak, by transforming, it into words. We then orient
+ourselves through the memory picture itself in order to find the
+direction towards which the work should be continued. We say
+to the patient, “Just look again at the picture, has it disappeared?”—“As
+a whole, yes, but I still see this detail.”—“Then this must
+have some meaning, you will either see something new, or this
+remnant will remind you of something.” When the work is
+finished the visual field becomes free again, and a new picture
+can be called forth; but at other times such a picture, in spite of
+its having been described, remains persistently before the inner
+eye of the patient, and I take this as a sign that he still has something
+important to tell me concerning its theme. As soon as
+this has been accomplished, the picture disappears like a wandering
+spirit returning to rest.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It is naturally of great value for the progress of the analysis
+to carry our point with the patient, otherwise we have to depend
+on what he thinks is proper to impart. It, therefore, will be
+pleasant to hear that the pressure procedure never failed except
+in a single case which I shall discuss later, but which I can now
+characterize by the fact that there was a special motive for the resistance.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>To be sure, it may happen under certain conditions
+that the procedure may be applied without bringing anything to
+light; as, for example, we may ask for the further etiology of a
+symptom when the same has already been exhausted; or, we
+may investigate for the psychic genealogy of a symptom, perhaps
+a pain, which really was of somatic origin. In these cases the
+patient equally insists that nothing occurred to him, and he is
+right. We should strive to avoid doing an injustice to the patient
+by making it a general rule not to lose sight of his features while
+he calmly lies before us during the analysis. One can then
+learn to distinguish, without any difficulty, the psychic calm in the
+real non appearance of a reminiscence from the tension and
+emotional signs under which the patient labors in trying to disavow
+the emerging reminiscences for the purpose of defense.
+The differential diagnostic application of the pressure procedure
+is really based on such experiences.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>We can see, therefore, that even with the help of the pressure
+procedure the task is not an easy one. The only advantage
+gained is the fact that we have learned from the results of this
+method in what direction to investigate, and what things we
+have to force upon the patient. For some cases that suffices,
+for the question is really to find the secret, and tell it to the patient,
+so that he is usually then forced to relinquish his resistance.
+In other cases more is necessary; here the surviving resistance
+of the patient manifests itself by the fact that the connections
+become torn, the solutions do not appear, and the recalled pictures
+come indistinctly and incompletely. On reviewing, at a later
+period, the earlier results of an analysis, we are often surprised
+at the distorted aspects of all the occurrences and scenes which
+we have snatched from the patient by the pressure procedure. It
+usually lacks the essential part, the relations to the person or to
+the theme, and for that reason the picture remained incomprehensible.
+I will now give one or two examples showing the effects
+of such a censoring during the first appearance of the pathogenic
+memories. The patient sees the upper part of a female body on
+which a loose covering fits carelessly, only much later he adds to
+this torso the head, and thereby betrays a person and a relationship.
+Or, he relates a reminiscence of his childhood about two
+boys whose forms are very indistinct, and to whom a certain mischievousness
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>was attributed. It required many months and considerable
+progress in the course of the analysis before he again
+saw this reminiscence and recognized one of the children as himself
+and the other as his brother. What means have we now at
+our disposal to overcome this continued resistance?</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>We have but few, yet we have almost all those by which one
+person exerts a psychic influence on the other. In the first place
+we must remember that psychic resistance, especially of long continuance,
+can only be broken slowly, gradually, and with much
+patience. We can also count on the intellectual interest which
+manifests itself in the patient after a brief period of the analysis.
+On explaining and imparting to him the knowledge of the
+marvelous world of psychic processes, which we have gained
+only through such analysis, we obtain his collaboration, causing
+him to view himself with the objective interest of the
+investigator, and we thus drive back the resistance which
+rests on an affective basis. But finally—and this remains
+the strongest motive force—after the motives for the defense
+have been discovered, we must make the attempt to reduce or
+even substitute them by stronger ones. Here the possibility of
+expressing the therapeutic activity in formulæ ceases. One does
+as well as he can as an explainer where ignorance has produced
+timorousness, as a teacher, as a representative of a freer and
+more superior world-conception, and as confessor, who through
+the continuance of his sympathy and his respect, imparts, so to
+say, absolution after the confession. One endeavors to do something
+humane for the patient in so far as the range of one’s own
+personality and the measure of sympathy which one can set apart
+for the case allows. It is an indispensable prerequisite for such
+psychic activities to have approximately discovered the nature
+of the case and the motives of the defense here effective. Fortunately
+the technique of the urging and the pressure procedure
+take us just so far. The more we have solved such enigmas the
+easier will we discover new ones, and the earlier will we be able
+to manage the actual curative psychic work. For it is well to
+bear in mind that although the patient can rid himself of an hysterical
+symptom only after reproducing and uttering under emotion
+its causal pathogenic impressions, yet the therapeutic task
+merely consists in inducing him to do it, and once the task has
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>been accomplished there remains nothing for the doctor to correct
+or abolish. All the contrary suggestions necessary have already
+been employed during the struggle carried on against the
+resistance. The case may be compared to the unlocking of a
+closed door, where, as soon as the door knob has been pressed
+downward, no other difficulties are encountered in opening the
+door.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Among the intellectual motives employed for the overcoming
+of the resistance one can hardly dispense with one affective
+moment, that is, the personal equation of the doctor, and in a
+number of cases, this alone will be able to break the resistance.
+The conditions here do not differ from those found in any other
+branch of medicine, and one should not expect any therapeutic
+method to fully disclaim the assistance of this personal moment.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>III.</h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>In view of the discussions in the preceding section concerning
+the difficulty of my technique, which I have unreservedly exposed,—I
+have really collected them from my most difficult cases,
+though it will often be easier work—in view then of this state of
+affairs everybody will wish to ask whether it would not be more
+suitable, instead of all these tortures, to apply oneself more energetically
+to hypnosis, or to limit the application of the cathartic
+method to only such cases as can be placed in deep hypnosis. To
+the latter proposition I should have to answer that the number
+of patients available for my skill would shrink considerably; but
+to the former advice I will advance the supposition that even where
+hypnosis could be produced the resistance would not be very much
+lessened. My experiences in this respect are not particularly extensive,
+so that I am unable to go beyond this supposition, but
+wherever I achieved a cathartic cure in the hypnotic state I found
+that the work devolved upon me was not less than in the state
+of concentration. I have only recently finished such a treatment
+during which course I caused the disappearance of a hysterical
+paralysis of the legs. The patient merged into a state, psychically
+very different from the conscious, and somatically distinguished
+by the fact that she was unable to open her eyes or rise without
+my ordering her to do so; and still I never had a case showing
+greater resistance than this one. I placed no value on these physical
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>signs, and toward the end of the ten months’ treatment they
+really became imperceptible. The condition of the patient during
+our work has therefore lost nothing of its psychic peculiarities,
+such as the ability to recall the unconscious and its very peculiar
+relation to the person of the physician. To be sure, in the history
+of Mrs. Emmy v. N. I have described an example of a cathartic
+cure accomplished in a profound somnambulism in which the resistance
+played almost no part. But nothing that I obtained from
+this woman would have required any special effort; I obtained
+nothing that she could not have told me in her waking state after
+a longer acquaintanceship and some esteem. The real causes of
+her disease, which were surely identical with the causes of her relapses
+after my treatment, I have never found—it was my first attempt
+in this therapy—and when I once asked her accidentally for
+a reminiscence which contained a fragment of the erotic, I found
+her just as resistant and unreliable in her statements as any one
+of my later non-somnambulic patients. This patient’s resistance,
+even in the somnambulic state, against other requirements
+and exactions I have already discussed in her history. Since I
+have witnessed cases who, even in deep somnambulism were absolutely
+refractory therapeutically despite their obedience in everything
+else, I really became skeptical as to the value of hypnosis
+for the facilitation of the cathartic treatment. A case of this
+kind I have reported in brief,<a id='r32'></a><a href='#f32' class='c012'><sup>[32]</sup></a> and could still add others.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In our discussion thus far, the idea of resistance has thrust
+itself to the foreground. I have shown how, in the therapeutic
+work, one is led to the conception that hysteria originates through
+the repression of an unbearable idea from a motive of defense,
+that the repressed idea remains as a weak (mildly intensive) reminiscence,
+and that the affect snatched from it is used for a
+somatic innervation, that is, conversion of the excitement. By
+virtue of its repression the idea becomes the cause of morbid
+symptoms, that is pathogenic. A hysteria showing this psychic
+mechanism may be designated by the name of “defense hysteria,”
+but both Breuer and myself have repeatedly spoken of two other
+kinds of hysterias which we have named hypnoid and retention hysteria.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>The first to reveal itself to us was really the hypnoid-hysteria,
+for which I can mention no better example than Breuer’s
+case of Miss Anna O.<a id='r33'></a><a href='#f33' class='c012'><sup>[33]</sup></a> For this form of hysteria Breuer gives
+an essentially different psychic mechanism than for the form
+which is characterized by conversion. Here the idea becomes
+pathogenic through the fact that it is conceived in a peculiar
+psychic state, having remained from the very beginning external
+to the ego. It therefore needs no psychic force to keep it away
+from the ego, and it need not awaken any resistance when, with
+the help of the somnambulic psychic authority, it is initiated into
+the ego. The history of Anna O. really shows no such resistance.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I held this distinction as so essential that it has readily induced
+me to adhere to the formation of the hypnoid-hysteria. It is however
+remarkable that in my own experience I encountered no genuine
+hypnoid-hysteria, whatever I treated changed itself into a defense
+hysteria. Not that I have never dealt with symptoms which
+manifestly originated in separated conscious states, and therefore
+were excluded from being accepted into the ego. I found this
+also in my own cases, but I could show that the so called hypnoid
+state owed its separation to the fact that a split off psychic group
+originated before, through defense. In brief, I cannot suppress
+the suspicion that hypnoid and defense hysteria meet somewhere
+at their roots, and that the defense is the primary thing; but I
+know nothing about it.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Equally uncertain is at present my opinion concerning the retention hysteria
+in which the therapeutic work is also supposed to
+follow without any resistance. I had a case which I took for a
+typical retention hysteria, and I was pleased over the anticipation
+of an easy and certain success; but this success did not come as
+easy as the work really was. I therefore presume, and again with
+all caution appropriate to ignorance, that in retention hysteria, too,
+we can find at its basis a fragment of defense which has thrust
+the whole process into hysteria. Let us hope that new experiences
+will soon decide whether I am running into the danger of
+one-sidedness and error in my tendency to spread the conception
+of defense for the whole of hysteria.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>Thus far I have dealt with the difficulties and technique of the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>cathartic method, I would now like to add a few indications showing
+how one makes an analysis with technique. For me this is a
+very interesting theme, but I do not expect that it will excite similar
+interest in others who have not practiced such analyses.
+Properly speaking we shall again deal with the technique, but this
+time with those difficulties concerning which the patient cannot
+be held responsible, and which must in part be the same in a hypnoid
+and a retention hysteria as well as in the defense hysteria
+which I have in mind as a model. I start on this last fragment of
+discussion with the expectation that the psychic peculiarities revealed
+here might sometime attain a certain value as raw material
+for an intellectual dynamics.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The first and strongest impression which one gains through
+such an analysis is surely the fact that the pathogenic psychic
+material, apparently forgotten and not at the disposal of the ego,
+playing no rôle in the association and in memory, still lies ready
+in some manner and in proper and good order. All that is necessary
+is to remove the resistances blocking the way. Barring
+that, everything is known as we know anything else, the proper
+connections of the individual ideas among themselves and with
+the nonpathogenic are frequently recalled and are present; they
+have been produced in their time and retained in memory. The
+pathogenic psychic material appears as the property of an intelligence
+which is not necessarily inferior to the normal ego.
+The semblance of a second personality is often most delusively
+produced. Whether this impression is justified, whether the arrangements
+of the psychic material resulting after the adjustment
+is not transferred back into the time of the disease, these are questions
+which I do not like to consider in this place. One cannot
+easily and intuitively describe the experiences resulting from these
+analyses as if he placed himself in the position, which one can
+only take a survey of after their disappearance.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The condition is usually not so simple as one represents it in
+special cases, as, for example, in a single case in which a symptom
+originates through a serious trauma. We frequently deal not with
+a single hysterical symptom but with a number of the same which
+are partially independent of one another and partially connected.
+We must not expect a single traumatic reminiscence whose nucleus
+is a single pathogenic idea, but we must be ready to assume
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>a series of partial traumas and a concatenation of pathogenic
+streams of thought. The monosymptomatic traumatic hysteria is,
+as it were, an elementary organism, it is a single being in comparison
+to the complicated structure of a grave hysterical neurosis
+as is generally encountered.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The psychic material of such hysteria presents itself as a multidimensional
+formation of at least triple stratification. I hope to
+be able to soon justify this figurative expression. First of all
+there is a nucleus of such reminiscences (either experiences or
+streams of thought) in which the traumatic moment culminated,
+or in which the pathogenic idea has found its purest formation.
+Around this nucleus we often find an incredibly rich mass of other
+memory material which we have to elaborate by the analysis in the
+triple arrangement mentioned before. In the first place, there is
+an unmistakable linear chronological arrangement which takes
+place within every individual theme. As an example of this I can
+only cite the arrangements in Breuer’s analysis of Anna O. The
+theme is that of becoming deaf, of not hearing,<a id='r34'></a><a href='#f34' class='c012'><sup>[34]</sup></a> which then becomes
+differentiated according to seven determinants, and under
+each heading there were from ten to one hundred single reminiscences
+in chronological order. It was as if one should take up
+an orderly kept record. In the analysis of my patient, Emmy v.
+N., there were similar if not so many memory sub-divisions; they
+formed quite a general event in every analysis. They always occurred
+in a chronological order which was as definitely reliable as
+the serial sequences of the days of the week or the names of the
+months in psychically normal individuals. They increased the
+work of the analysis through the peculiarity of reversing the
+series of their origin in the reproduction; the freshest and the
+most recent occurrence of the accumulation occurred first as a
+“wrapper,” and that with which the series really began gave the
+impression of the conclusion.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The grouping of similar reminiscences in a multiplicity of
+linear stratifications, as represented in a bundle of documents,
+in a package, etc., I have designated as the formation of a
+theme. These themes now show a second form of arrangement.
+I cannot express it differently than by saying that they are concentrically
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>stratified around the pathogenic nucleus. It is not difficult
+to say what determines these strata, and according to what
+decreasing or increasing magnitude this arrangement follows.
+They are layers of equal resistance tending towards the nucleus,
+accompanied by zones of similar alteration of consciousness into
+which the individual themes extend. The most peripheral layers
+contain those reminiscences (or fascicles) of the different themes
+which can readily be recalled and were always perfectly conscious.
+The deeper one penetrates the more difficult it becomes to recognize
+the emerging reminiscences until one strikes those near the
+nucleus which the patient disavows, even at the reproduction.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>As we shall hear later it is the peculiarity of the concentric
+stratification of the pathogenic psychic material which gives to
+the course of such an analysis its characteristic features. We
+must now mention the third and most essential arrangement concerning
+which a general statement can hardly be made. It is the
+arrangement according to the content of thought, the connection
+through the logical thread reaching to the nucleus which might in
+each case correspond to a special, irregular, and manifoldly devious
+road. This arrangement has a dynamic character in contradistinction
+to both morphological stratifications mentioned before.
+Whereas, in a spacially formed scheme the latter would
+be represented by rigid, arched, and straight lines, the course of
+the logical concatenation would have to be followed with a wand,
+over the most tortuous route, from the superficial into the deep
+layers and back, generally, however, progressing from the peripheral
+to the central nucleus, and touching thereby all stations;
+that is, its movement is similar to the zigzag movement of the
+knight in the solution of a chess problem.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I will still adhere for a moment to the last comparison in order
+to call attention to a point in which it does not do justice to the
+qualities of the thing compared. The logical connection corresponds
+not only to a zigzag-like devious line, but rather to a ramifying
+and especially to a converging system of lines. It has a
+junction in which two or more threads meet only to proceed
+thence united, and, as a rule, many threads running independently,
+or here and there connected by by-paths, open into the nucleus.
+To put it in different words, it is very remarkable how frequently
+a symptom is manifoldly determined, that is, over-determined.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>I will introduce one more complication, and then my effort to
+illustrate the organization of the pathogenic psychic material will
+be achieved. It can happen that we may deal with more than
+one single nucleus in the pathogenic material, as, for example,
+when we have to analyze a second hysterical outbreak having its
+own etiology but which is still connected with the first outbreak
+of an acute hysteria which has been overcome years before. It
+can readily be imagined what strata and streams of thought
+must be added in order to produce a connection between the two
+pathogenic nuclei.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I will still add a few observations to the picture obtained of the
+organization of the pathogenic material. We have said of this
+material that it behaves like a foreign body, and that the therapy
+also acts like the removal of a foreign body from the living tissues.
+We are now in position to consider the shortcomings of
+this comparison. A foreign body does not enter into any connection
+with the layers of tissue surrounding it, although it
+changes them and produces in them a reactive inflammation. On
+the other hand, our pathogenic psychic group does not allow
+itself to be cleanly shelled out from the ego, its outer layers radiate
+in all directions into the parts of the normal ego, and really
+belong to the latter as much as to the pathogenic organization.
+The boundaries between both become purely conventional in the
+analysis, being placed now here, now there, and in certain locations
+no demarcation is possible. The inner layers become more
+and more estranged from the ego without showing a visible beginning
+of the pathogenic boundaries. The pathogenic organization
+really does not behave like a foreign body, but rather like an
+infiltration. The infiltrate must, in this comparison, be assumed
+to be the resistance. Indeed, the therapy does not consist in extirpating
+something—psychotherapy cannot do that at present—but
+it causes a melting of the resistance, and thus opens the way
+for the circulation into a hitherto closed territory.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(I make use here of a series of comparisons all of which have
+only a very limited resemblance to my theme, and do not even
+agree among themselves. I am aware of that, and I am not in
+danger of over-estimating their value; but, as it is my intention to
+illustrate the many sides of a most complicated and not as yet
+depicted idea, I therefore take the liberty of dealing also in the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>following pages with comparisons which are not altogether free
+from objections.)</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>If, after a thorough adjustment, one could show to a third
+party the pathogenic material in its present recognized, complicated
+and multidimensional organization, he would justly propound
+the question, “How could such a camel go through the
+needle’s eye?” Indeed, one does not speak unjustly of a “narrowing
+of consciousness.” The term gains in sense and freshness
+for the physician who accomplishes such an analysis. Only one
+single reminiscence can enter into the ego consciousness; the
+patient occupied in working his way through this one sees nothing
+of that which follows, and forgets everything that has already
+wedged its way through. If the conquest of this one pathogenic
+reminiscence strikes against impediments, as for example, if the
+patient does not yield the resistance against it, but wishes to
+repress or distort it, the strait is, so to speak, blocked; the work
+comes to a standstill, it cannot advance, and the one reminiscence
+in the breach confronts the patient until he takes it up into the
+breadth of his ego. The whole spacially extended mass of the
+pathogenic material is thus drawn through a narrow fissure and
+reaches consciousness as if disjointed into fragments or strips,
+and it is the task of the psychotherapist to recompose it into the
+conjectured organization. He who desires still more comparisons
+may think here of a Chinese puzzle.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>If one is about to begin an analysis in which one may expect
+such an organization of the pathogenic material, the following
+results of experience may be useful: <em>It is perfectly hopeless to
+attempt to make any direct headway towards the nucleus of the
+pathogenic organization.</em> Even if it could be guessed the patient
+would still not know what to start with the explanation given to
+him, nor would it change him psychically.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>There is nothing left to do but follow up the periphery of the
+pathogenic psychic formation. One begins by allowing the
+patient to relate and recall what he knows, during which one can
+already direct his attention, and through the application of the
+pressure procedure slight resistances may be overcome. Whenever
+a new way is opened through pressure it can be expected that
+the patient will continue it for some distance without any new
+resistance.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>After having worked for a while in such manner a coöperating
+activity is usually manifested in the patient. A number of reminiscences
+now occur to him without any need of questioning or
+setting him a task. A way has thus been opened into an inner
+strata, within which the patient now spontaneously disposes of the
+material of equal resistance. It is well to allow him to reproduce
+for a while without being influenced; of course, he is unable to
+reveal important connections, but he may be allowed to clear
+things within the same stratum. The things which he thus reproduces
+often seem disconnected, but they give up the material
+which is later revived by the recognized connections.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>One has to guard here in general against two things. If the
+patient is checked in the reproduction of the inflowing ideas,
+something is apt to be “buried” which must be uncovered later
+with great effort. On the other hand one must not overestimate
+his “unconscious intelligence,” and one must not allow it to direct
+the whole work. If I should wish to schematize the mode of
+labor, I could perhaps say that one should himself undertake the
+opening of the inner strata and the advancement in the radial
+direction, while the patient should take care of the peripheral
+extension.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The advancement is brought about by the fact that the resistance
+is overcome in the manner indicated above. As a rule, however,
+one must at first solve another problem. One must obtain
+a piece of a logical thread by which direction alone one can hope
+to penetrate into the interior. One should not expect that the
+voluntary information of the patient, the material which is mostly
+in the superficial strata, will make it easy for the analyzer to
+recognize the locations where it enters into the deep, and to which
+points the desired connections of thought are attached. On the
+contrary, just this is cautiously concealed, the assertion of the
+patient sounds perfect and fixed in itself. One is at first confronted,
+as it were, by a wall which shuts off every view, and
+gives no suggestion of anything hidden behind it.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>If, however, one views with a critical eye the assertion obtained
+from the patient without much effort and resistance, one will unmistakably
+discover in it gaps and injuries. Here the connection
+is manifestly interrupted and is scantily completed by the patient
+by an expression conveying quite insufficient information. Here
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>one strikes against a motive which in a normal person would be
+designated as flimsy. The patient refuses to recognize these gaps
+when his attention is called to them. The physician, however,
+does well to seek under these weak points access to the material
+of the deeper layers and to hope to discover just here the threads
+of the connections which he traces by the pressure procedure.
+One, therefore, tells the patient, “You are mistaken, what you
+assert can have nothing to do with the thing in question; here we
+will have to strike against something which will occur to you
+under the pressure of my hand.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The hysterical stream of thought, even if it reaches into the
+unconscious, may be expected to show the same logical connections
+and sufficient causations as those that would be formed
+in a normal individual. A looseness of these relationships does
+not lie within the sphere of influence of the neurosis. If the association
+of ideas of neurotics, and especially of hysterics, makes
+a different impression, if the relation of the intensities of different
+ideas does not seem to be explainable here on psychological
+determinants alone, we know that such manifestations are due to
+the existence of concealed unconscious motives. Such secret motives
+may be expected wherever such a deviation in the connection,
+or a transgression from the normally justified causations
+can be demonstrated.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>To be sure one must free himself from the theoretical prejudice
+that one has to deal with abnormal brains of dégénerés and deséquilibrés,
+in whom the freedom of overthrowing the common psychological
+laws of the association of ideas is a stigma, or in whom
+a preferred idea without any motive may grow intensively excessive,
+and another without psychological motives may remain
+indestructible. Experience shows the contrary in hysteria; as
+soon as the hidden—often unconsciously remaining—motives have
+been revealed and brought to account there remains nothing in
+the hysterical thought connection that is enigmatical and anomalous.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Thus by tracing the breaches in the first statements of the
+patient, which are often hidden by “false connections,” one gets
+hold of a part of the logical thread at the periphery, and thereafter
+continues the route by the pressure procedure.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Very seldom do we succeed in working our way into the inner
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>strata by the same thread, usually it breaks on the way when the
+pressure fails, giving up either no experience, or one which cannot
+be explained or be continued despite all efforts. In such a
+case we soon learn how to protect ourselves from the obvious confusion.
+The expression of the patient must decide whether one
+really reached an end or encountered a case needing no psychic
+explanation, or whether it is the enormous resistance that halts
+the work. If the latter cannot soon be overcome, it may be
+assumed that the thread has been followed into a strata which is
+as yet impenetrable. One lets it fall in order to grasp another
+thread which may, perhaps, be followed up just as far. If one
+has followed all the threads into this strata, if the knottings have
+been reached through which no single isolated thread can be followed,
+it is well to think of seizing anew the resistances on hand.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>One can readily imagine how complicated such a work may become.
+By constantly overcoming the resistance, one pushes his
+way into the inner strata, gaining knowledge concerning the accumulative
+themes and passing threads found in this layer; one
+examines as far as he can advance with the means at hand, and
+by means of the pressure procedure he gains first information
+concerning the content of the next strata.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The threads are dropped, taken up again, and followed up until
+they reach the juncture; they are always retrieved, and by following
+a memory fascicle one reaches some by-way which finally
+opens again. In this manner it is possible to leave the work,
+layer by layer, and advance directly on the main road to the
+nucleus of the pathogenic organization. Thus the fight is won
+but not finished. One has to follow up the other threads and
+exhaust the material; but now the patient helps again energetically,
+for his resistance has mostly been broken.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In these later stages of the work it is of advantage if one can
+surmise the connection and tell it to the patient before it has been
+revealed. If the conjecture is correct the course of the analysis
+is accelerated, but even an incorrect hypothesis helps, for it urges
+the patient to participate and elicits from him energetic refutation,
+thus revealing that he surely knows better.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>One, thereby, becomes astonishingly convinced, <em>that it is not
+possible to press upon the patient things which he apparently does
+not know, or to influence the results of the analysis by exciting
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>his expectations</em>. I have not succeeded a single time in altering
+or falsifying the reproductions of memory or the connections of
+events by my predictions; had I succeeded it surely would have
+been revealed in the end by a contradiction in the construction.
+If anything occurred as I predicted, the correctness of my conjecture
+was always attested by numerous trustworthy reminiscences.
+Hence, one must not fear to express his opinion to the
+patient concerning the connections which are to follow; it does
+no harm.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Another manifestation which can be repeatedly observed refers
+to the patient’s independent reproductions. It can be asserted
+that not a single reminiscence comes to the surface during such an
+analysis which has no significance. An interposition of irrelevant
+memory pictures having no connection with the important associations
+does not really occur. An exception not contrary to the
+rule may be postulated for those reminiscences which, though in
+themselves unimportant, are indispensable as intercalations, since
+the associations between two related reminiscences passed through
+them only.—As mentioned above, the period during which a
+reminiscence abides in the pass of the patient’s consciousness is
+directly proportionate to its significance. A picture which does
+not disappear requires further consideration; a thought which
+cannot be abolished must be followed further. A reminiscence
+never recurs if it has been adjusted, a picture spoken away cannot
+be seen again. However, if that does happen it can be definitely
+expected that the second time the picture will be joined by a new
+content of thought, that the idea will contain a new inference
+which will show that no perfect adjustment has taken place. On
+the other hand, a recurrence of different intensities, at first
+vaguely then quite plainly, often occurs, but it does not, however,
+contradict the assertion just advanced.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>If the object of the analysis is to remove a symptom (pains,
+symptoms like vomiting, sensations and contractures) which is
+capable of aggravation or recurrence, the symptom shows during
+the work the interesting and not undesirable phenomenon of
+“joining in the discussion.” The symptom in question reappears,
+or appears with greater intensity, as soon as one penetrates into
+the region of the pathogenic organization containing the etiology
+of this symptom, and it continues to accompany the work with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>characteristic and instructive fluctuations. The intensity of the
+same (let us say of a nausea) increases the deeper one penetrates
+into its pathogenic reminiscence; it reaches its height shortly
+before the latter has been expressed, and suddenly subsides or
+disappears completely for a while after it has been fully expressed.
+If through resistance the patient delays the expression,
+the tension of the sensation of nausea becomes unbearable, and, if
+the expression cannot be forced, vomiting actually sets in. One
+thus gains a plastic impression of the fact that the vomiting takes
+the place of a psychic action (here that of speaking) just as was
+asserted in the conversion theory of hysteria.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The fluctuation of intensity on the part of the hysterical
+symptom recurs as often as one of its new and pathogenic reminiscences
+is attacked; the symptom remains, as it were, all the
+time the order of the day. If it is necessary to drop for awhile
+the thread upon which this symptom hangs, the symptom, too,
+merges into obscurity in order to emerge again at a later period
+of the analysis. This play continues until, through the completion
+of the pathogenic material, there occurs a definite adjustment
+of this symptom.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Strictly speaking the hysterical symptom does not behave here
+differently than a memory picture or a reproduced thought which
+is evoked by the pressure of the hand. Here, as there, the adjustment
+necessitates the same obsessing obstinacy of recurrence
+in the memory of the patient. The difference lies only in the
+apparent spontaneous appearance of the hysterical symptom,
+whereas one readily recalls having himself provoked the scenes
+and ideas. But in reality the memory symbols run in an uninterrupted
+series from the unchanged memory remnants of affectful
+experiences and thinking-acts to the hysterical symptoms.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The phenomenon of “joining in the discussion” of the hysterical
+symptom during the analysis carries with it a practical inconvenience
+to which the patient should be reconciled. It is quite
+impossible to undertake the analysis of a symptom in one stretch
+or to divide the pauses in the work in such a manner as to
+precisely coincide with the resting point in the adjustment.
+Furthermore, the interruption which is categorically dictated by
+the accessory circumstances of the treatment, like the late hour,
+etc., often occurs in the most awkward locations, just when some
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>critical point could be approached or when a new theme comes to
+light. These are the same inconveniences which every newspaper
+reader experiences in reading the daily fragments of his newspaper
+romance, when, immediately after the decisive speech of
+the heroine, or after the report of a shot, etc., he reads, “To
+be continued.” In our case the raked-up but unabolished theme,
+the at first strengthened but not yet explained symptom, remains
+in the patient’s psyche, and troubles him perhaps more than
+before.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>But the patient must understand this as it cannot be differently
+arranged. Indeed, there are patients who during such an
+analysis are unable to get rid of the theme once touched; they are
+obsessed by it even during the interval between the two treatments,
+and as they are unable to advance alone with the adjustment,
+they suffer more than before. Such patients, too, finally
+learn to wait for the doctor, postponing all interest which they
+have in the adjustment of the pathogenic material for the hours
+of the treatment, and they then begin to feel freer during the
+intervals.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The general condition of the patient during such an analysis
+seems also worthy of consideration. For a while it remains uninfluenced
+by the treatment expressing the former effective
+factors. But then a moment comes in which the patient is seized,
+and his interest chained and from that time his general condition
+becomes more and more dependent on the condition of the work.
+Whenever a new explanation is gained and an important contribution
+in the chain of the analysis is reached, the patient feels relieved
+and experiences a presentiment of the approaching deliverance;
+but at each standstill of the work, at each threatening
+entanglement, the psychic burden which oppresses him grows, and
+the unhappy sensation of his incapacity increases. To be sure,
+both conditions are only temporary, for the analysis continues
+disdaining to boast of a moment of wellbeing, and continues
+regardlessly over the period of gloominess. One is generally
+pleased if it is possible to substitute the spontaneous fluctuations
+in the condition of the patient by such as one himself provokes
+and understands, just as one prefers to see in place of the spontaneous
+discharge of the symptoms that order of the day which
+corresponds to the condition of the analysis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>Usually the deeper one penetrates into the above described
+layers of the psychic structure the more obscure and difficult the
+work will at first become. But once the nucleus is reached light
+ensues, and there is no more fear that a marked gloom will be
+cast over the condition of the patient. However, the reward of
+the labor, the cessation of the symptoms of the disease can only
+be expected when the full analysis of every individual symptom
+has been accomplished; indeed where the individual symptoms
+are connected through many junctures one is not even encouraged
+by partial successes during the work. By virtue of the great
+number of existing causal connections every unadjusted pathogenic
+idea acts as a motive for the complete creation of the
+neurosis, and only with the last word of the analysis does the
+whole picture of the disease disappear, just as happens in the
+behavior of the individual reproduced reminiscence.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>If a pathogenic reminiscence or a pathogenic connection which
+was previously withdrawn from the ego consciousness is revealed
+by the work of the analysis and inserted into the ego,
+one can observe in the psychic personality which was thus enriched
+the many ways in which it gives utterance to its gain.
+Especially does it frequently happen that after the patients have
+been painstakingly forced to a certain knowledge, they say:
+“Why I have known that all the time, I could have told you that
+before.” Those who have more insight recognize this afterwards
+as a self deception and accuse themselves of ungratefulness. In
+general the position that the ego takes towards the new acquisition
+depends upon the strata of the analysis from which the
+latter originates. Whatever belongs to the outermost layers is
+recognized without any difficulty, for it always remained in the
+possession of the ego, and the only thing that was new to the
+ego was its connection with the deeper layers of the pathogenic
+material. Whatever is brought to light from these deeper layers
+also finds appreciation and recognition, but frequently only after
+long hesitation and reflection. Of course, visual memory pictures
+are here more difficult to deny than reminiscences of mere
+streams of thought. Not very seldom the patient will at first
+say, “It is possible that I thought of that, but I cannot recall it,”
+and only after a longer familiarity with this supposition recognition
+will appear. He then recalls and even verifies by sight
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>associations that he once really had this thought. During the
+analysis I make it a point of holding the value of an emerging
+reminiscence independent of the patient’s recognition. I am not
+tired of repeating that we are obliged to accept everything that
+we bring to light with our means. Should there be anything
+unreal or incorrect in the material thus revealed, the connection
+will later teach us to separate it. I may add that I rarely ever
+have occasion to subsequently withdraw the recognition from a
+reminiscence which I had preliminarily admitted. In spite of the
+deceptive appearance of an urgent contradiction, whatever came
+to the surface finally proved itself correct.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Those ideas which originate in the deepest layer, and from the
+nucleus of the pathogenic organization, are only with the greatest
+difficulty recognized by the patient as reminiscences. Even after
+everything is accomplished, when the patients are overcome by
+the logical force and are convinced of the curative effect accompanying
+the emerging of this idea—I say even if the patients
+themselves assume that they have thought “so” and “so” they
+often add, “but to recall, that I have thought so, I cannot.” One
+readily comes to an understanding with them by saying that these
+were unconscious thoughts. But how should we note this state
+of affairs in our own psychological views? Should we pay no
+heed to the patient’s demurring recognition which has no motive
+after the work has been completed; should we assume that it was
+really a question of thoughts which never occurred, and for which
+there is only a possibility of existence so that the therapy would
+consist in the consummation of a psychic act which at that time
+never took place? It is obviously impossible to state anything
+about it, that is, to state anything concerning the condition of the
+pathogenic material previous to the analysis, before one has thoroughly
+explained his psychological views especially concerning the
+essence of consciousness. It is a fact worthy of reflection that in
+such analyses one can follow a stream of thought from the conscious
+into the unconscious (that is, absolutely not recognized as
+a reminiscence) thence draw it for some distance through the
+consciousness, and again see it end in the unconscious; and still
+this variation of the psychic elucidation would change nothing in
+it, in its logicalness, and in a single part of its connection. Should
+I then have this stream of thought freely before me, I could not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>conjecture what part was, and what part was not recognized by
+the patient as a reminiscence. In a measure I see only the points
+of the stream of thought merging into the unconscious, just the
+reverse of that which has been claimed for our normal psychic
+processes.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>I still have another theme to treat which plays an undesirably
+great part in the work of such a cathartic analysis. I have
+already admitted the possibility that the pressure procedure may
+fail and despite all assurance and urging it may evoke no reminiscences.
+I also stated that two possibilities are to be considered,
+there is really nothing to evoke in the place where we
+investigate—that can be recognized by the perfectly calm expression
+of the patient—or, we have struck against a resistance to be
+overcome only at some future time. We are confronted with a
+new layer into which we cannot as yet penetrate, and this can
+again be read from the drawn and psychic exertion of the patient’s
+expression. A third cause may be possible which also indicates
+an obstacle, not as to the purport, but externally. This cause
+occurs when the relation of the patient to the physician is disturbed,
+and signifies the worst obstacle that can be encountered.
+One may consider that in every more serious analysis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I have already alluded to the important rôle falling to the personality
+of the physician in the creation of motives which are to
+overcome the psychic force of the resistance. In not a few cases,
+especially in women and where we deal with the explanation of
+erotic streams of thought, the cooperation of the patient becomes
+a personal sacrifice which must be recompensed by some kind of
+a substitute of love. The great effort and the patient friendliness
+for the physician suffice as such substitutes. If this relation of
+the patient to the physician is disturbed the readiness of the
+patient fails; if the physician desires information concerning the
+next pathogenic idea, the patient is confronted by the consciousness
+of the unpleasantness which has accumulated in her against
+the physician. As far as I have discovered this obstacle occurs in
+three principal cases:</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>1. In personal estrangement, if the patient believes herself
+slighted, disparaged and insulted, or if she hears unfavorable
+accounts concerning the physician and his methods of treatment.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>This is the least serious case. The obstacle can readily be overcome
+by discussion and explanation, although the sensitiveness
+and the suspicion of hysterics can occasionally manifest itself in
+unsuspected dimensions.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>2. If the patient is seized with the fear that she becomes too
+accustomed to her physician, that in his presence she loses her
+independence and could even become sexually dependent upon
+him; this case is more significant because it is less determined
+individually. The occasion for this obstacle lies in the nature
+of the therapeutic distress. The patient has now a new motive
+to resist which manifests itself, not only in a certain reminiscence
+but at each attempt of the treatment. Whenever the pressure
+procedure is started the patient usually complains of headache.
+Her new motive for the resistance remains to her for the most
+part unconscious, and she manifests it by a newly created hysterical
+symptom. The headache signifies the aversion towards
+being influenced.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>3. If the patient fears lest the painful ideas emerging from the
+content of the analysis would be transferred to the physician.
+This happens frequently, and, indeed, in many analyses it is a
+regular occurrence. The transference to the physician occurs
+through false connections.<a id='r35'></a><a href='#f35' class='c012'><sup>[35]</sup></a> I must here give an example. The
+origin of a certain hysterical symptom in one of my hysterical
+patients was the wish she entertained years ago which was immediately
+banished into the unconscious, that the man with whom
+she at that time conversed would heartily grasp her and force a
+kiss on her. After the ending of a session such a wish occurred
+to the patient in reference to me. She was horrified and spent
+a sleepless night, and at the next session, although she did not
+refuse the treatment she was totally unfit for the work. After
+I had discovered the obstacle and removed it, the work continued.
+The wish that so frightened the patient appeared as the next
+pathogenic reminiscence, that is, as the one now required by the
+logical connection. It came about in the following manner:
+The content of the wish at first appeared in the patient’s consciousness
+without the recollection of the accessory circumstances
+which would have transferred this wish into the past. By the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>associative force prevailing in consciousness the existing wish
+became connected with my own person, with which the patient
+could naturally occupy herself, and in this mesalliance—which I
+call a false connection—the same affect became reawakened which
+originally urged the patient to banish this clandestine wish. As
+soon as I discovered this I could presuppose every similar claim
+on my personality to be another transference and false connection.
+It is remarkable how the patient falls a victim to deception on
+every new occasion.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>No analysis can be brought to an end if one does not know how
+to meet the resistances resulting from the causes mentioned. The
+way can be found if one bears in mind that the new symptom
+produced after the old model should be treated like the old symptoms.
+In the first place it is necessary to make the patient conscious
+of the obstacle. In one of my patients, in whom the pressure
+symptoms suddenly failed and I had cause to assume an unconscious
+idea like the one mentioned in 2, I met it for the first
+time with an unexpected attack. I told her that there must have
+originated some obstacle against the continuation of the treatment
+and that the pressure procedure has at least the power to
+show her the obstacle, and then pressed her head. She then said,
+surprisingly, “I see you sitting here on the chair, but that is nonsense,
+what can that mean?”—But now I could explain it.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In another patient the obstacle did not usually show itself
+directly on pressure, but I could always demonstrate it by taking
+the patient back to the moment in which it originated. The
+pressure procedure never failed to bring back this moment. By
+discovering and demonstrating the obstacle, the first difficulty was
+removed, but a greater one still remained. The difficulty lay in
+inducing the patient to give information where there was an
+obvious personal relation and where the third person coincided
+with the physician. At first I was very much annoyed about the
+increase of this psychic work until I had learned to see the lawful
+part of this whole process, and I then also noticed that such a
+transference does not cause any considerable increase in the work.
+The work of the patient remained the same, she perhaps had to
+overcome the painful affect of having entertained such a wish,
+and it seemed to be the same for the success whether she took
+this psychic repulsion as a theme of the work in the historical
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>case or in the recent case with me. The patients also gradually
+learned to see that in such transferences to the person of the
+physician they generally dealt with a force or a deception which
+disappeared when the analysis was accomplished. I believe, however,
+that if I should have delayed in making clear to them the
+nature of the obstacle, I would have given them a new, though a
+milder, hysterical symptom for another spontaneously developed.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>I now believe that I have sufficiently indicated how such
+analyses should be executed, and the experiences connected with
+them. They perhaps make some things appear more complicated
+than they are, for many things really result by themselves during
+such work. I have not enumerated the difficulties of the work
+in order to give the impression that in view of such requirements
+it pays for the physician and patient to undertake a cathartic
+analysis only in the rarest cases. I allow my medical activities to
+be inflected by the contrary suppositions.—To be sure I am
+unable to formulate the most definite indications for the application
+of the here discussed therapeutic method without entering
+into the valuation of the more significant and more comprehensive
+theme of the therapy of the neuroses in general. I have often
+compared the cathartic psychotherapy to surgical measures, and
+designated my cures as psychotherapeutic operations; the analogies
+follow the opening of a pus pocket, the curetting of a
+carious location, etc. Such an analogy finds its justification, not
+so much in the removal of the morbid as in the production of
+better curative conditions for the issue of the process.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>When I promised my patients help and relief through the
+cathartic method, I was often obliged to hear the following objections:
+“You say, yourself, that my suffering has probably to
+do with my own relation and destinies. You cannot change any
+of that. In what manner, then, can you help me?” To this I
+could always answer: “I do not doubt at all that it would be
+easier for destiny than for me to remove your sufferings, but you
+will be convinced that much will be gained if we succeed in transforming
+your hysterical misery into everyday unhappiness, against
+which you will be better able to defend yourself with a restored
+nervous system.”</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER V.<br> <span class='c013'><span class='sc'>The Defense Neuro-psychoses.</span><br> <span class='sc'>A Tentative Psychological Theory of Acquired Hysteria, many Phobias and Obsessions, and Certain Hallucinatory Psychoses.</span></span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>After an exhaustive study of many nervous patients afflicted
+with phobias and obsessions a tentative explanation of these symptoms
+urged itself upon me. This helped me afterwards happily to
+divine the origin of such morbid ideas in new and other cases, and
+I therefore believe it worthy of reporting and further examination.
+Simultaneously with this “psychological theory of phobias
+and obsessions,” the examination of these patients resulted in a
+contribution to the theory of hysteria, or rather in an alteration of
+the same, which seems to imply an important and common character
+to hysteria as well as the mentioned neuroses. Furthermore,
+I had the opportunity to look into the psychological mechanism of
+a form of indubitable psychic disease and found that my attempted
+observation shows an intelligible connection between
+these psychoses and the two neuroses mentioned. At the conclusion
+of this theme I will describe the supporting hypothesis which
+I have used in all three cases.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>I.</h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>I am beginning with that alteration which seems to be necessary
+for the theory of the hysterical neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>That the symptom-complex of hysteria as far as it can be understood,
+justifies the assumption of a splitting of consciousness
+with the formation of separate psychic groups, has attained general
+recognition since P. Janet, J. Breuer, and others have given
+out their interesting work. Less understood are the opinions concerning
+the origin of this splitting of consciousness and concerning
+the rôle played by this character in the structure of the hysterical
+neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>According to Janet’s<a id='r36'></a><a href='#f36' class='c012'><sup>[36]</sup></a> theory, the splitting of consciousness is a
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>primary feature of the hysterical alteration. It is due to a congenital
+weakness of the capacity for psychic synthesis, and to a
+narrowing of the “field of consciousness” (champ du conscience)
+which as a psychic stigma proves the degeneration of hysterical
+individuals.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In contradistinction to Janet’s views, which in my opinion admit
+the most manifold objections, are those advocated by J. Breuer
+in our joint communication. According to Breuer, the “basis
+and determination” of hysteria is the occurrence of peculiar
+dream-like conscious states with a narrowed association capacity,
+for which he proposes the name “hypnoid states.” The splitting
+of consciousness is secondary and acquired, and originates because
+the ideas emerging in the hypnoid states are isolated from
+associative communication with the rest of consciousness.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I can now demonstrate two other extreme forms of hysteria in
+which it is impossible to show that the splitting of consciousness
+is primary in the sense of Janet. In the first of these forms I
+could repeatedly show that the splitting of the content of consciousness
+was an arbitrary act of the patient, that is, it was
+initiated through an exertion of the will which motive can be
+stated. I naturally do not maintain that the patient intended to
+produce a splitting of his consciousness; the patient’s intention
+was different, but instead of attaining its aim it provoked a splitting
+of consciousness.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In the third form of hysteria, as we have demonstrated by psychic-analysis
+of intelligent patients, the splitting of consciousness
+plays only an insignificant and perhaps really no rôle. This includes
+those cases in which there had been no reaction to the traumatic
+stimulus and which were then adjusted and cured by ab-reaction.
+They are the pure retention hysterias.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In connection with the phobias and obsessions I have only to
+deal here with the second form of hysteria which for reasons to
+be presently explained I will designate as defense hysteria and
+thus distinguish it from the hypnoid and retention hysterias. Preliminarily
+I am able to call my cases of defense hysteria
+“acquired” hysterias for they show neither marked hereditary
+taints nor any degenerative disfigurements.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In those patients whom I have analyzed there existed psychic
+health until the moment in which a case of incompatibility occurred
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>in their ideation, that is, until there appeared an experience,
+idea, or feeling which evoked such a painful affect that the
+person decided to forget it because he did not trust his own
+ability to remove the resistance between the unbearable ideas and
+his ego.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Such incompatible ideas originate in the feminine sex on the
+basis of sexual experiences and feelings. With all desired precision
+the patients recall their efforts of defense, their intention
+“to push it away,” not to think of it, to repress it. As appropriate
+examples I can easily cite the following cases from my own experience:
+A young lady reproached herself because, while nursing
+her sick father, she thought of a young man who made a slight
+erotic impression on her; a governess fell in love with her employer
+and decided to crowd it out of her mind because it was
+incompatible with her pride, etc.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I am unable to maintain that the exertion of the will, in crowding
+such thoughts out of one’s mind, is a pathological act, nor am
+I able to state whether and how, the intentional forgetting succeeds
+in those persons who remain well under the same psychic
+influences. I only know that in the patients whom I analyzed such
+“forgetting” was unsuccessful and led to either a hysteria, obsession,
+or a hallucinatory psychosis. The ability to produce, by
+the exertion of the will one of these states all of which are connected
+with the splitting of consciousness, is to be considered as
+the expression of a pathological disposition, but it need not necessarily
+be identified with <a id='t123'></a>personal or hereditary “degeneration.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Over the road leading from the patient’s exertion of the will to
+the origin of a neurotic symptom I formed a conception which in
+the current psychological abstractions may be thus expressed: The
+task assumed by the defensive ego to treat the incompatible idea
+as “non arrivée” can not be directly accomplished. The memory
+trace as well as the affect adhering to the idea are here and can
+not be exterminated. The task can however, be brought to an
+approximate solution if it is possible to change the strong idea
+into a weak one and to take away the affect or sum of excitement
+which adheres to it. The weak idea will then exert almost no
+claims on the association work; but the separated sum of excitement
+must be utilized in another direction.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Thus far the processes are the same in hysteria, in phobias and
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>obsessions, but from now on their ways part. The unbearable
+idea in hysteria is rendered harmless because the sum of excitement
+is transformed into physical manifestations, a process for
+which I would like to propose the term conversion.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The conversion may be total or partial, and follows that motor
+or sensory innervation which is either ultimately or more loosely
+connected with the traumatic experience. In this way the ego
+succeeds in freeing itself from opposition but instead it becomes
+burdened with a memory symbol which remains in consciousness
+as an unadjusted motor innervation, or as a constantly recurring
+hallucinatory sensation similar to a parasite. It thus remains
+fixed until a conversion takes place in the opposite direction. The
+memory symbol of the repressed idea does not perish, but from
+now on forms the nucleus for a second psychic group.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I will follow up this view of the psycho-physical processes in
+hysteria with a few more words. If such a nucleus for an hysterical
+splitting is once formed in a “traumatic moment” it then
+increases in other moments which might be designated as “auxiliary
+traumatic” as soon as a newly formed similar impression
+succeeds in breaking through the barrier formed by the will and in
+adding new affects to the weakened idea, and in forcing for a
+while the associative union of both psychic groups until a new
+conversion produces defense. The condition thus attained in
+hysteria in regard to the distribution of the excitement, proves
+to be unstable in most cases. As shown by the familiar contrast
+of the attacks and the persistent symptoms, the excitement which
+was pushed on a false path (in the bodily innervation) now and
+then returns to the idea from which it was discharged and forces
+the person to associative elaboration or to adjustment in hysterical
+attacks. The effect of Breuer’s cathartic method consists in the
+fact that it consciously reconducts the excitement from the physical
+into the psychic spheres and then forces an adjustment of
+the contradiction through intellectual work, and a discharge of
+the excitement through speech.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>If the splitting of consciousness in acquired hysteria is due to
+an act of volition we can explain with surprising simplicity the remarkable
+fact that hypnosis regularly broadens the narrowed
+consciousness of hysteria, and causes the split off psychic groups
+to become accessible. For we know that it is peculiar to all
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>sleep-like states to remove that distribution of excitement which
+depends on the “will” of the conscious personality.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>We accordingly recognize that the characteristic moment of
+hysteria is not the splitting of consciousness but the ability of
+conversion, and as an important part of the hitherto unknown disposition
+of hysteria we can mention the psycho-physical adaptation
+for the transference of a great sum of excitement into bodily
+innervation.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The adaptation does not in itself exclude psychic health, and
+leads to hysteria only in event of a psychic incompatibility or
+accumulation of excitement. With this turn, we—Breuer and I—come
+near to the familiar definitions of hysteria of Oppenheim<a id='r37'></a><a href='#f37' class='c012'><sup>[37]</sup></a>
+and Strümpel,<a id='r38'></a><a href='#f38' class='c012'><sup>[38]</sup></a> and deviate from Janet,<a id='r39'></a><a href='#f39' class='c012'><sup>[39]</sup></a> who assigns to the splitting
+of consciousness too great a rôle in the characteristics of
+hysteria. The description here given can lay claim to the fact
+that it explains the connection between the conversion and the
+hysterical splitting of consciousness.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>II</h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>In a predisposed person if there is no adaptation for conversion,
+and still for the purpose of defense a separation of the unbearable
+idea from its affect is undertaken, the affect must then remain in
+the psychic sphere. The weakened idea remains apart from all
+association in consciousness, but its freed affect attaches itself to
+other not in themselves unbearable ideas, which on account of this
+“false” connection become obsessions. This is in brief the psychological
+theory of the obsessions and phobias concerning which
+I have spoken above.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>I will now state what parts demanded in this theory can be directly
+demonstrated and what parts I have supplemented. Besides
+the end product of the process, the obsession, we can in the
+first place directly demonstrate the source from which the affect
+in the false connection originates. In all cases that I have analyzed
+it was the sexual life that has furnished a painful affect
+of precisely the same character as the one attached to the obsession.
+It is not theoretically excluded that this affect could not
+occasionally originate in other spheres, but I must say that thus
+far I have found no other origin. Moreover, one can readily
+understand that it is precisely the sexual life which furnishes the
+most manifold occasions for the appearance of unbearable ideas.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Moreover, the exertion of the will, the attempt at defence,
+upon which this theory lays stress is demonstrated by the most
+unequivocal utterances of the patients. At least in a number of
+cases the patients themselves inform us that the phobia or obsession
+appeared only after the exertion of the will manifestly gained
+its point. “Something very disagreeable happened to me once
+and I have exerted all my power to push it away, not to think of
+it. When I have finally succeeded I have gotten the other thing
+instead, which I have not lost since.” With these words a patient
+verified the main points of the theory here developed.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Not all who suffer from obsessions are so clear concerning the
+origin of the same. As a rule when we call the patient’s attention
+to the original idea of a sexual nature we receive the following
+answer: “It could not have come from that. Why I have not
+thought much about it. For a moment I was frightened, then I
+distracted myself and since then it has not bothered me.” In
+this, so frequent objection, we have the proof that the obsession
+represents a compensation or substitute for the unbearable sexual
+idea, and that it has taken its place in consciousness.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Between the patient’s exertion of the will which succeeds in
+repressing the unacceptable sexual idea and the appearance of the
+obsession, which though in itself of little intensity, is here furnished
+with inconceivably strong affect, there is a yawning gap
+which the theory here developed will fill. The separation of the
+sexual idea from its affect and the connection of the latter with
+another suitable but not unbearable idea—these are processes
+which take place unconsciously which we can only presume but not
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>prove by any clinico-psychological analysis. Perhaps it would be
+more correct to say that these are not really processes of a psychic
+nature but physical processes of which the psychic result so presents
+itself that the expressions “separation of the idea from its
+affect and false connection of the latter,” seem actual occurrences.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Besides the cases evincing in turn the sexual unbearable idea
+and the obsession we find a series of others in which there are
+simultaneously obsessions and painfully accentuated sexual ideas.
+It will not do very well to call the latter “sexual obsessions”;
+they lack the essential character of obsessions in proving themselves
+fully justified, whereas the painfulness of the ordinary obsession
+is a problem for the doctor as well as the patient. From
+the amount of insight that could be obtained in such cases, it
+seems that we deal here with a continued defense against sexual
+ideas which are constantly renewed, a work heretofore not accomplished.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>As long as the patients are aware of the sexual origin of their
+obsessions they often conceal them. If they complain they generally
+express surprise that this affect underlies the symptoms, at
+being afraid, and at having certain impulses, etc. To the experienced
+physician, however, the affect appears justified and intelligible;
+he finds the striking part only in the connection of
+such an affect with an idea unworthy of it. In other words the
+affect of the obsession appears to him as one dislocated or transposed,
+and if he has accepted the observations here laid down he
+can in a great many cases of obsessions attempt a retranslation
+into the sexual.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Any idea which either through its character may be combinable
+with an affect of such quality or which bears a certain relation to
+the unbearable by virtue of which it seems fit as a substitute for
+the same, may be used for the secondary connection of the freed
+affect. Thus, for example, freed anxiety, the sexual origin of
+which can not be recalled, attaches itself to the common primary
+phobias of man for animals, thunderstorms, darkness, etc., or to
+things which are unmistakably in some way associated with the
+sexual, such as urination, defecation, pollutions and infections.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The advantage gained by the ego in the transposition of the
+affect for the purpose of defense is considerably less than in the
+hysterical conversion of psychic excitement into somatic innervation.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>The affect under which the ego has suffered remains now
+as ever unchanged and undiminished, but the unbearable idea is
+suppressed and excluded from memory. The repressed ideas
+again form the nucleus of a second psychic group which I believe
+can be accessible without having recourse to hypnotism. That
+in the phobias and obsessions there appear none of the striking
+symptoms which in hysteria accompany the formation of an independent
+psychic group, is due to the fact that in the former
+case the whole transformation remains in the psychic sphere and
+the somatic innervation experiences no change.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>What I have here said concerning obsessions I will explain by
+some examples which are probably of a typical nature:</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>1. A young girl suffers from obsessive reproaches. If she
+reads anything in the journal about false coiners she conceives
+the thought that she too, made counterfeit money; if a murder
+was anywhere committed by an unknown assassin she anxiously
+asked herself whether she had not committed this crime. At the
+same time she is perfectly aware of the absurdity of these obsessive
+reproaches. For a time the consciousness of her guilt gained
+such a power over her that her judgment was suppressed, and she
+accused herself before her relatives and physician of having really
+committed all these crimes (Psychosis through simple aggravation—overwhelming
+psychosis—Uberwältigungspsychose). A thorough
+examination revealed the source of the origin of this guilty
+conscience. Accidentally incited by a sensual feeling she allowed
+herself to be allured by a friend to masturbate. She practiced it
+for years with the full consciousness of her wrong doing, and
+under the most violent but useless self reproaches.—The girl was
+cured after a few months’ treatment and strict watching.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>2. Another girl suffered from the fear of getting sudden desires
+of micturition and of being forced to wet herself. This began
+after such a desire had really forced her to leave a concert hall
+during the performance. This phobia had gradually caused her
+to become quite incapable of any enjoyment and social relationship.
+She felt secure only when she knew that there was a toilet
+in the neighborhood to which she could repair unobserved. An
+organic suffering which might have justified this lack of confidence
+of the control of the bladder was excluded. At home
+among quiet surroundings and during the night there was no such
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>desire to micturate. Detailed examination showed that the desire
+to micturate appeared for the first time under the following conditions:
+A gentleman to whom she was not indifferent took a
+seat in the concert hall not far from her. She began to think and
+to picture to herself how she would sit near him as his wife. In
+this erotic revery she experienced that physical feeling which
+must be compared to erection in the man, and which in her—I
+do not know whether it is general—ended in a slight desire to
+micturate. She now became extremely frightened over her otherwise
+accustomed sexual sensation because she had determined to
+overcome this as well as every desire, and in the next moment the
+affect transposed itself to the accompanying desire to micturate
+and forced her to leave the hall after a very painful struggle.
+In her life she was so prudish that she experienced an intensive
+horror for all things sexual, and could not conceive the thought of
+ever marrying; on the other hand she was sexually so hyperesthetic
+that during every erotic revery, which she gladly allowed
+herself, there appeared sensual feeling. The erection was always
+accompanied by the desire to micturate, and up to the time of the
+scene in the concert hall it had made no impression on her. The
+treatment led to an almost complete control of the phobia.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>3. A young woman who had only one child after five years of
+married life complained of obsessive impulses to throw herself
+from the window or balcony, and of fears lest at the sight of a
+sharp knife she might kill her child. She admitted that the marriage
+relations were seldom practised and then only with caution
+against conception; but she added that she did not miss this as she
+was not of a sensual nature. I then ventured to tell her that at
+the sight of a man she conceives erotic ideas, and that she therefore
+lost confidence in herself and imagined herself a depraved
+person fit for anything. The retranslation of the obsession into
+the sexual was successful; weeping, she soon admitted her long
+concealed marital misery, and then mentioned painful ideas of an
+unchanged sexual character such as the often recurring sensation
+of something forcing itself under her skirts.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I have made use of such experiences in the therapy of phobias
+and obsessions, and despite the patient’s resistances I have redirected
+the attention to the repressed sexual ideas, and wherever
+feasible I have blocked the sources from which the same originated.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>To be sure I cannot maintain that all phobias and obsessions
+originate in the manner here revealed; first, my experience,
+in proportion to the abundance of these neuroses, embraces only
+a limited amount, and second, I, myself, know that these “psychasthenic”
+symptoms (according to Janet’s designation) are not all
+of the same value.<a id='r40'></a><a href='#f40' class='c012'><sup>[40]</sup></a> Thus, for instance, there are pure hysterical
+phobias. But I believe that the mechanism of the transposition
+of the affect will be demonstrated in the greater part of the phobias
+and obsessions, and I must assert that these neuroses, which
+are found just as often isolated as combined with hysteria and
+neurasthenia, are not to be thrown together with the ordinary
+neurasthenia for which fundamental symptom a psychic mechanism
+is not all to be assumed.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>III.</h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>In both cases thus far considered the defense of the unbearable
+idea was brought about by the separation of the same from its
+affect; the idea though weakened and isolated remained in consciousness.
+There exists, however, a far more energetic and more
+successful form of defense wherein the ego misplaces the unbearable
+idea with its affect, and behaves as though the unbearable
+idea had never approached the ego. But at the moment when
+this is brought about the person suffers from a psychosis which
+can only be classified as an “hallucinatory confusion.” A single
+example will explain this assertion. A young girl gives her first
+impulsive love to a man who she firmly believed reciprocated her
+love. As a matter of fact she was mistaken; the young man had
+other motives for visiting her. It was not long before she was
+disappointed; at first she defended herself against it by converting
+hysterically the corresponding experience, and thus came to believe
+that he would come some day to ask her in marriage; but in
+consequence of the imperfect conversion and the constant pressure
+of new painful impressions, she felt unhappy and ill. She finally
+expects him with the greatest tension on a definite day, it is the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>day of a family reunion. The day passes but he does not come.
+After all the trains on which he could have come have passed she
+suddenly merged into an hallucinatory confusion. She thought
+that he did come, she heard his voice in the garden, and hastened
+down in her night gown to receive him. For two months after
+she lived in a happy dream, the content of which was that he was
+there, that he was always with her, and that everything was as
+before (before the time of the painfully defended disappointment).
+The hysteria and depression were thus conquered; during
+her sickness she never mentioned anything about the last period
+of doubt and suffering; she was happy as long as she was left
+undisturbed, and frenzied only when a regulation of her environment
+prevented her from accomplishing something which she
+thought quite natural as a result of her blissful dream. This
+psychosis, unintelligible as it was in its time, was revealed ten
+years later through hypnotic analysis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The fact to which I call attention is this: That the content of
+such an hallucinatory psychosis consists in directly bringing into
+prominence that idea which was threatened by the motive of the
+disease. One is therefore justified in saying that through its
+flight into the psychosis the ego defended the unbearable idea;
+the process through which this has been brought about withdraws
+itself from self perception as well as from the psychological-clinical
+analysis. It is to be considered as the expression of a higher
+grade of pathological disposition, and can perhaps be explained as
+follows: The ego tears itself away from the unbearable idea, but
+as it hangs inseparably together with a part of reality, the ego
+while accomplishing this performance also detaches itself wholly
+or partially from reality. The latter is, in my opinion the condition
+under which hallucinatory vividness is decreed to particular
+ideas, and hence after very successful defense the person finds
+himself in a hallucinatory confusion.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I have but very few analyses of such psychoses at my disposal;
+but I believe that we deal with a very frequently employed type
+of psychic illness. For analogous examples such as the mother
+who becoming sick after the loss of her child continues to rock
+in her arms a piece of wood, or the jilted bride who in full dress
+expects her bridegroom, can be seen in every insane asylum.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It will perhaps not be superfluous to mention that the three
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>forms of defense here considered, and hence the three forms of
+disease to which this defense leads may be united in the same
+person. The simultaneous occurrence of phobias and hysterical
+symptoms, so frequently observed in praxis, really belongs to those
+moments which impede a pure separation of hysteria from other
+neuroses and urge the formation of the “mixed neuroses.” To
+be sure the hallucinatory confusion is not frequently compatible
+with the continuation of hysteria and not as a rule with obsessions;
+but on the other hand it is not rare that a defense psychosis
+should episodically break through the course of a hysteria or
+mixed neurosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>In conclusion I will mention in few words the subsidiary idea
+of which I have made use in this discussion of the defense neuroses.
+It is the idea that there is something to distinguish in all
+psychic functions (amount of affect, sum of excitement), that
+all qualities have a quantity though we have no means to measure
+the same—it is something that can be increased, diminished, displaced,
+and discharged, and that extends over the memory traces
+of the ideas perhaps like an electric charge over the surface of the
+body.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This hypothesis, which also underlies our theory of “ab-reaction”
+(“Preliminary Communication”), can be used in the same
+sense as the physicist uses the assumption of the current of electric
+fluid. It is preliminarily justified through its usefulness in the
+comprehension and elucidation of diverse psychic states.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VI.<br> <span class='c013'><span class='sc'>On the Right to Separate from Neurasthenia a Definite Symptom-complex as “Anxiety Neurosis”</span><br> (<span class='sc'>Angstneurose</span>).</span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>It is difficult to assert anything of general validity concerning
+neurasthenia as long as this term is allowed to express all that for
+which Beard used it. I believe that neuropathology can only gain
+by an attempt to separate from the actual neurosis all those
+neurotic disturbances the symptoms of which are on the one hand
+more firmly connected among themselves than to the typical
+neurasthenic symptoms, such as headache, spinal irritation, dyspepsia
+with flatulence and constipation, and which on the other
+hand show essential differences from the typical neurasthenic
+neurosis in their etiology and mechanism. If we accept this plan
+we will soon gain quite a uniform picture of neurasthenia. We
+will soon be able to differentiate—sharper than we have hitherto
+succeeded—from the real neurasthenia the different pseudoneurasthenias,
+such as the organically determined nasal reflex
+neurosis, the neurotic disturbances of cachexias and arteriosclerosis,
+the early stages of progressive paralysis, and of some
+psychoses. Furthermore, following the proposition of Moebius,
+some status nervosi of hereditary degenerates will be set aside
+and we will also find reasons for ascribing some of the neuroses
+which are now called neurasthenia to melancholia, especially those
+of an intermittent or periodic nature. But we force the way
+into the most marked changes if we decide to separate from
+neurasthenia that symptom-complex which I shall hereafter describe
+and which especially fulfills the conditions formulated
+above. The symptoms of this complex are clinically more related
+to one another than to the real neurasthenic symptoms, that is,
+they frequently appear together and substitute one another in the
+course of the disease, and both the etiology as well as the mechanism
+of this neurosis differs basically from the etiology and the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>mechanism of the real neurasthenia which remains after such a
+separation.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I call this symptom-complex “anxiety neurosis” (Angstneurose)
+because the sum of its components can be grouped around the
+main symptom of anxiety, because each individual symptom shows
+a definite relation to anxiety. I believed that I was original in
+this conception of the symptoms of anxiety neurosis until an
+interesting lecture by E. Hecker<a id='r41'></a><a href='#f41' class='c012'><sup>[41]</sup></a> fell into my hands. In this
+lecture I found the description of the same interpretation with all
+the desired clearness and completeness. To be sure, Hecker does
+not separate the equivalents or rudiments of the attack of anxiety
+from neurasthenia as I intend to do; but this is apparently due
+to the fact that neither here nor there has he taken into account
+the diversity of the etiological determinants. With the knowledge
+of the latter difference every obligation to designate the
+anxiety neurosis by the same name as the real neurasthenia disappears,
+for the only object of arbitrary naming is to facilitate
+the formulation of general assertions.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>I. <span class='sc'>Clinical Symptomatology of Anxiety Neurosis.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>What I call “anxiety neurosis” can be observed in complete or
+rudimentary development, either isolated or in combination with
+other neuroses. The cases which are in a measure complete, and
+at the same time isolated, are naturally those which especially corroborate
+the impression that the anxiety neurosis possesses
+clinical independence. In other cases we are confronted with the
+task of selecting and separating from a symptom-complex which
+corresponds to a “mixed neurosis,” all those symptoms which do
+not belong to neurasthenia, hysteria, etc., but to the anxiety
+neurosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The clinical picture of the anxiety neurosis comprises the following
+symptoms:</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>1. <em>General Irritability.</em>—This is a frequent nervous symptom,
+common as such to many nervous states. I mention it here because
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>it constantly occurs in the anxiety neurosis and is of theoretical
+significance. For increased irritability always points to an
+accumulation of excitement or to an inability to bear accumulation,
+hence to an absolute or relative accumulation of excitement.
+The expression of this increased irritability through an auditory
+hyperesthesia is especially worth mentioning; it is an over sensitiveness
+for noises, which symptom is certainly to be explained
+by the congenital intimate relationship between auditory impressions
+and fright. Auditory hyperesthesia is frequently found
+as a cause of insomnia, of which more than one form belongs to
+anxiety neurosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>2. <em>Anxious Expectation.</em>—I can not better explain the condition
+that I have in mind, than by this name and by some appended
+examples. A woman, for example, who suffers from anxious
+expectation thinks of influenza-pneumonia whenever her husband
+who is afflicted with a catarrhal condition has a coughing spell;
+and in her mind she sees a passing funeral procession. If on her
+way home she sees two persons standing together in front of her
+house she can not refrain from the thought that one of her
+children fell out of the window; if she hears the bell ring she
+thinks that someone is bringing her mournful tidings, etc.; yet in
+none of these cases is there any special reason for exaggerating
+a mere possibility.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The anxious expectation naturally reflects itself constantly in the
+normal, and embraces all that is designated as “uneasiness and a
+tendency to a pessimistic conception of things,” but as often as
+possible it goes beyond such a plausible uneasiness, and it is frequently
+recognized as a part of constraint even by the patient
+himself. For one form of anxious expectation, namely, that
+which refers to one’s own health, we can reserve the old name of
+hypochondria. Hypochondria does not always run parallel with
+the height of the general anxious expectation; as a preliminary
+stipulation it requires the existence of paresthesias and annoying
+somatic sensations. Hypochondria is thus the form preferred
+by the genuine neurasthenics whenever they merge into the
+anxiety neurosis, a thing which frequently happens.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>As a further manifestation of anxious expectation we may
+mention the frequent tendency observed in morally sensitive
+persons to pangs of conscience, scrupulosity, and pedantry, which
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>varies as it were, from the normal to its aggravation as doubting
+mania.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Anxious expectation is the most essential symptom of the
+neurosis; it also clearly shows a part of its theory. It can perhaps
+be said that we have here a quantum of freely floating anxiety
+which controls the choice of ideas by expectation and is forever
+ready to unite itself with any suitable ideation.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>3. This is not the only way in which the anxiousness, usually
+latent but constantly lurking in consciousness, can manifest itself.
+On the contrary it can also suddenly break into consciousness
+without being aroused by the issue of an idea, and thus provoke
+an attack of anxiety. Such an attack of anxiety consists of
+either the anxious feeling alone without any associated idea, or of
+the nearest interpretation of the termination of life, such as the
+idea of “sudden death” or threatening insanity; or the feeling of
+anxiety becomes mixed with some paresthesia (similar to the
+hysterical aura); or finally the anxious feeling may be combined
+with a disturbance of one or many somatic functions, such as
+respiration, cardiac activity, the vasomotor innervation, and the
+glandular activity. From this combination the patient renders
+especially prominent now this and now the other moment. He
+complains of “heartspasms,” “heavy breathing,” “profuse perspiration,”
+“inordinate appetite,” etc., and in his description the
+feeling of anxiety is put to the background or it is rather vaguely
+described as “feeling badly,” “uncomfortably,” etc.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>4. What is interesting and of diagnostic significance is the fact
+that the amount of admixture of these elements in the attack of
+anxiety varies extraordinarily, and that almost any accompanying
+symptom can alone constitute the attack as well as the anxiety
+itself. Accordingly there are rudimentary attacks of anxiety,
+and equivalents for the attack of anxiety, probably all of equal
+significance in showing a profuse and hitherto little appreciated
+richness in forms. A more thorough study of these larvated
+states of anxiety (Hecker) and their diagnostic division from
+other attacks ought soon to become the necessary work for the
+neuropathologist.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I now add a list of those forms of attacks of anxiety with
+which I am acquainted. There are attacks:</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>a</em>) With disturbances of heart action, such as palpitation with
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>transitory arrythmia, with longer continued tachycardia up to
+grave states of heart weakness, the differentiation of which from
+organic heart affection is not always easy; among such we have
+the pseudo-angina pectoris, a delicate diagnostic sphere!</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>b</em>) With disturbances of respiration, many forms of nervous
+dyspnoea, asthma-like attacks, etc. I assert that even these attacks
+are not always accompanied by conscious anxiety;</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>c</em>) Of profuse perspiration, often nocturnal;</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>d</em>) Of trembling and shaking which may readily be mistaken
+for hysterical attacks;</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>e</em>) Of inordinate appetite, often combined with dizziness;</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>f</em>) Of attack-like appearing diarrhoea;</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>g</em>) Of locomotor dizziness;</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>h</em>) Of so called congestions, embracing all that was called
+vasomotor neurasthenia; and,</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>i</em>) Of paresthesias (These are seldom without anxiety or a
+similar discomfort).</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>5. Very frequently the nocturnal frights (pavor nocturnus of
+adults) usually combined with anxiety, dyspnoea, perspiration, etc.,
+is nothing other than a variety of the attack of anxiety. This
+disturbance determines a second form of insomnia in the sphere
+of the anxiety neurosis. Moreover I became convinced that even
+the pavor nocturnus of children evinces a form belonging to the
+anxiety neurosis. The hysterical tinge and the connection of
+the fear with the reproduction of appropriate experience or
+dream, makes the pavor nocturnus of children appear as something
+peculiar, but it also occurs alone without a dream or a recurring
+hallucination.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>6. “<em>Vertigo.</em>”—This in its lightest forms is better designated
+as “dizziness,” assumes a prominent place in the group of
+symptoms of anxiety neurosis. In its severer forms the “attack
+of vertigo,” with or without fear, belongs to the gravest symptoms
+of the neurosis. The vertigo of the anxiety neurosis is
+neither a rotatory dizziness nor is it confined to certain planes or
+lines like Menier’s vertigo. It belongs to the locomotor or coordinating
+vertigo, like the vertigo in paralysis of the ocular
+muscles; it consists in a specific feeling of discomfort which is
+accompanied by sensations of a heaving ground, sinking legs, of
+the impossibility to continue in an upright position, and at the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>same time there is a feeling that the legs are as heavy as lead, they
+shake, or give way. This vertigo never leads to falling. On the
+other hand, I would like to state that such an attack of vertigo
+may also be substituted by a profound attack of syncope. Other
+fainting-like states in the anxiety neurosis seem to depend on a
+cardiac collapse.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The vertigo attack is frequently accompanied by the worst kind
+of anxiety and is often combined with cardiac and respiratory
+disturbances. Vertigo of elevations, mountains and precipices,
+can also be frequently observed in anxiety neurosis; moreover, I
+do not know whether we are still justified in recognizing a
+vertigo “a stomacho laeso.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>7. On the basis of the chronic anxiousness (anxious expectation)
+on the one hand, and the tendency to vertiginous attacks
+of anxiety on the other, there develop two groups of typical
+phobias; the first refers to the general physiological menaces,
+while the second refers to locomotion. To the first group belong
+the fear for snakes, thunderstorms, darkness, vermin, etc., as well
+as the typical moral overscrupulousness, and the forms of doubting mania.
+Here the available fear is merely used to strengthen
+those aversions which are instinctively implanted in every man.
+But usually a compulsively acting phobia is formed only after a
+reminiscence is added to an experience in which this fear could
+manifest itself; as, for example, after the patient has experienced
+a storm in the open air. To attempt to explain such cases as
+mere continuations of strong impressions is incorrect. What
+makes these experiences significant and their reminiscences durable
+is after all only the fear which could at that time appear and
+can also appear today. In other words such impressions remain
+forceful only in persons with “anxious expectations.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The other group contains agoraphobia with all its accessory
+forms, all of which are characterized by their relation to locomotion.
+As a determination of the phobia we frequently find a
+precedent attack of vertigo; I do not think that it can always
+be postulated. Occasionally, after a first attack of vertigo without
+fear, we see that though locomotion is always accompanied by
+the sensation of vertigo, it remains possible without any restrictions,
+but as soon as fear attaches itself to the attack of
+vertigo, locomotion fails, under the conditions of being alone,
+narrow streets, etc.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>The relation of these phobias to the phobias of obsessions,
+which mechanism I discussed above,<a id='r42'></a><a href='#f42' class='c012'><sup>[42]</sup></a> is as follows: The agreement
+lies in the fact that here as there, an idea becomes obsessive
+through its connection with an available affect. The mechanism
+of transposition of the affect therefore holds true for both kinds
+of phobias. But in phobias of the anxiety neurosis this affect is
+(1) a monotonous one, it is always one of anxiety; (2) it does
+not originate from a repressed idea, and on psychological analysis
+it proves itself not further reducible, nor can it be attacked
+through psychotherapy. The mechanism of substitution does
+not therefore hold true for the phobias of anxiety neurosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Both kinds of phobias (or obsessions) often occur side by side,
+though the atypical phobias which depend on obsessions need
+not necessarily develop on the basis of anxiety neurosis. A very
+frequent, ostensibly complicated mechanism appears if the content
+of an original simple phobia of anxiety neurosis is substituted by
+another idea, the substitution is then subsequently added to the
+phobia. The “protective measures” originally employed in combatting
+the phobia are most frequently used as substitutions.
+Thus, for example, from the effort to provide oneself with
+counter evidence that one is not crazy, contrary to the assertion
+of the hypochondriacal phobia, there results a reasoning mania.
+The hesitations, doubts, and the many repetitions of the folie du
+doute originate from the justified doubt concerning the certainty
+of one’s own stream of thoughts, for, through the compulsive
+like idea one is surely conscious of so obstinate a disturbance,
+etc. It may therefore be claimed that many syndromes of compulsion
+neurosis, like folie du doute and similar ones, can clinically,
+if not notionally be attributed to anxiety neurosis.<a id='r43'></a><a href='#f43' class='c012'><sup>[43]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'>8. The digestive functions in anxiety neurosis are subject to
+very few but characteristic disturbances. Sensations like nausea
+and sickly feeling are not rare, and the symptom of inordinate
+appetite alone or with other congestions, may serve as a rudimentary
+attack of anxiety. As a chronic alteration analogous to
+the anxious expectations one finds a tendency to diarrhea which
+has occasioned the queerest diagnostic mistakes. If I am not
+mistaken it is this diarrhea to which Moebius<a id='r44'></a><a href='#f44' class='c012'><sup>[44]</sup></a> has recently called
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>attention in a small article. I believe, moreover, that Peyer’s<a id='r45'></a><a href='#f45' class='c012'><sup>[45]</sup></a>
+reflex diarrhea which he attributes to a disease of the prostate
+is nothing other than the diarrhea of anxiety neurosis. The
+deceptive reflex relation is due to the fact that the same factors
+which are active in the origin of such prostatic affections also
+come into play in the etiology of anxiety neurosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The behavior of the gastro-intestinal function in anxiety
+neurosis shows a sharp contrast to the influence of this same
+function in neurasthenia. Mixed cases often show the familiar
+“fluctuations between diarrhea and constipation.” The desire to
+urinate in anxiety neurosis is analogous to the diarrhea.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>9. The paresthesias which accompany the attack of vertigo or
+anxiety are interesting because they associate themselves into a
+firm sequence, similar to the sensations of the hysterical aura.
+But in contrast to the hysterical aura I find these associated sensations
+atypical and changeable. Another similarity to hysteria
+is shown by the fact that in anxiety neurosis a kind of conversion<a id='r46'></a><a href='#f46' class='c012'><sup>[46]</sup></a>
+into bodily sensations, as for example into rheumatic muscles,
+takes place which otherwise can be overlooked at one’s pleasure.
+A large number of so called rheumatics, who are moreover
+demonstrable as such, really suffer from an anxiety neurosis.
+Besides this aggravation of the sensation of pain I have observed
+in a number of cases of anxiety neurosis a tendency towards
+hallucinations which could not be explained as hysterical.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>10. Many of the so called symptoms which accompany or substitute
+the attack of anxiety also appear in a chronic manner.
+They are then still less discernible, for the anxious feeling accompanying
+them appears more indistinct than in the attack of
+anxiety. This especially holds true for the diarrhea, vertigo, and
+paresthesias. Just as the attack of vertigo can be substituted by
+an attack of syncope, so can the chronic vertigo be substituted by
+the continuous feeling of feebleness, lassitude, etc.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>II. <span class='sc'>The Occurrence and Etiology of Anxiety Neurosis.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>In some cases of anxiety neurosis no etiology can readily be
+ascertained. It is noteworthy that in such cases it is seldom
+difficult to demonstrate a marked hereditary taint.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>Where we have reason to assume that the neurosis is acquired
+we can find by careful and laborious examination that the etiologically
+effective moments are based on a series of injuries and
+influences from the sexual life. These at first appear to be of a
+varied nature but easily display the common character which explains
+their homogeneous effect on the nervous system. They
+are found either alone or with other banal injuries to which a
+reinforcing effect can be attributed. This sexual etiology of
+anxiety neurosis can be demonstrated so preponderately often
+that I venture for the purpose of this brief communication to set
+aside all cases of a doubtful or different etiology.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>For the more precise description of the etiological determinations
+under which anxiety neurosis occurs, it will be advisable to
+treat separately those occurring in men and those occurring in
+women. Anxiety neurosis appears in women—disregarding their
+predisposition—in the following cases:</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>a</em>) As virginal fear or anxiety in adults. A number of unequivocal
+observations showed me that an anxiety neurosis, which
+is almost typically combined with hysteria, can be evoked in
+maturing girls, at the first encounter with the sexual problem, that
+is at the sudden revelation of the things hitherto veiled, by either
+seeing the sexual act, or by hearing or reading something of that
+nature;</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>b</em>) As fear in the newly married. Young women who remain
+anesthetic during the first cohabitation not seldom merge into
+an anxiety neurosis which disappears after the anesthesia is displaced
+by the normal sensation. As most young women remain
+undisturbed through such a beginning anesthesia, the production
+of this fear requires determinants which I will mention;</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>c</em>) As fear in women whose husbands suffer from ejaculatio
+precox or from diminished potency; and,</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>d</em>) In those whose husbands practice coitus interruptus or
+reservatus. These cases go together, for on analyzing a large
+number of examples one can easily be convinced that they only
+depend on whether the woman attained gratification during coitus
+or not. In the latter case one finds the determinant for the
+origin of anxiety neurosis. On the other hand the woman is
+spared from the neurosis if the husband afflicted by ejaculatio
+precox can repeat the congress with better results immediately
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>thereafter. The congressus reservatus by means of the condom
+is not injurious to the woman if she is quickly excited and the
+husband is very potent; in other cases the noxiousness of this
+kind of preventive measure is not inferior to the others. Coitus
+interruptus is almost regularly injurious; but for the woman it
+is injurious only if the husband practices it regardlessly, that is,
+if he interrupt coitus as soon as he comes near ejaculating without
+concerning himself about the determination of the excitement of
+his wife. On the other hand if the husband waits until his wife
+is gratified, the coitus has the same significance for the latter
+as a normal one; but then the husband becomes afflicted with an
+anxiety neurosis. I have collected and analyzed a number of
+cases which furnished the material for the above statements.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>e</em>) As fear in widows and intentional abstainers, not seldom
+in typical combination with obsessions; and,</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>f</em>) As fear in the climacterium during the last marked enhancement
+of the sexual desire.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The cases (<em>c</em>), (<em>d</em>), and (<em>e</em>), contain the determinants under
+which the anxiety neurosis originates in the female sex, most
+frequently and most independently, of hereditary predisposition.
+I will endeavor to demonstrate in these—curable, acquired—cases
+of anxiety neurosis that the discovered sexual injuries really
+represent the etiological moments of the neurosis. But before
+proceeding I will mention the sexual determinants of anxiety
+neurosis in men. I would like to formulate the following groups,
+every one of which finds its analogy in women:</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>a</em>) Fear of the intentional abstainers; this is frequently combined
+with symptoms of defense (obsessions, hysteria). The
+motives which are decisive for intentional abstinence carry along
+with them the fact that a number of hereditarily burdened eccentrics,
+etc., belong to this category.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>b</em>) Fear in men with frustrated excitement (during the engagement
+period), persons who out of fear for the consequences
+of sexual relations satisfy themselves with handling or looking at
+the woman. This group of determinants which can moreover be
+transferred to the other sex—engagement periods, relations with
+sexual forbearance—furnish the purest cases of the neurosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>c</em>) Fear in men who practice coitus interruptus. As observed
+above, coitus interruptus injures the woman if it is practiced
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>regardless of the woman’s gratification; it becomes injurious to
+the man, if in order to bring about the gratification in the woman
+be voluntarily controls the coitus by delaying the ejaculation. In
+this manner we can understand why it is that in couples who
+practice coitus interruptus it is usually only one of them who
+becomes afflicted. Moreover the coitus interruptus only rarely
+produces in man a pure anxiety neurosis, usually it is a mixture
+of the same with neurasthenia.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>d</em>) Fear in men in the senium. There are men who show a
+climacterium like women, and merge into an anxiety neurosis at
+the time when their potency diminishes and their libido increases.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Finally I must add two more cases holding true for both sexes:</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>e</em>) Neurasthenics merge into anxiety neurosis in consequence
+of masturbation as soon as they refrain from this manner of
+sexual gratification. These persons have especially made themselves
+unfit to bear abstinence.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>What is important for the understanding of the anxiety
+neurosis is the fact that any noteworthy development of the same
+occurs only in men who remain potent, and in non-anesthetic
+women. In neurasthenics, who on account of masturbation have
+markedly injured their potency, anxiety neurosis as a result of
+abstinence occurs but rarely and limits itself usually to hypochondria
+and light chronic dizziness. The majority of women
+are really to be considered as “potent”; a real impotent, that is,
+a real anesthetic woman, is also inaccessible to anxiety neurosis,
+and bears strikingly well the injuries cited.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>How far we are perhaps justified in assuming constant relations
+between individual etiological moments and individual
+symptoms from the complex of anxiety neurosis, I do not care
+to discuss here.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>f</em>) The last of the etiological determinants to be mentioned
+seems, in the first place, really not to be of a sexual nature.
+Anxiety neurosis originates in both sexes through the moment of
+overwork, exhaustive exertion, as for instance, after sleepless
+nights, nursing the sick, and even after serious illnesses.</p>
+
+<p class='c010'>The main objection against my formulation of a sexual etiology
+of the anxiety neurosis will probably be to the purport that such
+abnormal relations of the sexual life can be found so very often
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>that wherever one will look for them they will be found near at
+hand. Their occurrence, therefore, in the cases cited of anxiety
+neurosis does not prove that the etiology of the neurosis was
+revealed in them. Moreover, the number of persons practicing
+coitus interruptus, etc., is incomparably greater than the number
+of those who are burdened with anxiety neurosis, and the overwhelming
+number of the first are quite well in spite of this
+injury.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>To this I can answer that we certainly ought not to expect a
+rarely occurring etiological moment in the conceded enormous
+frequency of the neurosis, and especially anxiety neurosis;
+furthermore, that it really fulfills a postulate of pathology if on
+examining an etiology the etiological moments can be more frequently
+demonstrated than their effects, for, for the latter still
+other determinants (predisposition, summation of the specific
+etiology, reinforcement through other banal injuries) could be
+demanded; and furthermore, that the detailed analysis of suitable
+cases of anxiety neurosis show quite unequivocally the significance
+of the sexual moment. I shall, however, here confine myself
+to the etiological moment of coitus interruptus, and I will
+render prominent obvious individual experiences.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>1. As long as the anxiety neurosis in young women is not yet
+constituted but appears in fragments which again spontaneously
+disappear, it can be shown that every such turn of the neurosis
+depends on a coitus with lack of gratification. Two days after
+this influence, and in persons of little resistance the day after,
+there regularly appears the attack of anxiety or vertigo to which
+all the other symptoms of the neurosis attach themselves, only to
+separate again on rarer marriage relations. An unexpected
+journey of the husband, a sojourn in the mountains causing a
+separation of the married couple, does good; the benefit from a
+course of gynecological treatment is due to the fact that during
+its continuation the marriage relations are stopped. It is noteworthy
+that the success of a local treatment is only transitory, the
+neurosis reappears while in the mountains if the husband joins his
+wife for his own vacation, etc. If, in a not as yet constituted
+neurosis, a physician aware of this etiology causes a substitution
+of the coitus interruptus by normal relations there results a
+therapeutic proof of the assertion here formulated. The anxiety
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>is removed and does not return unless there be a new or similar
+cause.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>2. In the anamnesis of many cases of anxiety neurosis we find
+in both men and women a striking fluctuation in the intensity of
+the appearances in both the coming and going of the whole condition.
+This year was almost wholly good, the following was
+terrible, etc.; on one occasion the improvement occurred after a
+definite treatment which, however, failed to produce a response
+at the next attack. If we inform ourselves about the number and
+the sequence of the children, and compare this marriage chronicle
+with the peculiar course of the neurosis, the result of the simple
+solution shows that the periods of improvement or well being corresponded
+with the pregnancies of the woman during which,
+naturally, the occasions for preventive relations were unnecessary.
+The treatment which benefited the husband, be it Father
+Kneip’s or the hydrotherapeutic institute, was the one which he
+has taken after he found his wife was pregnant.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>3. From the anamnesis of the patients we often find that the
+symptoms of the anxiety neurosis are relieved at a certain time by
+another neurosis, perhaps a neurasthenia which has supplanted it.
+It can then be regularly demonstrated that shortly before this
+change of the picture there occurred a corresponding change in
+the form of a sexual injury.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Whereas such experiences, which can be augmented at pleasure,
+plainly obtrude upon the physician the sexual etiology for a certain
+category of cases, other cases which would have otherwise
+remained incomprehensible can at least without gainsaying be
+solved and classified by the key of the sexual etiology. We refer
+to those numerous cases in which everything exists that has been
+found in the former category, such as the appearance of anxiety
+neurosis on the one hand, and the specific moment of the coitus
+interruptus on the other, but yet something else slips in, namely, a
+long interval between the assumed etiology and its effect, and
+perhaps other etiological moments of a non-sexual nature. We
+have here, for example, a man who was seized with an attack
+of palpitation on hearing of his father’s death, and who since
+that time suffered from an anxiety neurosis. The case cannot
+be understood, for up to that time this man was not nervous.
+The death of the father, well advanced in years, did not occur
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>under any peculiar circumstances, and it must be admitted that
+the natural expected death of an aged father does not belong to
+those experiences which are wont to make a healthy adult sick.
+The etiological analysis will perhaps seem clearer if I add that
+out of regard for his wife this man practiced coitus interruptus
+for eleven years. At all events the manifestations are precisely
+the same as those appearing in other persons after a short sexual
+injury of this nature, and without the intervention of another
+trauma. The same judgment may be pronounced in the case of
+a woman who merges into an anxiety neurosis after the death
+of her child, or in the case of the student who becomes disturbed
+by an anxiety neurosis while preparing for his final state examination.
+I find that here, as there, the effect is not explained by the
+reported etiology. One must not necessarily “overwork” himself
+studying, and a healthy mother is wont to react to the death
+of her child with normal grief. But, above all, I would expect
+that the overworked student would acquire a cephalasthenia, and
+the mother in our example a hysteria. That both became
+afflicted with anxiety neurosis causes me to attach importance to
+the fact that the mother lived for eight year in marital coitus
+interruptus, and that the student entertained for three years a
+warm love affair with a “respectable” girl whom he was not
+allowed to impregnate.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>These examples tend to show that where the specific sexual
+injury of the coitus interruptus is in itself unable to provoke an
+anxiety neurosis it at least predisposes to its acquisition. The
+anxiety neurosis then comes to light as soon as the effect of
+another banal injury enters into the latent effect of the specific
+moment. The former can quantitatively substitute the specific
+moment but not supplant it qualitatively. The specific moment
+always remains that which determines the form of neurosis. I
+hope to be able to prove to a greater extent this proposition for
+the etiology of the neurosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Furthermore, the last discussions contain the, not in itself, improbable
+assumption that a sexual injury like coitus interruptus
+asserts itself through summation. The time required before the
+effect of this summation becomes visible depends upon the predisposition
+of the individual and the former burdening of his
+nervous system. The individuals who bear coitus interruptus
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>manifestly without disadvantage really become predisposed by
+it to the disturbance—anxiety neurosis—which can at any time
+burst forth spontaneously or after a banal, otherwise inadequate,
+trauma, just as the chronic alcoholic finally develops a cirrhosis
+or another disease by summation, or under the influence of a
+fever he merges into a delirium.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>III. <span class='sc'>Addenda to the Theory of Anxiety Neurosis.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>The following discussions claim nothing but the value of a first
+tentative experiment, which judgment should not influence the acceptance
+of the facts mentioned above. The estimation of this
+“Theory of Anxiety Neurosis” is rendered still more difficult
+by the fact that it merely corresponds to a fragment of a more
+comprehensive representation of the neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The facts hitherto expressed concerning the anxiety neurosis
+already contain some starting points for an insight into the mechanism
+of this neurosis. In the first place it contains the assumption
+that we deal with an accumulation of excitement, and
+then the very important fact that the anxiety underlying the manifestations
+of the neurosis is not of psychic derivation. Such,
+for example, would exist if we found as a basis for the anxiety
+neurosis a justified fright happening once or repeatedly which
+has since supplied the source of the preparedness for the anxiety
+neurosis. But this is not the case; a former fright can perhaps
+cause a hysteria or a traumatic neurosis but never an anxiety
+neurosis. As the coitus interruptus is rendered so prominent
+among the causes of anxiety neurosis I have thought at first that
+the source of the continuous anxiety was perhaps the repeated
+fear during the sexual act lest the technique will fail and conception
+follow. But I have found that this state of mind of the man
+or woman during the coitus interruptus plays no part in the origin
+of anxiety neurosis, that the women who are really indifferent to
+the possibilities of conception are just as exposed to the neurosis
+as those who are trembling at the possibility of it, it all depends
+on which person suffers the loss of sexual gratification.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Another starting point presents itself in the as yet unmentioned
+observation that in a whole series of cases the anxiety neurosis
+goes along with the most distinct diminution of the sexual libido
+or the psychic desire, so that on revealing to the patients that their
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>affliction depends on “insufficient gratification,” they regularly
+reply that this is impossible as just now their whole desire is extinguished.
+The indications that we deal with an accumulation
+of excitement, that the anxiety which probably corresponds to
+such accumulated excitement is of somatic origin, so that somatic
+excitement becomes accumulated, and furthermore, that this somatic
+excitement is of a sexual nature, and that it is accompanied
+by a decreased psychic participation in the sexual processes—all
+these indications, I say, favor the expectation that the
+mechanism of the anxiety neurosis is to be found in the deviation
+of the somatic sexual excitement from the psychic, and in the abnormal
+utilization of this excitement occasioned by the former.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This conception of the mechanism of anxiety neurosis will become
+clearer if one accepts the following view concerning the
+sexual process in man. In the sexually mature male organism,
+the somatic sexual excitement is—probably continuously—produced,
+and this becomes a periodic stimulus for the psychic life.
+To make our conceptions clearer we will add that this somatic
+sexual excitement manifests itself as a pressure on the wall of the
+seminal vesicle which is provided with nerve endings. This
+visceral excitement thus becomes continuously increased, but not
+before attaining a certain height is it able to overcome the resistances
+of the intercalated conduction as far as the cortex, and
+manifest itself as psychic excitement. Then the group of sexual
+ideas existing in the psyche becomes endowed with energy and
+results in a psychic state of libidinous tension which is accompanied
+by an impulse to remove this tension. Such psychic unburdening
+is possible only in one way which I wish to designate
+as specific or adequate action. This adequate action for the male
+sexual impulse consists of a complicated spinal reflex-act which
+results in the unburdening of those nerve endings, and of all
+psychically formed preparations for the liberation of this reflex.
+Anything else except the adequate action would be of no avail,
+for after the somatic sexual excitement has once reached the
+liminal value, it continuously changes into psychic excitement;
+that must by all means occur which frees the nerve endings
+from their heavy pressure, and thus abolish the whole somatic
+excitement existing at the time and allow the subcortical conduction
+to reestablish its resistance.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>I will desist from presenting in a similar manner more complicated
+cases of the sexual process. I will merely formulate the
+statement that this scheme can essentially be transferred to the
+woman despite the problem of the perplexity, artificial retardation,
+and stunting of the female sexual impulse. In the woman,
+too, it can be assumed that there is a somatic sexual excitement
+and a state in which this excitement becomes psychic, evoking
+libido and the impulse to specific action which is accompanied by
+the sensual feeling. But we are unable to state what analogy
+there may be in the woman to the unburdening of the seminal
+vesicles.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>We can bring into the bounds of this representation of the
+sexual process the etiology of actual neurasthenia as well as of
+the anxiety neurosis. Neurasthenia always originates whenever
+the adequate (action) unburdening is replaced by a less adequate
+one, like the normal coitus under the most favorable conditions,
+by a masturbation or spontaneous pollution; while anxiety neurosis
+is produced by all moments which impede the psychic elaboration
+of the somatic sexual excitement. The manifestations of
+anxiety neurosis are brought about by the fact that the somatic
+sexual excitement diverted from the psyche expends itself subcortically
+in not at all adequate reactions.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I will now attempt to test the etiological determinants suggested
+before in order to see whether they show the common character
+formulated by me. As the first etiological moment for the
+man, I have mentioned intentional abstinence. Abstinence consists
+in foregoing the specific action which results from the libido.
+Such foregoing may have two consequences, namely that the
+somatic excitement accumulates, and then, what is more important,
+is the fact that it becomes diverted to another route where there
+is more chance for discharge than through the psyche. It will
+then finally diminish the libido and the excitement will manifest
+itself subcortically as anxiety. Where the libido does not become
+diminished, or the somatic excitement is expended in pollutions, or
+where it really becomes exhausted in consequence of repulsion,
+everything else except anxiety neurosis is formed. In this manner
+abstinence leads to anxiety neurosis. But abstinence is also
+the active process in the second etiological group of frustrated excitement.
+The third case, that of the considerate coitus reservatus,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>acts through the fact that it disturbs the psychic preparedness
+for the sexual discharge by establishing beside the subjugation
+of the sexual affect, another distracting psychic task.
+Through this psychic distraction, too, the libido gradually disappears
+and the further course is then the same as in the case of
+abstinence. The anxiety in old age (climacterium of men) requires
+another explanation. Here the libido does not diminish,
+but just as in the climacterium of women, such an increase takes
+place in the somatic excitement that the psyche shows itself relatively
+insufficient for the subjugation of the same.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The subsummation of the etiological determinants in the
+woman, under the aspect mentioned, does not afford any greater
+difficulties. The case of the virginal fear is especially clear.
+Here the group of ideas with which the somatic sexual excitement
+should combine are not as yet sufficiently developed. In
+anesthetically newly married the anxiety appears only if the first
+cohabitations awakened a sufficient amount of somatic excitement.
+Where the local signs of such excitability (like spontaneous
+feelings of excitement, desire to micturate, etc.) are lacking, the
+anxiety, too, stays away. The case of ejaculatio precox or coitus
+interruptus is explained similarly to that in the man by the fact
+that the libido gradually disappears in the psychically ungratified
+act, whereas the excitement thereby evoked is subcortically expended.
+The formation of an estrangement between the somatic
+and psychic in the discharge of the sexual excitement succeeds
+quicker in the woman than in the man and is more difficult to
+remove. The case of widowhood or voluntary abstinence, as well
+as the case of climacterium adjusts itself in the woman as in the
+man, but in the case of abstinence there surely is in addition the
+intentional repression of the sexual ideas, for an abstinent woman
+struggling with temptation must often decide to suppress it.
+The abhorrence perceived by an elderly woman during her menopause
+against the immensely increased libido can have a similar
+effect.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The two etiological determinants mentioned last can also be
+classified without any difficulty.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The tendency to anxiety of the masturbator who becomes neurasthenic
+is explained by the fact that these persons so easily merge
+into the state of abstinence after they have for long been accustomed
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>to afford a discharge, to be sure an incorrect one, for every
+little quantity of somatic excitement. Finally the last case, the
+origin of anxiety neurosis through a severe illness, overwork, exhaustive
+nursing, etc., in addition to the efficacy of coitus interruptus
+readily permits a free interpretation. Through deviation the
+psyche becomes here insufficient for the subjugation of the somatic
+sexual excitement, a task which continuously devolves upon it.
+We know how deeply the libido can sink under the same conditions,
+and we have here a nice example of a neurosis which
+although not of a sexual etiology still evinces a sexual mechanism.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The conception here developed represents the symptoms of
+anxiety neurosis in a measure as a substitute for the omitted
+specific action to the sexual excitement. As a further corroboration
+of this I recall that also in normal coitus the excitement
+expends itself in respiratory acceleration, palpitation, perspiration,
+congestion, etc. In the corresponding attack of anxiety of our
+neurosis we have before us the dyspnoea, the palpitation, etc.,
+of the coitus in an isolated and aggravated manner.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It can still be asked why the nervous system merges into a
+peculiar affective state of anxiety under the circumstances of
+psychic inadequacy for the subjugation of the sexual excitement?
+A hint to the answer is as follows: The psyche merges into the
+affect of fear when it perceives itself unable to adjust an externally
+approaching task (danger) by corresponding reaction; it
+merges into the neurosis of anxiety when it finds itself unable to
+equalize the endogenously originated (sexual) excitement. The
+psyche, therefore, behaves as if projecting this excitement externally.
+The affect and the neurosis corresponding to it stand in
+close relationship to each other; the first is the reaction to an exogenous,
+the latter the reaction to an analogous endogenous excitement.
+The affect is a rapidly passing state, the neurosis is
+chronic because the exogenous excitement acts like a stroke happening
+but once, while the endogenous acts like a constant force.
+The nervous system reacts in the neurosis against an inner source
+of excitement just as it does in the corresponding affect against
+an analogous external one.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>
+ <h3 class='c016'>IV. <span class='sc'>The Relations to Other Neuroses.</span></h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>A few observations still remain to be mentioned on the relations
+of the anxiety neurosis to the other neuroses in reference to
+occurrence and inner relationship.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The purest cases of anxiety neurosis are also usually the most
+pronounced. They are found in potent young individuals with a
+uniform etiology, and where the disease is not of long standing.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>To be sure, the symptoms of anxiety are found more frequently
+as a simultaneous and common occurrence with those
+of neurasthenia, hysteria, compulsive ideas, and melancholia. If
+on account of such clinical mixtures one hesitates in recognizing
+anxiety neurosis as an independent unity, he will also have to
+abandon the laboriously acquired separation of hysteria and neurasthenia.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>For the analysis of the “mixed neuroses” I can advocate the
+following proposition: Where a mixed neurosis exists, an involvement
+of many specific etiologies can be demonstrated.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Such a multiplicity of etiological moments determining a mixed
+neurosis can only come about accidentally, if the activities of a
+newly formed injury are added to those already existing. Thus,
+for example, a woman who was at all times a hysteric begins to
+practice coitus reservatus at a certain period of her married life,
+and adds an anxiety neurosis to her hysteria; a man who had
+masturbated and become neurasthenic, becomes engaged and excites
+himself with his fiancée so that a fresh anxiety neurosis
+allies itself to his neurasthenia.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The multiplicity of etiological moments in other cases is not
+accidental, one of them has brought the other into activity. Thus
+a woman, with whom her husband practices coitus reservatus
+without regard to her gratification, finds herself forced to finish
+the tormenting excitement following such an act with masturbation,
+as a result of which she shows an anxiety neurosis with
+symptoms of neurasthenia. Under the same noxiousness another
+woman has to contend with lewd pictures against which she
+wishes to defend herself, and in this way the coitus interruptus
+will cause her to acquire obsessions along with the anxiety neurosis.
+Finally a third woman, as a result of coitus interruptus
+loses her affection for her husband and forms another which she
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>secretly guards, and as a result she evinces a mixture of hysteria
+and anxiety neurosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In a third category of mixed neuroses the connection of the
+symptoms is of a still more intimate nature, as the same etiological
+determinants regularly and simultaneously evoke both neuroses.
+Thus, for example, the sudden sexual explanation which
+we have found in virginal fear always produces hysteria, too;
+most causes of intentional abstinence connect themselves in the
+beginning with actual obsessions; and it seems to me that the
+coitus interruptus of men can never provoke a pure anxiety
+neurosis, but always a mixture of the same with neurasthenia,
+etc.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It follows from this discussion that the etiological determinants
+of the occurrence must moreover be distinguished from the specific
+etiological moments of neurasthenia. The first moments,
+as for example the coitus interruptus, masturbation, and abstinence,
+are still ambiguous, and can each produce different neuroses;
+and it is only the etiological moments abstracted from
+them, like the inadequate unburdening, psychic insufficiency,
+and defense with substitution, that have an unambiguous and
+specific relation to the etiology of the individual great neuroses.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In its intrinsic property, anxiety neurosis shows the most interesting
+agreements and differences when compared with the
+other great neuroses, particularly when compared with neurasthenia
+and hysteria. With neurasthenia it shares one main character,
+namely, that the source of excitement, the cause of the
+disturbance, lies in the somatic rather than in the psychic sphere
+as in the case of hysteria and compulsion neurosis. For the rest
+we can recognize a kind of contrast between the symptoms of
+neurasthenia and anxiety neurosis, which can be expressed in the
+catchwords, accumulation and impoverishment of excitement.
+This contrast does not hinder the two neuroses from combining
+with each other, but shows itself in the fact that the most extreme
+forms in both cases are also the purest.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>When compared with hysteria anxiety neurosis shows in the
+first place a number of agreements in the symptomatology
+the valuation of which is still unsettled. The appearance of the
+manifestations as persistent symptoms or attacks, the aura-like
+grouped paresthesias, the hyperesthesias and pressure points can
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>be found in certain substitutes for the anxiety attack, as in dyspnoea
+and palpitation, the aggravation of the perhaps organically
+determined pains (by conversion)—these and other joint features
+lead to the supposition that some things which are ascribed to
+hysteria can with full authority be fastened to anxiety neurosis.
+But if we enter into the mechanism of both neuroses, as far as
+it can at present be penetrated, we find aspects which make it
+appear that the anxiety neurosis is really the somatic counterpart
+to hysteria. Here as there we have accumulation and excitement—on
+which is perhaps based the similarity of the aforementioned
+symptoms—; here as there we have a psychic insufficiency which
+results from abnormal somatic processes; and here as there we
+have instead of a psychic elaboration a deviation of the excitement
+into the somatic. The difference only lies in the fact that
+the excitement, in which displacement the neurosis manifests
+itself, is purely somatic (somatic sexual excitement) in anxiety
+neurosis, while in hysteria it is psychic (evoked through a conflict).
+Hence it is not surprising that hysteria and anxiety neurosis
+lawfully combine with each other, as in the “virginal fear”
+or in the “sexual hysteria,” and that hysteria simply borrows a
+number of symptoms from anxiety neurosis, etc. This intimate
+relationship between anxiety neurosis and hysteria furnishes us
+with a new argument for demanding the separation of anxiety
+neurosis from hysteria, for if this be denied, one will also be
+unable to maintain the so painstakingly acquired distinction between
+neurasthenia and hysteria, so indispensable for the theory
+of the neuroses.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VII.<br> <span class='c013'><span class='sc'>Further Observations on the Defense Neuropsychoses.</span></span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>Under the caption of “Defense Neuropsychoses” I have comprised
+hysteria, obsessions, as well as certain cases of acute hallucinatory
+confusion.<a id='r47'></a><a href='#f47' class='c012'><sup>[47]</sup></a> All these affections evince one common
+aspect in the fact that their symptoms originated through the
+psychic mechanism of (unconscious) defense, that is, through the
+attempt to repress an unbearable idea which appeared in painful
+contrast to the ego of the patient. I was also able to explain
+and exemplify by cases reported in the preceding chapters in
+what sense this psychic process of “defense” or “repression” is
+to be understood. I have also discussed the laborious but perfectly
+reliable method of psychoanalysis of which I make use
+in my examinations, and which at the same time serves as a
+therapy.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>My experiences during the last two years have strengthened
+my predilection for making the defense the essential point in the
+psychic mechanism of the mentioned neuroses, and on the other
+hand have permitted me to give a clinical foundation to the
+psychological theory. To my surprise I have discovered some
+simple but sharply circumscribed solutions for the problem of the
+neuroses which I shall provisionally briefly report in the following
+pages. It would be inconsistent with this manner of reporting
+to add to the assertions the required proofs, but I hope to be
+able to fulfill this obligation in a comprehensive discussion.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>I. <span class='sc'>The “Specific” Etiology of Hysteria.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>That the symptoms of hysteria become comprehensible only
+through a reduction to “traumatically” effective experiences, and
+that these psychic traumas refer to the sexual life has already
+been asserted by Breuer and me in former publications. What
+I have to add today as a uniform result of thirteen analyzed cases
+of hysteria concerns, on the one hand, the nature of these sexual
+traumas, and on the other, the period of life in which they occurred.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>An experience occurring at any period of life, touching
+in any way the sexual life, and then becoming pathogenic through
+the liberation and suppression of a painful affect is not sufficient
+for the causation of hysteria. It must on the contrary belong
+to the sexual traumas of early childhood (the period of life
+before puberty), and its content must consist in a real irritation
+of the genitals (coitus-like processes).</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This specific determination of hysteria—sexual passivity in
+pre-sexual periods—I have found fulfilled in all analyzed cases
+of hysteria (among which were two men). To what extent the
+determination of the accidental etiological moment diminishes the
+requirement of the hereditary predisposition needs only be intimated.
+We can, moreover, understand the disproportionately
+greater frequency of hysteria in the female sex, as even in childhood
+this sex is more subject to sexual assaults.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The objection most frequently advanced against this result
+may be to the purport, that sexual assaults on little children occur
+too frequently to give an etiological value to its verification, or
+that such experiences must remain ineffectual just because they
+concern a sexually undeveloped being; and that one must moreover
+be careful not to obtrude upon the patient through the examination
+such alleged reminiscences or believe in the romances
+which they themselves fabricate. To the latter objections I hold
+out the request that no one should really judge with great certainty
+this obscure realm unless he has made use of the only
+method which can clear it up (the method of psychoanalysis for
+bringing to consciousness the hitherto unconscious<a id='r48'></a><a href='#f48' class='c012'><sup>[48]</sup></a>). The essential
+point in the first doubts is settled by the observation that
+it really is not the experiences themselves that act traumatically,
+but their revival as reminiscences after the individual has entered
+into sexual maturity.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>My thirteen cases of hysteria were throughout of the graver
+kind, they were all of long duration, and some had undergone a
+lengthy and unsuccessful asylum treatment. Every one of the
+infantile traumas which the analysis revealed for these severe
+cases had to be designated as marked sexual injuries; some of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>them were indeed abominable. Among the persons who were
+guilty of such serious abuse we have in the first place nurses,
+governesses, and other servants to whom children are left much
+too carelessly, then in regrettable frequency come the teachers;
+but in seven of the thirteen cases we dealt with innocent childish
+offenders, mostly brothers who for years entertained sexual relations
+with their younger sisters. The course of events always
+resembled some of the cases which could with certainty be tracked,
+namely, that the boy had been abused by a person of the feminine
+sex, thus awakening in him prematurely the libido, and that after
+a few years he repeated in sexual aggression on his sister the
+same procedures to which he himself was subjected.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I must exclude active masturbation from the list of sexual injuries
+of early childhood as being pathogenic for hysteria. That
+it is so very frequently found associated with hysteria is due to the
+fact that masturbation in itself is more frequently the result of
+abuse or seduction than one supposes. It not seldom happens
+that both members of a childish pair later in life become afflicted
+by defense neuroses, the brother by obsessions and the sister by
+hysteria, which naturally gives the appearance of a familial neurotic
+predisposition. This pseudo-heredity is now and then
+solved in a surprising manner. I have had under observation
+a brother, sister, and a somewhat older cousin. The analysis
+which I have undertaken with the brother showed me that he
+suffered from reproaches for being the cause of his sister’s
+malady; he himself was corrupted by his cousin, concerning
+whom it was known in the family that he fell a victim to his
+nurse.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I can not definitely state up to what age sexual damage occurs
+in the etiology of hysteria, but I doubt whether sexual passivity
+can cause repression after the eighth and tenth year unless qualified
+for it by previous experiences. The lower limit reaches as
+far as memory in general, that is, to the delicate age of one and
+one half or two years! (two cases). In a number of my cases
+the sexual trauma (or the number of traumas) occurred during
+the third and fourth year of life. I myself would not lend credence
+to this peculiar discovery if it were not for the fact that the
+later development of the neurosis furnished it with full trustworthiness.
+In every case there are a number of morbid symptoms,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>habits and phobias which are only explainable by returning
+to those youthful experiences, and the logical structure of the
+neurotic manifestation makes it impossible to reject the faithfully
+retained memories of childhood. Except through psychoanalysis
+it is of no avail to ask a hysterical patient about these infantile
+traumas; their remains can only be found in the morbid symptoms
+and not in conscious memory.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>All the experiences and excitements which prepare the way for,
+or occasion the outburst of, hysteria in the period of life after
+puberty evidently act through the fact that they awaken the memory
+remnants of those infantile traumas which do not become
+conscious but lead to the liberation of affect and repression. It
+is quite in harmony with this rôle of the later traumas not to be
+subject to the strict limitation of the infantile traumas, but that
+both in intensity and quality they can vary from an actual sexual
+assault to a mere approximation of the sexual, such as perceiving
+the sexual acts of others, or receiving information concerning
+sexual processes.<a id='r49'></a><a href='#f49' class='c012'><sup>[49]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In my first communication on the defense neuropsychoses I
+failed to explain how the exertion of a hitherto healthy individual
+to forget such traumatic happenings would result in the real intentional
+repression, and thus open the door for the defense neurosis.
+It can not depend on the nature of the experience, as other
+persons remain unaffected despite the same motives. Hysteria
+cannot therefore be fully explained by the effect of the trauma,
+and we are forced to admit that the capacity for hysteria already
+existed before the trauma.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This indefinite hysterical predisposition can now wholly or partially
+be substituted by the posthumous effect of the infantile
+sexual trauma. The “repression” of the memory of a painful
+sexual experience of maturer years can take place only in persons
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>in whom this experience can bring into activity the memory
+remnants of an infantile trauma.<a id='r50'></a><a href='#f50' class='c012'><sup>[50]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The prerequisite of obsessions is also a sexual infantile experience,
+but of a different nature than that of hysteria. The
+etiology of both defense neuropsychoses now shows the following
+relation to the etiology of both simple neuroses, neurasthenia
+and anxiety neurosis. As I have shown above, both the latter
+neuroses are the direct results of the sexual noxas alone, while
+both defense neuroses are the direct results of sexual noxas which
+acted before the appearance of sexual maturity, that is, they are
+the results of the psychic memory remnants of these noxas. The
+actual causes producing neurasthenia and anxiety neurosis simultaneously
+play the rôle of inciting causes of the defense neuroses,
+and on the other hand, the specific causes of the defense neuroses,
+the infantile traumas, may simultaneously prepare the soil for
+the later developing neurasthenia. Finally it not seldom happens
+that the existence of a neurasthenia or anxiety neurosis is only
+preserved by continued recollection of an infantile trauma rather
+than by actual sexual injuries.</p>
+
+<div>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>
+ <h3 class='c016'>II. <span class='sc'>The Essence and Mechanism of Compulsion Neurosis.</span></h3>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c015'>Sexual experiences of early childhood have the same significance
+in the etiology of the compulsion neurosis as in hysteria,
+still we no longer deal here with sexual passivity but with pleasurably
+accomplished aggressions, and with pleasurably experienced
+participation in sexual acts, that is, we deal here with
+sexual activity. It is due to this difference in the etiological relations
+that the masculine sex seems to be preferred in the compulsion
+neurosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In all my cases of compulsion neurosis I have found besides a
+subsoil of hysterical symptoms which could be traced to a pleasurable
+action of sexual passivity from a precedent scene. I presume
+that this coincidence is a lawful one, and that premature
+sexual aggression always presupposes an experience of seduction.
+But I am unable to present as yet a complete description of the
+etiology of the compulsion neurosis. I only believe that the final
+determination as to whether a hysteria or compulsion neurosis
+should originate on the basis of infantile traumas depends on the
+temporal relation of the development of the libido.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The essence of the compulsion neurosis may be expressed in
+the following simple formula: Obsessions are always transformed
+<em>reproaches</em> returning from consciousness which always
+refer to a pleasurably accomplished sexual action of childhood.
+In order to elucidate this sentence it will be necessary to describe
+the typical course of compulsion neurosis.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In a first period—period of childish immorality—the events
+containing the seeds of the later neurosis take place. In the earliest
+childhood there appear at first the experiences of sexual seduction
+which later makes the repression possible, and this is followed
+by the actions of sexual aggressions against the other sex
+which later manifest themselves as actions of reproach.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This period is brought to an end by the appearance of the—often
+self ripened—sexual “maturity.” A reproach then attaches
+itself to the memory of that pleasurable action, and the connection
+with the initial experience of passivity makes it possible—often
+only after conscious and recollected effort—to repress it and replace
+it by a primary symptom of defense. The third period, that
+of apparent healthiness but really of successful defense, begins
+with the symptoms of scrupulousness, shame and diffidence.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>The next period, the disease is characterized by the return of
+the repressed reminiscences, hence, by the failure of the defense;
+but it remains undecided whether the awakening of the same is
+more frequently accidental and spontaneous, or whether it appears
+in consequence of actual sexual disturbances, that is, as additional
+influences of the same. But the revived reminiscences
+and the reproaches formed from them never enter into consciousness
+unchanged, but what becomes conscious as an obsession and
+obsessive affect and substitutes the pathogenic memory in the
+conscious life, are compromise formations between the repressed
+and the repressing ideas.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In order to describe clearly and probably convincingly the processes
+of repression, the return of the repression, and the formation
+of the pathological ideas of compromise, we would have to
+decide upon very definite hypotheses concerning the substratum
+of the psychic occurrence and consciousness. As long as we
+wish to avoid it we will have to rest content with the following
+rather figuratively understood observations. Depending on
+whether the memory content of the reproachful action alone
+forces an entrance into consciousness or whether it takes with it
+the accompanying reproachful affect, we have two forms of compulsion
+neurosis. The first represents the typical obsessions, the
+content of which attracts the patient’s attention; only an indefinite
+displeasure is perceived as an affect, whereas, for the content
+of the obsession the only suitable affect would be one of reproach.
+The content of the obsession is doubly distorted when compared
+to the content of the infantile compulsive act. First, something
+actual replaces the past experience, and second, the sexual is
+substituted by an analogous non-sexual experience. These two
+changes are the results of the constant tendency to repression still
+in force which we will attribute to the “ego.” The influence
+of the revived pathogenic memory is shown by the fact that the
+content of the obsession is still partially identical with the repressed,
+or can be traced to it by a correct stream of thought.
+If, with the help of the psychoanalytic method, we reconstruct
+the origin of one individual obsession we find that one actual impression
+instigated two diverse streams of thought, and that the
+one which passed over the repressed memory, though incapable
+of consciousness and correction, proves to be just as correctly
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>formed logically as the other. If the results of the two psychic
+operations disagree, the contradiction between the two may never
+be brought to logical adjustment, but as a compromise between
+the resistance and the pathological result of thought an apparently
+absurd obsession enters into consciousness beside the normal result
+of the thought. If both streams of thought yield the same
+result, they reinforce each other so that the normally gained result
+of thought now behaves psychically like an obsession. Wherever
+neurotic compulsion manifests itself psychically it originates
+from repression. The obsessions have, as it were, a psychical
+course of compulsion which is due, not to their own validity,
+but to the source from which they originate, or to the source
+which furnishes a part of their validity.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>A second form of compulsion neurosis results if the repressed
+reproach and not the repressed content of memory forces a replacement
+in the conscious psychic life. Through a psychic admixture,
+the affect of the reproach can change itself into any
+other affect of displeasure, and if this occurs there is nothing to
+hinder the substituting affect from becoming conscious. Thus,
+the reproach (of having performed in childhood some sexual
+actions) may be easily transformed into shame (if some one else
+becomes aware of it), into hypochondriacal anxiety (because of
+the physical harmful consequences of those reproachful acts), into
+social anxiety (fearing punishment from others), into religious
+anxiety, into delusions of observation (fear of betraying those
+actions to others), into fear of temptations (justified distrust in
+one’s own moral ability of resistance), etc. Besides, the memory
+content of the reproachful action may also be represented in
+consciousness, or it may be altogether concealed, which makes
+the diagnosis very difficult. Many cases which on superficial
+examination are taken as ordinary (neurasthenic) hypochondria
+often belong to this group of compulsive affects; the very frequently
+so called “periodic neurasthenia” or “periodic melancholia”
+especially seem to be explained by compulsive affects or
+obsessions, a recognition not unimportant therapeutically.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Beside these compromise symptoms which signify the return
+of the repression and hence a failure of the originally achieved
+defense, the compulsion neurosis forms a series of other symptoms
+of a totally different origin. The ego really tries to defend
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>itself against those descendants of the initial repressed reminiscence,
+and in this conflict of defense it produces symptoms which
+may be comprehended as “secondary defense.” These are throughout
+“protective measures” which have performed good service
+in the struggle carried on against the obsessions and the obsessing
+affects. If these helps in the conflict of the defense really succeed
+in repressing anew the symptoms of return obtruding themselves
+on the ego, the compulsion then transmits itself on the protective
+measures themselves and produces a third form of the “compulsion
+neurosis,” the compulsive action. These are never primary,
+they never contain anything else but a defense, never an aggression.
+Psychic analysis shows that despite their peculiarity they
+can always be fully explained by reduction to the compulsive reminiscence
+which they oppose.<a id='r51'></a><a href='#f51' class='c012'><sup>[51]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The secondary defense of the obsessions can be brought about
+by a forcible deviation to other thoughts of possibly contrary
+content; hence, in case of success there is a compulsive reasoning,
+regularly concerning abstract and transcendental subjects, because
+the repressed ideas always occupied themselves with the sensuous.
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>Or the patient tries to become master of every compulsive idea
+through logical labor and by appealing to his conscious memory;
+this leads to compulsive thinking and examination and to doubting
+mania. The priority of the perception before the memory in
+these examinations at first induce and then force the patient to
+collect and preserve all objects with which he comes in contact.
+The secondary defense against the compulsive affects results in a
+greater number of defensive measures which are capable of being
+transformed into compulsive actions. These can be grouped according
+to their tendency. We may have measures of penitence
+(irksome ceremonial and observation of numbers), of prevention
+(diverse phobias, superstition, pedantry, aggravation of the primary
+symptom of scrupulousness), measures of fear of betrayal
+(collecting papers and shyness), and measures of becoming unconscious
+(dipsomania). Among these compulsive acts and impulses
+the phobias play the greatest part as limitations of the
+patient’s existence.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>There are cases in which we can observe how the compulsion
+becomes transferred from the idea or affect to the measure, and
+other cases in which the compulsion oscillates between the returning
+symptoms of secondary defense. But there are also cases in
+which no obsessions are really formed, but the repressed reminiscence
+immediately becomes replaced by the apparent primary
+defensive measure. Here that stage is attained at a bound which
+otherwise ends the course of the compulsion neurosis only after
+the conflict of the defense. Grave cases of this affection end
+either with a fixation of ceremonial actions, general doubting
+mania, or in an existence of eccentricity conditioned by phobias.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>That the obsessions and everything derived from them are not
+believed is probably due to the fact that the defense symptom of
+scrupulousness was formed during the first repression and gained
+compulsive validity. The certainty of having lived morally
+throughout the whole period of the successful defense makes it
+impossible to give credence to the reproach which the obsession
+really involves. Only transitorily during the appearance of a new
+obsession, and now and then in melancholic exhaustive states of
+the ego do the morbid symptoms of the return also enforce the
+belief. The “compulsion” of the psychic formations here described
+has in general nothing to do with the recognition through
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>belief, and is not to be mistaken for that moment which is designated
+as “strength” or “intensity” of an idea. Its main characteristic
+lies in its inexplicableness through psychic activities of
+conscious ability, and this character undergoes no change whether
+the idea to which the compulsion is attached is stronger or weaker,
+more or less intensively “elucidated,” “supplied with energy,”
+etc.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The reason for the unassailableness of the obsession or its
+derivative is due only to its connection with the repressed memory
+of early childhood, for as soon as we succeed in making it conscious,
+for which the psychotherapeutic methods already seem
+quite sufficient, the compulsion, too, becomes detached.</p>
+
+<h3 class='c016'>III. <span class='sc'>Analysis of a Case of Chronic Paranoia.</span></h3>
+
+<p class='c015'>For some length of time I entertained the idea that paranoia
+also—or the group of cases belonging to paranoia—is a defense
+psychosis, that is, like hysteria and obsessions it originates from
+the repression of painful reminiscences, and that the form of its
+symptoms is determined by the content of the repression. A
+special way or mechanism of repression must be peculiar to
+paranoia perhaps just as in hysteria which brings about the repression
+by way of conversion into bodily innervation, and
+perhaps like obsessions in which a substitution is accomplished
+(displacement along certain associative categories). I observed
+many cases which seemed to favor this interpretation, but I had
+not found any which demonstrated it until a few months ago
+when, through the kindness of Dr. J. Breuer, I subjected to
+psychoanalysis, with therapeutic aims, an intelligent woman of
+32, whom no one will be able to refuse to designate as a chronic
+paranoiac. I report here some explanations gained in this work,
+because I have no prospects of studying paranoia except in very
+isolated examples, and because I think it possible that these
+observations may instigate a psychiatrist for whom conditions are
+more favorable, to give due justice to the moment of defense in
+the present animated discussion on the nature and psychic mechanism
+of paranoia. It is of course far from my thoughts to wish
+to show from the following single observation anything but that
+this case is a defense psychosis, and that in the group of
+“paranoia” there may be still others of a similar nature.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>Mrs. P. thirty-two years old, married three years. She is the
+mother of a two-year-old child, and does not descend from nervous
+parents; but her sister and brother whom I know, are also neurotic.
+It was doubtful whether she was not transitorily depressed
+and mistaken in her judgment in the middle of her twentieth year.
+During the last years she was healthy and capacitated until she
+evinced the first symptoms of the present illness, six months after
+the birth of her child. She became secluded and suspicious,
+showing a disinclination towards social relations with the relatives
+of her husband, and complained that the neighbors in the
+little town now behaved towards her in a rather impolite and regardless
+manner. Gradually these complaints grew in intensity,
+she thought that there was something against her, though she
+had no notion what it could be. But there was no doubt that all
+the relatives and friends denied her respect, and did everything
+to aggravate her. She was trying very hard to find out whence
+this came but could not discover anything. Some time later she
+complained that she was watched, that her thoughts were guessed,
+and that everything that happened in her house was known.
+One afternoon she suddenly conceived the thought that she was
+watched during the evening while undressing. Since then she
+applied while undressing the most complicated precautionary
+measures. She slipped into her bed in the darkness and undressed
+only under cover. As she avoided all social relations,
+and took but little nourishment, and was very depressed, she was
+sent in the summer of 1895 to a hydrotherapeutic institute.
+There new symptoms appeared and reinforced those already
+existing. As early as the spring, while she was alone with the
+servant girl, she suddenly perceived a sensation in her lap, and
+thought that the servant girl then had an unseemly thought.
+This sensation became more frequent in the summer, it was almost
+continuous, and she felt her genitals “as if one feels a heavy
+hand.” She then began to see pictures which frightened her;
+they were hallucinations of female nakedness, especially an exposed
+woman’s lap with hair; occasionally she also saw male
+genitals. The picture of the hairy lap and the organic sensation
+in the lap usually came conjointly. The pictures became very
+aggravating, as she regularly perceived them when she was in
+the company of a woman, and the thought accompanying them
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>was that she sees the woman in an indecent exposure, and that in
+the same moment the woman sees the same picture of her (!)
+Simultaneously with these visual hallucinations, which, after
+their first appearance in the asylum, disappeared again for many
+months, she began to be troubled with voices which she did not
+recognize and could not explain. When she was in the street
+she heard, “This is Mrs. P.—Here she goes.—Where does she
+go?”. Every one of her movements and actions were commented
+upon. Occasionally she heard threats and reproaches. All these
+symptoms became worse when she was in society, or even in the
+street; she therefore hesitated about going out; she also stated that
+she experienced nausea for food, and as a result she became reduced
+in vitality.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I obtained this from her when she came under my care in the
+winter of 1895. I present this case in detail in order to make the
+impression that we really deal here with a very frequent form
+of chronic paranoia, which diagnosis will agree with the details
+of the symptoms and their behavior to be mentioned later. At
+that time she either concealed from me the delusions for the
+interpretation of the hallucinations or they really had not as yet
+occurred. Her intelligence was undiminished. It was reported
+to me as peculiar that she had a number of rendezvous with her
+brother who lived in the neighborhood, in order to confide something
+to him, but this she never told him. She never spoke
+about her hallucinations, and towards the end she did not say
+much about the aggravations and persecutions from which she
+suffered. What I have to report about this patient concerns the
+etiology of the case and the mechanism of the hallucinations.
+I discovered the etiology by applying Breuer’s method exactly as
+in hysteria, for the investigation and removal of the hallucinations.
+I started with the presupposition that just as in the two
+other defense neuroses known to me this paranoia must contain
+unconscious thoughts and repressed reminiscences which
+have to be brought to consciousness, in the same manner as
+in the others, by overcoming a certain resistance. The patient
+immediately corroborated this expectation by behaving during
+the analysis exactly like a hysteric, and under attention to
+the pressure of my hand she reproduced thoughts which she
+could not remember having had, which she at first could not understand,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>and which contradicted her expectations. The occurrence
+of important unconscious ideas was therefore also demonstrated
+in a case of paranoia, and I could hope to reconduct
+the compulsion of paranoia to repression. It was only peculiar
+that the assertions which originated in the unconscious were usually
+heard inwardly or hallucinated by her as her voices.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Concerning the origin of the visual hallucinations, or at least
+the vivid pictures, I discovered the following: The picture of the
+female lap occurred almost always together with the organic
+sensation in the lap. The latter, however, was more constant and
+often occurred without the picture.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The first pictures of feminine laps appeared in the hydrotherapeutic
+institute a few hours after she had actually seen a
+number of women naked in the bath house. They were therefore
+only simple reproductions of a real impression. It may be assumed
+that these impressions repeated themselves because something
+of great interest was connected with them. She stated that
+she was at that time ashamed of these women, and that since
+she recalled it she is ashamed of having been seen naked. Having
+been obliged to look upon this shame as something compulsive,
+I concluded that according to the mechanism of defense
+an experience must have here been repressed in which she was
+not ashamed, and I requested her to allow those reminiscences
+to emerge which belonged to the theme of shame. She promptly
+reproduced a series of scenes from her seventeenth to her eighth
+year, during which while bathing before her mother, her sister,
+and her physician she was ashamed of her nakedness. This
+series, however, reached back to a scene in her sixth year when
+she undressed in the children’s room before going to sleep without
+feeling ashamed of her brother who was present. On questioning
+her it was found that there were a number of such scenes,
+and that for years the brothers and sisters were in the habit of
+showing themselves naked to one another before retiring. I
+now understood the significance of the sudden thought of being
+watched on going to sleep. It was an unchanged fragment of
+the old reproachful reminiscence, and she was now trying to
+make up in shame what she lost as a child.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The supposition that we dealt here with an amour of childhood
+so frequent in the etiology of hysteria was strengthened by the
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>further progress of the analysis which also showed simultaneous
+solutions for individual frequently recurring details in the picture
+of paranoia. The beginning of her depression commenced at the
+time of a disagreement between her husband and her brother on
+account of which the latter no longer visited her. She was always
+much attached to this brother and missed him very much
+at this time. Besides this she spoke about a moment in the history
+of her disease during which for the first time “everything
+became clear,” that is, during which she became convinced that
+her assumption about being generally despised and intentionally
+annoyed was true. She gained this assurance during a visit of
+her sister-in-law, who in the course of conversation dropped
+the words, “If such a thing should happen to me I would not
+mind it.” Mrs. P. at first took this utterance unsuspectingly,
+but when her visitor left her it seemed to her that these words
+contained a reproach meaning that she was in the habit of taking
+serious matters lightly, and since that hour she was sure that
+she was a victim of common slander. On asking her why
+she felt justified in referring those words to herself she answered
+that the tone in which her sister-in-law spoke convinced her of
+it—to be sure subsequently—This is really a characteristic detail
+of paranoia. I now urged her to recall her sister-in-law’s conversation
+before the accusing utterance, and it was found that she
+related that in her father’s home there were all sorts of difficulties
+with the brothers, and added the wise remark, “In every family
+many things happen which one would rather keep under
+cover, and that if such a thing should happen to her she would
+take it lightly.” Mrs. P. had to acknowledge that her depression
+was connected with the sentences before the last utterance.
+As she repressed both sentences which could recall her relations
+with her brother, and retained only the last meaningless one, she
+was forced to connect with it the feeling of being reproached by
+her sister-in-law; but, inasmuch as the contents of this sentence
+offered absolutely no basis for such assumption she disregarded
+it and laid stress on the tone with which the words were pronounced.
+It is probably a typical illustration for the fact that the
+misinterpretations of paranoia depend on repression.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In a most surprising manner it also explains her peculiar behavior
+in making appointments with her brother and then refusing
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>to tell him anything. Her explanation was that she
+thought that if she only looked at him he must understand her
+suffering, as he knew the cause of it. As this brother was really
+the only person who could know anything about the etiology of
+her disease it followed that she acted from a motive which,
+though she did not consciously understand, seemed perfectly
+justified as soon as a new sense was put on it from the unconscious.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I then succeeded in causing her to reproduce different scenes
+the culminating points of which were the sexual relations with
+her brother at least from her sixth to her tenth year. During
+this work of reproduction the organic sensation in the lap “joined
+in the discussion,” precisely as regularly observed in the analysis
+of memory remnants of hysterical patients. The picture of a
+naked female lap (but now reduced to childish proportions and
+without hair) immediately appeared or stayed away in accordance
+with the occurrence of the scene in question in full light or in
+darkness. The disgust for eating, too, was explained by a repulsive
+detail of these actions. After we had gone through this
+series, the hallucinatory sensations and pictures disappeared without
+having thus far returned.<a id='r52'></a><a href='#f52' class='c012'><sup>[52]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I have thus learned that these hallucinations were nothing other
+than fragments from the content of the repressed experiences of
+childhood, that is, symptoms of the return of the repressed material.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I now turned to the analysis of the voices. Here it must before
+all be explained why such indifferent remarks as, “Here
+goes Mrs. P.—She now looks for apartments, etc.” could be so
+painfully perceived, and how these harmless sentences managed
+to become distinguished by hallucinatory enforcement. To begin
+with, it was clear that these “voices” could not be hallucinatory
+reproduced reminiscences like the pictures and sensations, but
+rather thoughts which “became loud.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>She heard the voices for the first time under the following
+circumstances. With great tension she read the pretty story,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>“The Heiterethei” by O. Ludwig, and noticed that while reading
+she was preoccupied with incoming thoughts. Immediately after
+she took a walk on the highway and suddenly while passing a
+peasant’s cottage the voices told her, “That is how the house of
+the Heiterethei looked! Here is the well, and here is the bush!
+How happy she was in all her poverty!” The voices then repeated
+whole paragraphs of what she had just read, but it remained
+incomprehensible why house, bush, and well of the Heiterethei,
+and just such indifferent and most irrelevant passages of
+the romance should have obtruded themselves upon her attention
+with pathological strength. The analysis showed that while reading
+she at the same time entertained extraneous thoughts, and that
+she was excited by totally different passages of the book. Against
+this material analogy between the couple of the romance and
+herself and her husband, the reminiscence of intimate things of
+her married life and family secrets, against all these there arose a
+repressive resistance because they were connected with her sexual
+shyness by very simple and demonstrable streams of thought,
+and finally resulted in the awakening of old experiences of childhood.
+In consequence of the censorship exercised by the repression
+the harmless and idyllic passages connected with the objectionable
+ones by contrast and vicinity, became reinforced in consciousness,
+enabling them to become audible. For example, the
+first repressed thought referred to the slander to which the secluded
+heroine was subjected by her neighbors. She readily
+found in this an analogy to herself. She, too, lived in a small
+place, had no intercourse with anybody and considered herself
+despised by her neighbors. The suspicion against the neighbors
+was founded on the fact that in the beginning of her married
+life she was obliged to content herself with a small apartment.
+The wall of the bedroom, near which stood the nuptial bed of the
+young couple, adjoined the neighbors’ room. With the beginning
+of her marriage there awakened in her a great sexual shyness.
+This was apparently due to an unconscious awakening of some
+reminiscences of childhood of having played husband and wife.
+She was very careful lest the neighbors might hear through the
+adjacent wall either words or noises and this shyness changed
+into suspicion against the neighbors.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The voices therefore owed their origin to the repression of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>thoughts which in the last analysis really signified reproaches on
+the occasion of an experience analogous to the infantile trauma;
+they were accordingly symptoms of the return of the repression,
+but at the same time they were results of a comparison between
+the resistance of the ego and the force of the returning repression
+which in this case produce a distortion beyond recognition. On
+other occasions when analyzing voices in Mrs. P. the distortion
+was less marked, still the words heard always showed a character
+of diplomatic uncertainty. The annoying allusion was generally
+deeply hidden, the connection of the individual sentences was
+masked by a strange expression, unusual forms of speech, etc.,
+characteristics generally common to the auditory hallucinations
+of paranoiacs, and in which I noticed the remnant of the compromise
+distortion. The expression, “There goes Mrs. P., she
+is looking for apartments in the street,” signified, for example,
+the threat that she will never recover, for I promised her that
+after the treatment she would be able to return to the little city
+where her husband was employed. She rented temporary quarters
+in Vienna for a few months.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>On some occasions Mrs. P. also perceived more distinct threats,
+for example, concerning the relatives of her husband, the restrained
+expression of which still continued to contrast with the
+grief which such voices caused her. Considering all that we
+otherwise know of paranoiacs I am inclined to assume a gradual
+relaxation of that resistance which weakens the reproaches so
+that finally the defense fails completely and the original reproach,
+the insulting word, which one wanted to save himself returns in
+unchanged form. I do not, however, know whether this is a constant
+course, whether the censor of the expressions of reproach
+can not from the beginning stay away, or persist to the end.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It is left for me to utilize the explanations gained in this case
+of paranoia for the comparison of paranoia with compulsion neurosis.
+Here, as there, the repression was shown to be the nucleus
+of the psychic mechanism, and in both cases the repression is a
+sexual experience of childhood. The origin of every compulsion
+in this paranoia is in the repression, and the symptoms of paranoia
+allow a similar classification as the one found justified in
+compulsion neurosis. Some symptoms also originate from the
+primary defense among which are all delusions of distrust, suspicion
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>and persecution by others. In the compulsion neurosis
+the initial reproach became repressed through the formation of
+the primary symptom of defense, self-distrust, moreover, the reproach
+was recognized as justified, and for the purpose of adjustment
+the validity acquired by the scrupulousness during the
+normal interval now guards against giving credence to the returning
+reproach in the form of an obsession. By the formation
+of the defense symptom of distrust in others, the reproach in paranoia
+is repressed in a way which may be designated as projection;
+the reproach is also deprived of recognition, and as a retaliation
+there is no protection against the returning reproaches
+contained in the delusions.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The other symptoms in my case of paranoia are therefore to
+be designated as symptoms of the return of the repression, and
+as in the compulsion neurosis they show the traces of the compromise
+which alone permits an entrance into consciousness.
+Such are the delusions of being observed while undressing, the
+visual hallucinations, the perceptual hallucinations and the hearing
+of voices. The memory content existing in the delusion mentioned
+is almost unchanged and appears only uncertain through
+utterance. The return of the repression into visual pictures
+comes nearer to the character of hysteria than to the character of
+compulsion neurosis; still, hysteria is wont to repeat its memory
+symbols without modification, whereas the paranoiac memory hallucination
+undergoes a distortion similar to those in compulsion
+neurosis. An analogous modern picture takes the place of the
+one repressed (instead of a child’s lap it was the lap of a woman
+upon which the hairs were particularly distinct because they were
+absent in the original impression). Quite peculiar to paranoia
+but no further elucidated in this comparison is the fact that the
+repressed reproaches return as loud thoughts, this must yield to
+a double distortion: (1) a censor, which either leads to a replacement
+through other associated thoughts or to a concealment
+by indefinite expressions, and (2) the reference to the modern
+which is merely analogous to the old.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The third group of symptoms found in compulsion neurosis,
+the symptoms of the secondary defense, cannot exist as such in
+paranoia, for no defense asserts itself against the returning
+symptoms which really find credence. As a substitute for this
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>we find in paranoia another source of symptom formation; the
+delusions (symptoms of return) reaching consciousness through
+the compromise demand a great deal of the thinking work of the
+ego until they can be unconditionally accepted. As they themselves
+are not to be influenced the ego must adapt itself to them,
+and hence the combining delusional formation, the delusion of interpretation
+which results in the transformation of the ego, corresponds
+here to the symptoms of secondary defense of compulsion
+neurosis. In this respect my case was imperfect as it did
+not at that time show any attempt at interpretation, this only
+appeared later. I do not doubt, however that if psychoanalysis
+were also applied to that stage of paranoia, another important result
+would be established. It would probably be found that even
+the so called weakness of memory in paranoiacs is purposeful,
+that is, it depends on the repression and serves its purpose. Subsequently
+even those nonpathogenic memories which stand in opposition
+to the transformation of the ego become repressed and
+replaced; this the symptoms of return imperatively demand.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER VIII.<br> <span class='c013'><span class='sc'>On Psychotherapy.</span><a id='r53'></a><a href='#f53' class='c012'><sup>[53]</sup></a></span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<div class='lg-container-l c003'>
+ <div class='linegroup'>
+ <div class='group'>
+ <div class='line'><em>Gentlemen</em>:</div>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c011'>It is almost eight years since, at the request of your deceased
+chairman, Prof. v. Reder, I had the pleasure of speaking in your
+midst on the subject of hysteria. Shortly before (1895) I had
+published the “Studien über Hysterie” together with Dr. J.
+Breuer, and on the basis of a new knowledge for which we are
+thankful to this investigator, I have attempted to introduce a new
+way of treating the neurosis. Fortunately, I can say that the
+endeavors of our “Studies” have met with success, and that the
+ideas which they advocate concerning the effects of psychic traumas
+through the restraint of affects and the conception of the
+hysterical symptom as a result of a displacement of excitement
+from the psychic to the physical—ideas for which we have
+created the terms “ab-reaction” and “conversion”—are today
+generally known and understood. At least in German-speaking
+countries there are no descriptions of hysteria which do not to a
+certain extent take cognizance of them, and no colleague who
+does not at least partially follow this theory. And yet as long
+as they were new these theories and these terms must have
+sounded strange enough!</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I can not say the same thing about the therapeutic procedure
+which we have proposed to our colleagues together with our
+theory. It still struggles for recognition. This may have its
+special reasons. The technique of the procedure was at that time
+still rudimentary. I was unable to give those indications to the
+medical reader of the book which would enable him to perform
+such a treatment. But surely there were other causes of a general
+nature. To many physicians psychotherapy even today appears
+as a product of modern mysticism, and in comparison to
+our physico-chemical remedies the application of which is based
+on physiological insight, psychotherapy appears quite unscientific
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>and unworthy of the interest of a natural philosopher. You will
+therefore allow me to present to you the subject of psychotherapy,
+and to point out to you what part of this verdict can be designated
+as unjust or erroneous.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In the first place let me remind you that psychotherapy is not
+a modern therapeutic procedure. On the contrary it is one of
+the oldest remedies used in medicine. In Lëwenfeld’s instructive
+work (Lehrbuch der gesamten Psychotherapie) you can find the
+methods employed in primitive and ancient medicine. Most of
+them were of a psychotherapeutic nature. In order to cure a
+patient he was transferred into a state of “credulous expectation”
+which acts in a similar manner even today. Even after the doctors
+found other remedial agents psychotherapeutic endeavors
+never disappeared from this or that branch of medicine.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Secondly, I call your attention to the fact that we doctors really
+can not abandon psychotherapy if only because another very much
+to be considered party in the treatment—namely the patient—has
+no intention of abandoning it. You know how much we owe
+to the Nancy school (Liébault, Bernheim) for these explanations.
+Without our intention, an independent factor from the patient’s
+psychic disposition enters into the activity of every remedial agent
+introduced by the doctor, acting mostly in a favorable sense but
+often also in an inhibiting sense. We have learned to apply to
+this factor the word “suggestion,” and Moebius taught us that
+the failures of some of our remedies are to be ascribed to the disturbing
+influences of this very powerful moment. You doctors,
+all of you, constantly practice psychotherapy, even when you do
+not know it, or do not intend it, but it has one disadvantage, you
+leave entirely to the patient the psychic factor of your influence.
+It then becomes uncontrollable, it can not be divided into doses
+and can not be increased. Is it not a justified endeavor of the
+doctor to become master of this factor, to make use of it intentionally,
+to direct and enforce it? It is nothing other than that,
+that scientific psychotherapy expects of you.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In the third place, gentlemen, I wish to refer you to the well
+known experience, namely, that certain maladies and particularly
+the psychoneuroses, are more accessible to psychic influences
+than to any other medications. It is no modern talk but a dictum
+of old physicians that these diseases are not cured by the drug,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>but by the doctor, to wit, by the personality of the physician in
+so far as it exerts a psychic influence. I am well aware, gentlemen,
+that you like very much the idea which the aesthete Vischer,
+in his parody on Faust (Faust, der Tragödie, III Teil) endowed
+with a classical expression: “I know that the physical often acts
+on the moral.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>But would it not be more adequate and frequently more correct
+to influence the moral part of the person with the moral, that is,
+with psychic means?</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>There are many ways and means of psychotherapy. All
+methods are good which produce the aim of the therapy. Our
+usual consolation, “You will soon be well again,” with which we
+are so generous to our patients, corresponds to one of the
+psychotherapeutic methods, only that on gaining a profounder
+insight into the neuroses we are not forced to limit ourselves to
+this consolation alone. We have developed the technique of
+hypnotic suggestion, of psychotherapy through diversion, through
+practice, and through the evocation of serviceable affects. I do
+not disdain any of them, and would practice them all under
+suitable conditions. That I have in reality restricted myself to a
+single therapeutic procedure, to the method called by Breuer
+“cathartic,” which I prefer to call “analytic,” is simply due to
+subjective motives which guided me. Having participated in the
+elaboration of this therapy I feel it a personal duty to devote
+myself to its investigation, and to the final development of its
+technique. I maintain that the analytic method of psychotherapy
+is one which acts most penetratingly, and carries farthest;
+through it one can produce the most prolific changes in the
+patient. If I relinquish for a moment the therapeutic point of
+view, I can assert that it is the most interesting, and that it alone
+teaches us something concerning the origin and the connection
+of the morbid manifestations. Owing to insights which it opens
+for us into the mechanism of the psychic malady, it can even lead
+us beyond itself, and show us the way to still other kinds of
+therapeutic influences.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Allow me now to correct some errors, and furnish some explanations
+concerning this cathartic or analytic method of psychotherapy.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>a</em>) I notice that this method is often mistaken for the hypnotic
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>suggestive treatment. I notice this by the fact that quite
+frequently colleagues whose confidant I am not by any means,
+send patients to me, refractory patients of course, with the
+request that I should hypnotize them. Now, for eight years I
+have not practiced hypnotism (individual cases excluded) as a
+therapeutic aim, and hence I used to return the patients with
+the advice that he who relies on hypnosis should do it himself.
+In truth, the greatest possible contrast exists between the suggestive
+and the analytic technique, that contrast which the great
+Leonardo da Vinci has expressed for the arts in the <span lang="it">formulæ per
+via di porre</span> and <span lang="it">per via di levare</span>. Said Leonardo, “the art of
+painting works per via di levare, that is to say, places little
+heaps of paint where they have not been before on the uncolored
+canvas; sculpturing, on the other hand, goes <span lang="it">per via di levare</span>,
+that is to say, it takes away from the stone as much as covers
+the surface of the statue therein contained.” Quite similarly,
+gentlemen, the suggestive technique acts <span lang="it">per via di porre</span>, it does
+not concern itself about the origin, force, and significance of the
+morbid symptoms, but puts on something, to wit, the suggestion
+which it expects will be strong enough to prevent the pathogenic
+idea from expression. On the other hand the analytic therapy
+does not wish to put on anything, or introduce anything new,
+but to take away, and extract, and for this purpose it concerns
+itself with the genesis of the morbid symptoms, and the psychic
+connection of the pathogenic idea the removal of which is its aim.
+This manner of investigation has considerably furthered our understanding.
+I have so early given up the technique of suggestion,
+and with it hypnosis, because I despaired of making the suggestion
+as strong and persistent as would be necessary for a lasting
+cure. In all grave cases I noticed that the suggestions which
+were put on crumbled off again, and then the disease, or one
+replacing it, reappeared. Besides, I charge this technique with
+concealing from us the psychic play of forces, for example, it
+does not permit us to recognize the resistance with which the
+patients adhere to their malady, with which they also strive
+against the recovery, and which alone can give us an understanding
+of their behavior in life.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>b</em>) It seems to me that a very widespread mistake among my
+colleagues is the idea that the technique of the investigation for
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>the causes of the disease and the removal of the manifestations
+by this investigation is easy and self-evident. I concluded this
+from the fact that of the many who interest themselves in my
+therapy and express a definite opinion on the same, no one has
+yet asked me how I do it. There can only be one reason for it,
+they believe there is nothing to ask, that it is a matter of course.
+I occasionally also hear with surprise that in this or that division
+of the hospital a young interne is requested by his chief to undertake
+a “psychoanalysis” with a hysterical woman. I am convinced
+that he would not entrust him with the examination of an
+extirpated tumor without previously assuring himself that he is
+acquainted with the histological technique. Likewise I am informed
+that this or that colleague has made appointments with a
+patient for psychic treatment, whereas I am certain that he does
+not know the technique of such a treatment. He must, therefore,
+expect that the patient will bring him her secrets, or he
+seeks salvation in some kind of a confession or confidence. I
+should not wonder if the patient thus treated would rather be
+harmed than benefited. The mental instrument is really not at
+all easy to play. On such occasions I can not help but think of
+the speech of a world-renowned neurotic, who really never came
+under a doctor’s treatment, and only lived in the fancy of the
+poet. I mean Prince Hamlet of Denmark. The king has sent
+the two courtiers, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern, to investigate
+him and rob him of his secret. While he defended himself, pipes
+were brought on the stage. Hamlet took a pipe and requested
+one of his tormentors to play on it, saying that it is as easy to
+play as lying. The courtier hesitated because he knew no touch
+of it, and as he could not be moved to attempt to play the pipe,
+Hamlet finally burst forth: “Why, look you now, how unworthy
+a thing you make of me! You would play upon me; you would
+seem to know my stops; you would pluck out the heart of my
+mystery; you would sound me from my lowest note to the top of
+my compass; and there is much music, excellent voice, in this
+little organ, yet you cannot make it speak. ’Sblood! do you
+think I am easier to be played on than a pipe? Call me what
+instrument you will, though you can fret me, you cannot play
+upon me.” (Act III, Scene 2.)</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>c</em>) You will have surmised from some of my observations
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>that the analytic cure contains qualities which keep it away from
+the ideal of a therapy. Tuto, cito, iucunde; the investigation and
+examination does not really mean rapidity of success, and the
+allusion to the resistance has prepared you for the expectation of
+inconveniences. Certainly the psychoanalytic method lays high
+claims on the patient as well as the physician. From the first it
+requires the sacrifice of perfect candor, it takes up much of his
+time, and is therefore also expensive; for the physician it also
+means the loss of much time, and due to the technique which he
+has to learn and practice, it is quite laborious. I even find it
+quite justified to employ more suitable remedies as long as there
+is a prospect to achieve something with them. It comes to this
+point only: if we gain by the more laborious and cumbersome
+procedure considerably more than by the short and easy one, the
+first is justified despite everything. Just think, gentlemen, by
+how much the Finsen therapy of lupus is more inconvenient and
+expensive than the formerly used cauterization and scraping, and
+yet it means a great progress, merely because it achieves more, it
+actually cures the lupus radically. I do not really wish to carry
+through the comparison, but psychoanalysis can claim for itself
+a similar privilege. In reality I could develop and test my therapeutic
+method in grave and in the gravest of cases only; my
+material at first consisted of patients who tried everything unsuccessfully,
+and had spent years in asylums. I hardly gained
+enough experience to be able to tell you how my therapy behaves
+in those lighter, episodically appearing diseases which we see
+cured under the most diverse influences, and also spontaneously.
+The psychoanalytic method was created for patients who are
+permanently incapacitated, and its triumph is to make a gratifying
+number of such, permanently capacitated. Against this
+success all expense is insignificant. We can not conceal from
+ourselves what we were wont to disavow to the patient, namely,
+that the significance of a grave neurosis for the individual subjected
+to it is not less than any cachexia or any of the generally
+feared maladies.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>d</em>) In view of the many practical limitations which I have
+encountered in my work, I can hardly definitely enumerate the
+indications and contraindications of this treatment. However,
+I will attempt to discuss with you a few points:</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>1. The former value of the person should not be overlooked
+in the disease, and you should refuse a patient who does not
+possess a certain degree of education, and whose character is
+not in a measure reliable. We must not forget that there are
+also healthy persons who are good for nothing, and that if they
+only show a mere touch of the neurosis, one is only too much
+inclined to blame the disease for incapacitating such inferior
+persons. I maintain that the neurosis does not in any way stamp
+its bearer as a dégéneré, but that frequently enough it is found
+in the same individual associated with the manifestations of
+degeneration. The analytic psychotherapy is therefore no procedure
+for the treatment of neuropathic degeneration, on the contrary
+it is limited by it. It is also not to be applied in persons
+who are not prompted by their own suffering to seek the treatment,
+but subject themselves to it by order of their relatives.
+The characteristic feature upon which the usefulness of the
+psychoanalytic treatment depends, the educability, we will still
+have to consider from another point of view.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>2. If one wishes to take a safe course he should limit his
+selection to persons of a normal state, for, in psychoanalytic procedures,
+it is from the normal that we seize upon the morbid.
+Psychoses, confusional states, and marked (I might say toxic)
+depressions, are unsuitable for analysis, at least as it is practiced
+today. I do not think it at all impossible that with the proper
+changes in the procedure it will be possible to disregard this
+contraindication, and thus claim a psychotherapy for the psychoses.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>3. The age of the patient also plays a part in the selection for
+the psychoanalytic treatment. Persons near or over the age of
+fifty lack, on the one hand, the plasticity of the psychic processes
+upon which the therapy depends—old people are no longer
+educable—and on the other hand, the material which has to be
+elaborated, and the duration of the treatment is immensely increased.
+The earliest age limit is to be individually determined;
+youthful persons, even before puberty, are excellent subjects for
+influence.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>4. One should not attempt psychoanalysis when it is a question
+of rapidly removing a threatening manifestation, as, for example,
+in the case of an hysterical anorexia.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>You have now gained the impression that the sphere of application
+of the analytic psychotherapy is a very limited one, for you
+really heard me enumerate nothing but contraindications. Nevertheless,
+there remain sufficient cases and morbid states, such as
+all chronic forms of hysteria with remnant manifestations, the
+extensive realms of compulsive states, abulias, etc., on which
+this therapy can be tried.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It is pleasing that particularly the worthiest and highest developed
+persons can thus be most helped. Where the analytic
+psychotherapy has accomplished but little one can cheerfully
+assert that any other treatment would have certainly resulted in
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>e</em>) You will surely wish to ask me about the possibility of
+doing harm through the application of psychoanalysis. To this I
+will reply that if you will judge justly you will meet this procedure
+with the same critical good-feeling as you have met our
+other therapeutic methods, and doing this you will have to agree
+with me that a rationally executed analytic treatment entails no
+dangers for the patient. One who, like a layman, is accustomed
+to ascribe to the treatment everything occurring during the
+disease, will probably judge differently. It is really not so long
+since our hydrotherapeutic asylums met with similar opposition.
+Thus one who was advised to go to such an asylum became
+thoughtful because he had an acquaintance who entered the
+asylum as nervous and there become insane. As you surmise
+we deal with cases of initial general paresis who in the first stages
+could still be sent to hydrotherapeutic asylums, and who there
+merged into the irresistible course leading to manifest insanity.
+For the layman the water was the cause and author of this sad
+transformation. Where it is a question of unfamiliar influences,
+even doctors are not free from such mistaken judgment. I recall
+having once attempted to treat a woman by psychotherapy who
+passed a great part of her existence by alternating between mania
+and melancholia. I began to treat her at the end of a melancholia
+and everything seemed to go well for two weeks, but in the
+third week she was again merging into a mania. It was surely a
+spontaneous alteration of the morbid picture, for two weeks is
+no time in which anything can be accomplished by psychotherapy,
+but the prominent—now deceased—physician who saw the case
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>with me could not refrain from remarking that this decline must
+have been due to the psychotherapy. I am quite convinced that
+he would have been more critical under different conditions.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>(<em>f</em>) In conclusion, gentlemen, I must say to myself that it will
+not do to lay claim to your attention so long in favor of the
+analytic psychotherapy without telling you of what this treatment
+consists, and on what it is based. To be sure I can only indicate
+it as I have to be brief. This therapy is founded on the understanding
+that unconscious ideas—or rather the unconsciousness
+of certain psychic processes—are the main causes of a morbid
+symptom. We share this conviction with the French school
+(Janet) which moreover by gross schematization reduces the
+hysterical symptom to an unconscious idée fixe. Do not fear
+now that we will thus merge too far into the obscurest philosophy.
+Our unconscious is not quite the same as that of the philosophers
+and what is more, most philosophers wish to know nothing of
+the “psychical unconscious.” But if you will put yourselves in
+our position, you will understand that the interpretation of this
+unconscious, in patients’ psychic life, into the conscious, must
+result in a correction of their deviation from the normal, and in
+an abrogation of the compulsion controlling their psychic life.
+For the conscious will reaches as far as the conscious psychic
+processes and every psychic compulsion is substantiated by the
+unconscious. You need never fear that the patient will be
+harmed by the emotion produced in the entrance of his unconscious
+into consciousness, for you can theoretically readily understand
+that the somatic and affective activity of the emotion which
+became conscious can never become as great as those of the unconscious.
+For we only control all our emotions by directing
+upon them our highest psychic activities which are connected
+with consciousness.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>We can still choose another point of view for the understanding
+of the psychoanalytic treatment. The revealing and interpreting
+of the unconscious takes place under constant resistance
+on the part of the patient. The emerging of the unconscious
+is connected with displeasure and owing to this displeasure
+it is continuously repulsed by the patient. It is upon this conflict
+in the patient’s psychic life that you encroach, and if you
+succeed in prevailing upon him to accept something, for motives
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>of better insight, which he has thus far repulsed (repressed) on
+account of the automatic adjustment of displeasure, you have
+achieved in him a piece of educational work. For it is really an
+education if you can induce a person to leave his bed early in the
+morning despite his unwillingness to do so. As such an after
+training for the overcoming of inner resistances you can conceive
+the psychoanalytic treatment in quite a general manner.
+But in no sphere of the nervous patients is such an after training
+so essential as in the psychic elements of their sexual life.
+For nowhere have culture and education produced as much harm
+as here, and it is here, as experience will show you, that the controlling
+etiologies of the neuroses are found. The other etiological
+element, the constitutional contribution, is really given
+to us as something immutable. But this gives rise to an important
+demand on the doctor. Not only must he be of unblemished
+character—“morality is really a matter of course” as
+the principal person in Th. Vischer’s “Auch Einer” used to say—but
+he must have overcome in his own personality the mixture
+of lewdness and prudishness with which so many others are wont
+to meet the sexual problems.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>This is perhaps the place for another observation. I know
+that the emphasis which I laid on the sexual rôle in the origin of
+the psychoneuroses has become widely known. But I also know
+that restriction and nearer determinations are of little use with
+the great public; the multitude has little room in its memory, and
+generally retains from a statement the bare nucleus, thus creating
+for itself an easily remembered extreme. The same might
+also have happened to some physicians when the faint notion that
+they have of my theory is that I trace back the neurosis in the last
+place to sexual privation. Of such there is surely no dearth
+under the vital conditions of our society. But if that supposition
+were true would it not seem obvious that in order to avoid the
+roundabout way of the psychic treatment and tend directly
+towards the cure, we should directly recommend sexual participation
+as the remedy? I really do not know what could induce
+me to suppress these conclusions if they were justified. But
+the state of affairs is different. The sexual need or privation is
+merely one of the factors playing a part in the mechanism of the
+neurosis, and if it alone existed the result would not be a disease
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>but a dissipation. The other equally indispensable factor, which
+one is only too ready to forget, is the sexual repugnance of neurotics,
+their inability to love; it is that psychic feature which I
+have designated as “repression.” It is only from the conflict
+between the two strivings that the neurotic malady originates, and
+it is for this reason that the advice for sexual participation in the
+psychoneuroses can really only seldom be designated as good.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Allow me to conclude with this guarded remark. Let us hope
+that with an interest for psychotherapy, purified of all hostile
+prejudice, you will help us to do some good in the treatment of
+the severe cases of psychoneuroses.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER IX.<br> <span class='c013'><span class='sc'>My Views on the Rôle of Sexuality in the Etiology of the Neuroses.</span><a id='r54'></a><a href='#f54' class='c012'><sup>[54]</sup></a></span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>I am of the opinion that my theory on the etiological significance
+of the sexual moment in the neuroses can be best appreciated
+by following its development. I will by no means make
+any effort to deny that it passed through an evolution during
+which it underwent a change. My colleagues can find the assurance
+in this admission that this theory is nothing other than the
+result of continued and painstaking experiences. In contradistinction
+to this whatever originates from speculation can certainly
+appear complete at one go and continue unchanged.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Originally the theory had reference only to the morbid pictures
+comprehended as “neurasthenia,” among which I found two
+types which occasionally appeared pure, and which I described
+as “actual neurasthenia” and “anxiety neurosis.” For it was
+always known that sexual moments could play a part in the
+causation of these forms, but they were found neither regularly
+effective, nor did one think of conceding to them a precedence
+over other etiological influences. I was above all surprised at
+the frequency of coarse disturbances in the vita sexualis of
+nervous patients. The more I was in quest of such disturbances,
+during which I remembered that all men conceal the truth in
+things sexual, and the more skilful I became in continuing the
+examination despite the incipient negation, the more regularly
+such disease-forming moments were discovered in the sexual life,
+until it seemed to me that they were but little short of universal.
+But one must from the first be prepared for similar frequent
+occurrences of sexual irregularities under the stress of the social
+relations of our society, and one could therefore remain in doubt
+as to what part of the deviation from the normal sexual function
+is to be considered as a morbid cause. I could therefore only
+place less value on the regular demonstration of sexual noxas
+than on other experiences which appeared to me to be less
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>equivocal. It was found that the form of the malady, be it
+neurasthenia or anxiety neurosis, shows a constant relation to the
+form of the sexual injury. In the typical cases of neurasthenia
+we could always demonstrate masturbation or accumulated pollutions,
+while in anxiety neurosis we could find such factors as
+coitus interruptus, “frustrated excitement,” etc. The moment
+of insufficient discharge of the generated libido seemed to be
+common to both. Only after this experience, which is easy to
+gain and very often confirmed, had I the courage to claim for the
+sexual influences a prominent place in the etiology of the
+neurosis. It also happened that the mixed forms of neurasthenia
+and anxiety neurosis occurring so often, showed the admixture
+of the etiologies accepted for both, and that such a bipartition in
+the form of the manifestations of the neurosis seemed to accord
+well with the polar characters of sexuality (male and female).</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>At the same time, while I assigned to sexuality this significance
+in the origin of the simple neurosis, I still professed for the
+psychoneuroses (hysteria and obsessions) a purely psychological
+theory in which the sexual moment was no differently considered
+than any other emotional sources. Together with J. Breuer, and
+in addition to observations which he has made on his hysterical
+patients fully a decade before, I have studied the mechanism of
+the origin of hysterical symptoms by the awakening of memories
+in hypnotic states. We obtained information which permitted us
+to cross the bridge from Charcot’s traumatic hysteria to the
+common non-traumatic hysteria. We reached the conception
+that the hysterical symptoms are permanent results of psychic
+traumas, and that the amount of affect belonging to them was
+pushed away from conscious elaboration by special determinations,
+thus forcing an abnormal road into bodily innervation.
+The terms “strangulated affect,” “conversion,” and “ab-reaction,”
+comprise the distinctive characteristics of this conception.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In the close relations of the psychoneuroses to the simple
+neuroses, which can go so far that the diagnostic distinction is
+not always easy for the unpracticed, it could happen that the
+cognition gained from one sphere has also taken effect in the
+other. Leaving such influences out of the question, the deep
+study of the psychic traumas also leads to the same results. If
+by the “analytic” method we continue to trace the psychic
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>traumas from which the hysterical symptoms are derived, we
+finally reach to experiences which belong to the patient’s childhood,
+and concern his sexual life. This can be found even in such
+cases where a banal emotion of a non-sexual nature has occasioned
+the outburst of the disease. Without taking into account
+these sexual traumas of childhood we could neither explain the
+symptoms, find their determination intelligible, nor guard against
+their recurrence. The incomparable significance of sexual experiences
+in the etiology of the psychoneuroses seems therefore
+firmly established, and this fact remains until today one of the
+main supports of the theory.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>If we represent this theory by saying that the course of the life
+long hysterical neurosis lies in the sexual experiences of early
+childhood which are usually trivial in themselves, it surely would
+sound strange enough. But if we take cognizance of the historical
+development of the theory, and transfer the main content
+of the same into the sentence: hysteria is the expression of a
+special behavior of the sexual function of the individual, and that
+this behavior was already decisively determined by the first
+effective influences and experiences of childhood, we will perhaps
+be poorer in a paradox but richer in a motive for directing our
+attention to a hitherto very neglected and most significant aftereffect
+of infantile impressions in general.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>As I reserve the question whether the etiology of hysteria (and
+compulsion neurosis) is to be found in the sexual infantile experiences
+for a later more thorough discussion, I now return to the
+construction of the theory expressed in some small preliminary
+publications in the years 1895–1896.<a id='r55'></a><a href='#f55' class='c012'><sup>[55]</sup></a> The bringing into prominence
+of the assumed etiological moments permitted us at the
+time to contrast the common neuroses which are maladies with
+an actual etiology, with the psychoneuroses which etiology was
+in the first place to be sought in the sexual experiences of remote
+times. The theory culminates in the sentence: In a normal vita
+sexualis no neurosis is possible.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>If I still consider today this sentence as correct it is really
+not surprising that after ten years labor on the knowledge of
+these relations I passed a good way beyond my former point of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>view, and that I now think myself in a position to correct by
+detailed experience the imperfections, the displacements, and the
+misconceptions, from which this theory then suffered. By chance
+my former rather meagre material furnished me with a great
+number of cases in which infantile histories, sexual seduction by
+grown-up persons or older children, played the main rôle. I
+overestimated the frequency of these (otherwise not to be
+doubted) occurrences, the more so because I was then in no position
+to distinguish definitely the deceptive memories of hysterical
+patients concerning their childhood, from the traces of the real
+processes, whereas, I have since then learned to explain many a
+seduction fancy as an attempt at defense against the reminiscence
+of their own sexual activity (infantile masturbation). The emphasis
+laid on the “traumatic” element of the infantile sexual
+experience disappeared with this explanation, and it remained
+obvious that the infantile sexual activities (be they spontaneous
+or provoked) dictate the course of the later sexual life after maturity.
+The same explanation which really corrects the most significant
+of my original errors perforce also changed the conception
+of the mechanism of the hysterical symptoms. These no
+longer appeared as direct descendants of repressed memories of
+sexual infantile experiences, but between the symptoms and the
+infantile impressions there slipped in the fancies (confabulations
+of memory) of the patients which were mostly produced during
+the years of puberty and which on the one hand, are raised from
+and over the infantile memories, and on the other, are immediately
+transformed into symptoms. Only after the introduction
+of the element of hysterical fancies did the structure of the neurosis
+and its relation to the life of the patient become transparent.
+It also resulted in a veritable surprising analogy between these
+unconscious hysterical fancies and the romances which became
+conscious as delusions in paranoia.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>After this correction the “infantile sexual traumas” were in a
+sense supplanted by the “infantilism of sexuality.” A second
+modification of the original theory was not remote. With the
+accepted frequency of seduction in childhood there also disappeared
+the enormous emphasis of the accidental influences of sexuality
+to which I wished to shift the main rôle in the causation of
+the disease without, however, denying constitutional and hereditary
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>moments. I even hoped to solve thereby the problem of the
+selection of the neurosis, that is, to decide by the details of the sexual
+infantile experience, the form of the psychoneurosis into which
+the patient may merge. Though with reserve I thought at that
+time that passive behavior during these scenes results in the specific
+predisposition for hysteria, while active behavior results in
+compulsion neurosis. This conception I was later obliged to
+disclaim completely though some facts of the supposed connection
+between passivity and hysteria, and activity and compulsion neurosis,
+can be maintained to some extent. With the disappearance
+of the accidental influences of experiences, the elements of constitution
+and heredity had to regain the upper hand, but differing
+from the view generally in vogue I placed the “sexual constitution”
+in place of the general neuropathic predisposition. In
+my recent work, “Three Contributions to the Sexual Theory.”<a id='r56'></a><a href='#f56' class='c012'><sup>[56]</sup></a> I
+have attempted to discuss the varieties of this sexual constitution,
+the components of the sexual impulse in general, and its origin
+from the contributory sources of the organism.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Still in connection with the changed conception of the “sexual
+infantile traumas,” the theory continued to develop in a course
+which was already indicated in the publications of 1894–1896.
+Even before sexuality was installed in its proper place in the etiology,
+I had already stated as a condition for the pathogenic efficaciousness
+of an experience that the latter must appear to the
+ego as unbearable and thus evoke an exertion for defense. To
+this defense I have traced the psychic splitting—or as it was
+then called the splitting of consciousness—of hysteria. If the
+defense succeeded, the unbearable experience with its resulting
+affect was expelled from consciousness and memory; but under
+certain conditions the thing expelled which was now unconscious,
+developed its activity, and with the aid of the symptoms and their
+adhering affect it returned into consciousness, so that the disease
+corresponded to a failure of the defense. This conception had
+the merit of entering into the play of the psychic forces, and
+hence approximate the psychic processes of hysteria to the normal
+instead of shifting the characteristic of the neurosis into an
+enigmatic and no further analyzable disturbance.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Further inquiries among persons who remained normal furnished
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>the unexpected result, that the sexual histories of their childhood
+need not differ essentially from the infantile life of neurotics,
+and that especially the rôle of seduction is the same in the
+former, so the accidental influences receded still more in comparison
+to the moments of “repression” (which I began to use instead
+of “defense”). It really does not depend on the sexual
+excitements which an individual experiences in his childhood
+but above all on his reactions towards these experiences, and
+whether these impressions responded with “repression” or not.
+It could be shown that spontaneous sexual manifestations of
+childhood were frequently interrupted in the course of development
+by an act of repression. The sexual maturity of neurotic
+individuals thus regularly brings with it a fragment of “sexual
+repression” from childhood which manifests itself in the requirements
+of real life. Psychoanalyses of hysterical individuals show
+that the malady is the result of the conflict between the libido and
+the sexual repression, and that their symptoms have the value of
+a compromise between both psychic streams.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Without a comprehensive discussion of my conception of repression
+I could not explain any further this part of the theory.
+It suffices to refer here to my “Three Contributions to the Sexual
+Theory,” where I have made an attempt to throw some light on
+the somatic processes in which the essence of sexuality is to be
+sought. I have stated there that the constitutional sexual predisposition
+of the child is more irregularly multifarious than one
+would expect, that it deserves to be called “polymorphous-perverse,”
+and that from this predisposition the so called normal
+behavior of the sexual functions results through a repression of
+certain components. By referring to the infantile character of
+sexuality, I could form a simple connection among normal, perversions,
+and neurosis. The normal resulted through the repression
+of certain partial impulses and components of the infantile
+predisposition, and through the subordination of the rest under the
+primacy of the genital zones for the service of the function of
+procreation. The perversions corresponded to disturbances of
+this connection due to a superior compulsive like development of
+some of the partial impulses, while the neurosis could be traced
+to a marked repression of the libidinous strivings. As almost
+all perversive impulses of the infantile predisposition are demonstrable
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>as forces of symptom formation in the neurosis, in which,
+however, they exist in a state of repression, I could designate the
+neurosis as the “negative” of the perversion.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I think it worth emphasizing that with all changes my ideas on
+the etiology of the psychoneuroses still never disavowed or
+abandoned two points of view, to wit, the estimation of sexuality
+and infantilism. In other respects we have in place of the accidental
+influences the constitutional moments, and instead of the
+pure psychologically intended defense we have the organic “sexual
+repression.” Should anybody ask where a cogent proof can
+be found for the asserted etiological significance of sexual factors
+in the psychoneuroses, and argue that since an outburst of these
+diseases can result from the most banal emotions, and even from
+somatic causes, a specific etiology in the form of special experiences
+of childhood must therefore be disavowed; I mention as
+an answer for all these arguments the psychoanalytic investigation
+of neurotics as the source from which the disputed conviction
+emanates. If one only makes use of this method of investigation
+he will discover that the symptoms represent the whole or a partial
+sexual manifestation of the patient from the sources of the
+normal or perverse partial impulses of sexuality. Not only does
+a good part of the hysterical symptomatology originate directly
+from the manifestations of the sexual excitement, not only are a
+series of erogenous zones in strengthening infantile attributes
+raised in the neurosis to the importance of genitals, but even the
+most complicated symptoms become revealed as the converted
+representations of fancies having a sexual situation as a content.
+He who can interpret the language of hysteria can understand
+that the neurosis only deals with the repressed sexuality. One
+should, however, understand the sexual function in its proper
+sphere as circumscribed by the infantile predisposition. Where
+a banal emotion has to be added to the causation of the disease,
+the analysis regularly shows that the sexual components of the
+traumatic experience, which are never missing, have exercised the
+pathogenic effect.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>We have unexpectedly advanced from the question of the causation
+of the psychoneuroses to the problem of its essence. If we
+wish to take cognizance of what we discovered by psychoanalysis
+we can only say that the essence of these maladies lies in disturbances
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>of the sexual processes, in those processes in the organism
+which determine the formation and utilization of the sexual libido.
+We can hardly avoid perceiving these processes in the last place
+as chemical, so that we can recognize in the so called actual neuroses
+the somatic effects of disturbances in the sexual metabolism,
+while in the psychoneuroses we recognize besides the psychic
+effects of the same disturbances. The resemblance of the neuroses
+to the manifestations of intoxication and abstinence following
+certain alkaloids, and to Basedow’s and Addison’s diseases,
+obtrudes itself clinically without any further ado, and just as these
+two diseases should no more be described as “nervous diseases,”
+so will the genuine “neuroses” soon have to be removed from
+this class despite their nomenclature.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Everything that can exert harmful influences in the processes
+serving the sexual function therefore belongs to the etiology of
+the neurosis. In the first place we have the noxas directly affecting
+the sexual functions insofar as they are accepted as injuries
+by the sexual constitution which is changeable through culture
+and breeding. In the second place, we have all the different
+noxas and traumas which may also injure the sexual processes by
+injuring the organism as a whole. But we must not forget that
+the etiological problem in the neuroses is at least as complicated
+as in the causation of any other disease. One single pathogenic
+influence almost never suffices, it mostly requires a multiplicity
+of etiological moments reinforcing one another, and which can
+not be brought in contrast to one another. It is for that reason
+that the state of neurotic illness is not sharply separated from the
+normal. The disease is the result of a summation, and the
+measure of the etiological determinations can be completed from
+any one part. To seek the etiology of the neurosis exclusively in
+heredity or in the constitution would be no less one sided than to
+attempt to raise to the etiology the accidental influences of sexuality
+alone, even though the explanations show that the essence
+of this malady lies only in a disturbance of the sexual processes
+of the organism.</p>
+
+<div class='chapter'>
+ <span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>
+ <h2 class='c005'>CHAPTER X.<br> <span class='c013'><span class='sc'>Hysterical Fancies and their Relations to Bisexuality.</span><a id='r57'></a><a href='#f57' class='c012'><sup>[57]</sup></a></span></h2>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c010'>The delusional formations of paranoiacs containing the greatness
+and sufferings of their own ego, which manifest themselves
+quite typically in almost monotonous forms are universally
+familiar. Furthermore, through numerous communications we
+became acquainted with the peculiar organizations by means of
+which certain perverts put into operation their sexual gratifications,
+be it in fancy or reality. On the other hand it may sound
+rather novel to some to hear that quite analogous psychic formations
+regularly appear in all psychoneuroses, especially in hysteria,
+and that these so called hysterical fancies show important relations
+to the causation of the neurotic symptoms.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Of the same source and of the normal prototype are all these
+fantastic creations, so called reveries of youth, which have already
+gained a certain consideration in the literature, though not a sufficient
+one.<a id='r58'></a><a href='#f58' class='c012'><sup>[58]</sup></a> They are perhaps equally frequent in both sexes; in
+girls and women they seem to be wholly of an erotic nature, while
+in men they are of an erotic or ambitious nature. Yet even in
+men the significance of the erotic moment is not to be put in the
+second place, for on examining more closely the reveries of men
+we generally learn that all these heroic acts are accomplished,
+that all these successes are acquired in order to please a woman
+and to be preferred to other men.<a id='r59'></a><a href='#f59' class='c012'><sup>[59]</sup></a> These fancies are wish gratifications
+which emanate from privation and longing. They are
+justly named “day dreams” for they give the key for the understanding
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span>of night dreams in which the nucleus of the dream formation
+is produced by just such complicated, disfigured day
+fancies which are misunderstood by the conscious psychic judgment.<a id='r60'></a><a href='#f60' class='c012'><sup>[60]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'>These day dreams are garnished with great interest, are cautiously
+nurtured, and coyly guarded, as if they were numbered
+among the most intimate estates of personality. On the street,
+however, the day dreamer can be readily recognized by a sudden,
+as if absent minded smile, by talking to himself, or by a running-like
+acceleration of his gait wherein he designates the acme of
+the imaginary situation.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>All hysterical attacks which I have been thus far able to examine
+proved to be such involuntary incursions of day dreams. Observation
+leaves no doubt that such fancies may exist as unconscious
+or conscious and whenever they become unconscious they may
+also become pathogenic, that is, they may express themselves in
+symptoms and attacks. Under favorable conditions it is possible
+for consciousness to seize such unconscious fancies. One of my
+patients whose attention I have called to her fancies narrated
+that once while in the street she suddenly found herself in tears,
+and rapidly reflecting over the cause of her weeping the fancy
+became clear to her. She fancied herself in delicate relationship
+with a piano virtuoso familiar in the city, but whom she did not
+know personally. In her fancy she bore him a child (she was
+childless), and he then deserted her, leaving her and her child in
+misery. At this passage of the romance she burst into tears.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The unconscious fancies are either from the first unconscious,
+having been formed in the unconscious, or what is more frequently
+the case they were once conscious fancies, day dreams,
+and were then intentionally forgotten, merging into the unconscious
+by “repression.” Their content then either remained the
+same or underwent a transformation, so that the present unconscious
+fancy represents a descendant of the once conscious one.
+The unconscious fancy stands in a very important relation to the
+sexual life of the person, it is really identical with that fancy
+which helped it towards sexual gratification during a period of
+masturbation. The masturbating act (in the broader sense the
+onanistic) then consisted of two parts, the evocation of the fancy,
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>and the active performance of self gratification at the height of
+the same. This combination is familiarly in itself a soldering.<a id='r61'></a><a href='#f61' class='c012'><sup>[61]</sup></a>
+Originally this action was a purely auto-erotic undertaking for
+the pleasure obtained from a certain so called erogenous part of
+the body. Later this action blended with a wish presentation
+from the sphere of the object loved, and served for a partial
+realization of the situation in which this fancy culminated. If,
+then, the person forgoes in this manner the masturbo-fantastic
+gratification, the action remains undone, the fancy, however,
+changes from a conscious to an unconscious one. If no other
+manner of sexual gratification occurs, if the person remains abstinent
+and does not succeed in sublimating his libido, that is, in
+diverting the sexual excitement to a higher aim, we then have the
+conditions for the refreshment of the unconscious fancy; it grows
+exuberantly and with all the force of the desire for love at least
+a fragment of its content becomes a morbid symptom.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The unconscious fancies are then the nearest psychical first
+steps of a whole series of hysterical symptoms. The hysterical
+symptoms are nothing other than unconscious fancies brought to
+light by “conversion,” and insofar as they are somatic symptoms
+they are frequently enough taken from the spheres of the sexual
+feelings and motor innervations which originally accompanied the
+former still conscious fancies. In this way the disuse of onanism
+is really made retrograde, and the final aim of the whole pathological
+process, the restoration of the primary sexual gratification,
+though it never becomes perfect, in a manner always achieves a
+certain approximation.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The interest of him who studies hysteria turns directly from the
+symptoms to the fancies from which the former originate. The
+technique of psychoanalysis gives the means of finding out from
+the symptoms the unconscious fancies, and then of bringing
+them back to the patient’s consciousness. In this way it was
+found that the unconscious fancies of hysterics perfectly correspond
+in content to the consciously performed gratification situations
+of perverts. Those who lack examples of such nature
+need only recall the historical managements of the Roman Caesars
+whose frenzies were naturally only conditioned by the unrestricted
+fullness of the fancy creators. The delusional formations of
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>paranoiacs are of the same nature, they are fancies which directly
+become conscious, and which are borne by the masochistic-sadistic
+components of the sexual impulse. Complete counterparts of
+these can also be found in certain unconscious fancies of hysterics.
+It is a familiar, practically significant fact that hysterics express
+their fancies not as symptoms but in conscious realization, and in
+this way they feign and commit murders, assaults, and sexual aggressions.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>All that can be found out about the sexuality of the psychoneurotic
+can be ascertained by the psychoanalytic examination which
+leads from the obtrusive symptoms to the hidden unconscious
+fancies; herein, too, is the fact, the communication of which will
+be put in the foreground of this short preliminary publication.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Probably in view of the difficulties which prevent the effort of
+the unconscious fancies from expressing themselves, the relation
+between the fancies to the symptoms is not simple but rather
+manifoldly complicated.<a id='r62'></a><a href='#f62' class='c012'><sup>[62]</sup></a> As a rule, that is, in a fully developed
+and a long standing neurosis, a symptom does not correspond to
+an individual unconscious fancy, but to a number of such, and
+indeed it is not arbitrary but in lawful combination. To be sure
+in the beginning of the disease all these complications are not
+developed.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>For the sake of general interest I pass over the connection of
+this communication and insert a series of formulæ which strive to
+progressively exhaust the nature of hysteria. They do not contradict
+one another but correspond partly to more complete and
+sharper conceptions, and partly to the use of different points of
+view.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>1. The hysterical symptom is the memory symbol of certain
+efficacious (traumatic) impressions and experiences.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>2. The hysterical symptom is the compensation by conversion
+for the associative return of the traumatic experience.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>3. The hysterical symptom—like all other psychic formations—is
+the expression of a wish realization.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>4. The hysterical symptom is the realization of an unconscious
+fancy serving as a wish fulfilment.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>5. The hysterical symptom serves as a sexual gratification, and
+represents a part of the sexual life of the individual (corresponding
+to one of the components of his sexual impulse).</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>6. The hysterical symptom, in a fashion, corresponds to the
+return of the sexual gratification which was real in infantile life
+but had been repressed since then.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>7. The hysterical symptom results as a compromise between two
+opposing affects or impulse incitements, one of which strives to
+bring to realization a partial impulse, or a component of the
+sexual constitution, while the other strives to suppress the same.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>8. The hysterical symptom may undertake the representation
+of diverse unconscious non-sexual incitements, but can not lack
+the sexual significance.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>It is the seventh among these determinations which expresses
+most exhaustively the essence of the hysterical symptom as a realization
+of an unconscious fancy, and it is the eighth which properly
+designates the significance of the sexual moment. Some of
+the preceding formulæ are contained as first steps in this formula.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In view of these relations between symptoms and fancies one
+can readily reach from the psychoanalysis of the symptoms to the
+knowledge of the components of the sexual impulse controlling
+the individual, just as I have shown in the “Three Contributions
+to the Sexual Theory.” But in some cases this examination
+gives rather unexpected results. It shows that many symptoms
+can not be solved by one unconscious sexual fancy or by a series
+of fancies in which the most significant and most primitive is of
+a sexual nature, but in order to solve the symptom two sexual
+fancies are required, one of the masculine and one of the feminine
+character, so that one of these fancies arises from a homosexual
+impulse. The axiom pronounced in formula seven is in no way
+effected by this novelty, so that a hysterical symptom necessarily
+corresponds to a compromise between a libidinous and a repressed
+emotion, but besides that, it can correspond to a union of two
+libidinous fancies of contrary sex characters.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I refrain from giving examples for this axiom. Experience
+has taught me that short analyses compressed into the form of an
+abstract can never make the demonstrable impression for which
+they were intended. The communication of fully analyzed cases
+must be reserved for another place.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>I therefore content myself in formulating the axiom and in
+elucidating its significance:</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>9. An hysterical symptom is the expression, on the one hand,
+of a masculine, and on the other hand of a feminine unconscious
+sexual fancy.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>I expressly observe that I am unable to adjudge to this axiom
+the similar general validity that I claimed for the other formulæ.
+As far as I can see it is met neither in all symptoms of a single
+case, nor in all cases. On the contrary it is not difficult to find
+cases in which the contrary sexual emotions have found separate
+symptomatic expression, so that the symptoms of hetero- and
+homosexuality can be as sharply distinguished from each other as
+the fancies hidden behind them. Nevertheless, the relation
+claimed in the ninth formula occurs frequently enough, and
+wherever it is found it is of sufficient significance to merit a
+special formulation. It seems to me to signify the highest stage
+of complexity to which the determination of hysterical symptoms
+can reach, and can only be expected in a long standing neurosis
+and where a great amount of organization has occurred.<a id='r63'></a><a href='#f63' class='c012'><sup>[63]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The demonstrable bisexual significance of hysterical symptoms
+occurring in many cases is indeed an interesting proof for the
+assertion formulated by me that the supposed bisexual predisposition
+of man can be especially recognized in psychoneurotics by
+means of psychoanalysis.<a id='r64'></a><a href='#f64' class='c012'><sup>[64]</sup></a> Quite an analogous process from the
+same sphere is that in which the masturbator in his conscious
+fancies attempts to live through in his imagination the fancied
+situations of both the man and the woman. Other counterparts
+are found in certain hysterical crises in which the patients play
+both rôles lying at the basis of sexual fancies; thus, for example,
+one of the cases under my observation presses his garments to his
+body with one arm (as woman), and with the other arm he attempts
+to tear them off (as man). This contradictory simultaneity
+determines most of the incomprehensibility of the situation
+otherwise so plastically represented in the attack, and is excellently
+<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>suited for the concealment of the effective unconscious
+fancy.</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>In psychoanalytical treatment it is very important to be prepared
+for the bisexual significance of a symptom. It should
+not be at all surprising or misleading when a symptom remains
+apparently undiminished in spite of the fact that one of its
+sexual determinants is already solved. Perhaps it is still supported
+by the unsuspected contrary sexual. Furthermore, during
+the treatment of such cases we can observe how the patient
+makes use of this convenience. During the analysis of the one
+sexual significance he continually switches his thoughts into the
+sphere of the contrary significance just as if onto a neighboring
+track.</p>
+
+<hr class='c018'>
+<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r1'>1</a>. Studien über Hysterie von Jos. Breuer und Sigm. Freud. Leipzig und
+Wien, Franz Deuticke, 1895. 2nd ed., 1909.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r2'>2</a>. Sammlung kleiner Schriften zur Neurosenlehre, Vols. I. and II.
+Leipzig und Wien, Deuticke, 1906, and 1909.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r3'>3</a>. Bleuler, Freudsche Mechanismen in der Symptomatologie der Psychosen,
+Psychiatrisch-Neurolog. Wochenschrift, 1906, Nrs. 35 and 36.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f4'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r4'>4</a>. Jung, The Psychology of Dementia Præcox, Nervous and Mental
+Disease Monograph Series, Nr. 3.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f5'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r5'>5</a>. Riklin, Psychiatrisch-Neurolog. Wochenschrift, 1905, Nr. 46.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f6'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r6'>6</a>. Brill, Psychological Factors in Dementia Præcox, Journal of Abnormal
+Psychology, Vol. III, Nr. 4, and A Case of Schizophrenia, American
+Journal of Insanity, Vol. LXVI, No. 1.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f7'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r7'>7</a>. Freud, Deuticke, 1909.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f8'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r8'>8</a>. Freud, Karger, 1907.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f9'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r9'>9</a>. Freud, Deuticke, 1905.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f10'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r10'>10</a>. Written in collaboration with Dr. Joseph Breuer.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f11'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r11'>11</a>. The possibility of such a therapy was clearly recognized by Delboeuf
+and Binet, as is shown by the accompanying quotations: Delboeuf, Le
+magnétisme animal, Paris, 1889: <span lang="fr">“On s’expliquerait des lors comment le
+magnétiseur aide à guérison. Il remet le sujet dans l’état où le mal s’est
+manifesté et combat par la parole le même mal, mais renaissant.” (Binet,
+Les altérations de la personnalité, 1892, p. 243): “... peut-être verra-t-on
+qu’en reportant le malade par un artifice mental, au moment même ou
+le symptome a apparu pour la premiere fois, on rend ce malade plus
+docile a une suggestion curative.”</span> In the interesting book of Janet,
+L’Automatism Psychologique, Paris, 1889, we find the description of a
+cure brought about in a hysterical girl by a process similar to our method.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f12'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r12'>12</a>. We are unable to distinguish in this preliminary contribution what
+there is new in this content and what can be found in such other authors
+as Moebius and Strümpel who present similar views on hysteria. The
+greatest similarity to our theoretical and therapeutical accomplishments we
+accidentally found in some published observations of Benedict which we
+shall discuss hereafter.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f13'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r13'>13</a>. The German abreagiren has no exact English equivalent. It will therefore
+be rendered throughout the text by “ab-react,” the literal meaning
+is to react away from or to react off. It has different shades of meaning,
+from defense reaction to emotional catharsis, which can be discerned from
+the context.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f14'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r14'>14</a>. As an example of the technique mentioned above, that is, of investigating
+in a non-somnambulic state or where consciousness is not broadened,
+I will relate a case which I analyzed recently. I treated a woman of
+thirty-eight who suffered from an anxiety neurosis (agoraphobia, fear of
+death, etc.). Like many patients of that type she had a disinclination to
+admit that she acquired this disease in her married state and was quite
+desirous of referring it back to early youth. She informed me that at
+the age of seventeen when she was in the street of her small city she had
+the first attack of vertigo, anxiety, and faintness, and that these attacks
+recurred at times up to a few years ago when they were replaced by her
+present disease. I thought that the first attacks of vertigo, in which the
+anxiety was only blurred, were hysterical and decided to analyze the
+same. All she knows is that she had the first attack when she went out
+to make purchases in the main street of her city.—“What purchases did
+you wish to make?”—“Various things, I believe it was for a ball to which
+I was invited.”—“When was the ball to take place?”—“I believe two days
+later.”—“Something must have happened a few days before this which
+excited you, and which made an impression on you.”—“But I don’t know,
+it is now twenty-one years.”—“That does not matter, you will recall it.
+I will exert some pressure on your head and when I stop it you will
+either think of or see something which I want you to tell me.” I went
+through this procedure, but she remained quiet.—“Well, has nothing
+come into your mind?”—“I thought of something, but that can have no
+connection with it.”—“Just say it.”—“I thought of a young girl who is
+dead, but she died when I was eighteen, that is, a year later.”—“Let us
+adhere to this. What was the matter with your friend?”—“Her death
+affected me very much, because I was very friendly with her. A few
+weeks before another young girl died, which attracted a great deal of
+attention in our city, but then I was only seventeen years old.”—“You
+see, I told you that the thought obtained under the pressure of the hands
+can be relied upon. Well now, can you recall the thought that you had
+when you became dizzy in the street?”—“There was no thought, it was
+vertigo.”—“That is quite impossible, such conditions are never without
+accompanying ideas. I will press your head again and you will think of
+it. Well, what came to your mind?”—“I thought, ‘now I am the third.’”—“What
+do you mean?”—“When I became dizzy I must have thought,
+now I will die like the other two.”—“That was then the idea, during the
+attack you thought of your friend, her death must have made a great impression
+on you.”—“Yes, indeed, I recall now that I felt dreadful when I
+heard of her death, to think that I should go to a ball while she lay dead,
+but I anticipated so much pleasure at the ball and was so occupied with
+the invitation that I did not wish to think of this sad event.” (Notice
+here the intentional repression from consciousness which caused the
+reminiscences of her friend to become pathogenic.)</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The attack was now in a measure explained, but I still needed the
+occasional moment which just then provoked this recollection, and accidentally
+I formed a happy supposition about it.—“Can you recall through
+which street you passed at that time?”—“Surely, the main street with
+its old houses, I can see it now.”—“And where did your friend live?”—“In
+the same street. I had just passed her house and was two houses
+farther when I was seized with the attack.”—“Then it was the house
+which you passed that recalled your dead friend, and the contrast which
+you then did not wish to think about that again took possession of you.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>Still I was not satisfied, perhaps there was something else which provoked
+or strengthened the hysterical disposition in a hitherto normal girl.
+My suppositions were directed to the menstrual indisposition as an appropriate
+moment, and I asked, “Do you know when during that month you
+had your menses?”—She became indignant: “Do you expect me to know
+that? I only know that I had them then very rarely and irregularly.
+When I was seventeen I only had them once.”—“Well let us enumerate
+the days, months, etc., so as to find when it occurred.”—She with certainty
+decided on a month and wavered between two days preceding a
+date which accompanied a fixed holiday.—Does that in any way correspond
+with the time of the ball?—She answered quietly: “The ball was on this
+holiday. And now I recall that I was impressed by the fact that the only
+menses which I had had during the year occurred just when I had to go to
+the ball. It was the first invitation to a ball that I had received.”</p>
+
+<p class='c011'>The combination of the events can now be readily constructed and the
+mechanism of this hysterical attack readily viewed. To be sure the result
+was gained after painstaking labor. It necessitated on my side full confidence
+in the technique and individual directing ideas in order to reawaken
+such details of forgotten experiences after twenty-one years in
+a sceptical and awakened patient. But then everything agreed.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f15'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r15'>15</a>. A better description of this peculiar state in which one knows something
+and at the same time does not know it, I could never obtain. It
+can apparently be understood only if one has found himself in such a
+state. I have at my disposal a very striking recollection of this kind
+which I can vividly see. If I make the effort to recall what passed
+through my mind at that time my output seems very poor. I saw at that
+time something which was not at all appropriate to my expectations, and
+what I saw did not in the least divert me from my definite purpose,
+whereas this perception ought to have done away with my purpose. I
+did not become conscious of this contradiction nor did I remark the affect
+of the repulsion to which it was undoubtedly due that this perception did
+not attain any psychic validity. I was struck with that form of blindness
+in seeing eyes, which one admires so much in mothers towards their
+daughters, in husbands towards their wives, and in rulers towards their
+favorites.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f16'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r16'>16</a>. It will be shown that, notwithstanding, I erred.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f17'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r17'>17</a>. <span lang="de">Die Abwehr-Neuropsychosen, Neurologisches Centralblatt</span>, 1 June,
+1894.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f18'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r18'>18</a>. I can neither exclude nor prove that this pain, especially of the thighs,
+was of a neurasthenic nature.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f19'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r19'>19</a>. To my surprise I once discovered that such subsequent ab-reaction—through
+other impressions than nursing—may form the content of an
+otherwise enigmatic neurosis. It was the case of a pretty girl of nineteen,
+Miss Matilda H. whom I first saw with an incomplete paralysis of the
+legs, and months afterward I was again called because her character had
+changed. She was depressed and tired of living, entertaining lack of
+consideration for her mother, and was irritable and inapproachable. The
+whole picture of the patient did not seem to me to be that of an ordinary
+melancholia. She could easily be put into a somnambulic state, and I
+made use of this peculiarity to impart to her each time commands and
+suggestions to which she listened in her profound sleep and responded
+with profuse tears, but which, however, caused but little change in her
+condition. One day while hypnotized she became talkative and informed
+me that the reason for her depression was the breaking of her betrothal
+many months before. She stated that on closer acquaintance with her
+fiance the things displeasing to her and her mother became more and
+more evident. On the other hand, the material advantages of the engagement
+were too tangible to make the decision of a rupture easy, thus, both
+of them hesitated for a long time. She then merged into a condition of
+indecision in which she allowed everything to pass apathetically, and
+finally her mother pronounced for her the decisive “no.” Shortly after,
+she awoke as from a dream and began to occupy herself fervently with
+the thoughts about the broken betrothal, she began to weigh the pros and
+cons, a process which she continued for some time. At present she continues
+to live in that time of doubt, and entertains daily the moods and
+the thoughts which would have been appropriate for that day. The
+irritability against her mother could only be explained if we took into
+consideration the circumstances that existed on that decisive day. Next
+to this thought activity she found her present life a mere phantom just
+like a dream. I did not again succeed in getting the girl to talk—I continued
+my exhortations during deep somnambulism. I saw her each time
+burst into tears without however receiving any answer from her. But
+one day, it was near the anniversary of the engagement, the whole state
+of depression disappeared. This was attributed to my great hypnotic cure.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f20'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r20'>20</a>. It is different in a hypnoid-hysteria. Here the content of the separate
+psychic groups may never have been in the ego consciousness.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f21'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r21'>21</a>. I had under my observation another case in which a contracture of the
+masseters made it impossible for the artist to sing. The young lady in
+question through painful experiences in the family was forced to go on
+the stage. While in Rome rehearsing, in great excitement she suddenly
+perceived the sensation of being unable to close her opened mouth and
+sank fainting to the floor. The physician who was called closed her jaws
+forcibly, but the patient since that time was unable to open her jaws more
+than a finger’s breadth and had to give up her newly chosen profession.
+When she came under my care many years later, the motives for that
+excitement were apparently over for some time, for massage in a light
+hypnosis sufficed to open her mouth widely. The lady has since sung
+in public.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f22'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r22'>22</a>. But perhaps spinal neurasthenic?</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f23'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r23'>23</a>. See Studien über Hysterie, p. 57, footnote.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f24'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r24'>24</a>. l. c.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f25'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r25'>25</a>. The literal translation of Auftreten is to press down by treading.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f26'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r26'>26</a>. In conditions of profounder psychic changes we apparently find a
+symbolic stamp (mark) of the more artificial usage of language in the
+form of emblematic pictures and sensations. There was a time in Mrs.
+Cäcilie M. during which every thought was changed into an hallucination,
+and which solution frequently afforded great humor. She at that time
+complained to me of being troubled by the hallucination that both her
+physicians, Breuer and I, were hanged in the garden on two nearby trees.
+The hallucination disappeared after the analysis revealed the following
+origin: The evening before Breuer refused her request for a certain
+drug. She then placed her hopes on me but found me just as inflexible.
+She was angry at both of us, and in her affect she thought, “They are
+worthy of each other, the one is a pendant of the other!”</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f27'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r27'>27</a>. E. Hecker, Centralblatt für Nervenheilkunde, Dec., 1893.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f28'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r28'>28</a>. See Breuer und Freud, Studien über Hysterie. Deuticke, Leipzig und
+Wien, 1895, p. 15.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f29'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r29'>29</a>. See Breuer und Freud, Studien über Hysterie. Deuticke, Leipzig und
+Wien, 1895, p. 106.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f30'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r30'>30</a>. See Breuer und Freud, Studien über Hysterie. Deuticke, Leipzig und
+Wien, 1895, p. 15.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f31'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r31'>31</a>. As mentioned in the preface the author has long since discarded this
+pressure procedure.—Translator’s note.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f32'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r32'>32</a>. See Breuer und Freud, Studien über Hysterie. Deuticke, Leipzig und
+Wien, 1895, p. 85.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f33'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r33'>33</a>. l. c., p. 15.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f34'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r34'>34</a>. See Breuer und Freud, Studien über Hysterie. Deuticke, Wien und
+Leipzig, 1895, p. 28.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f35'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r35'>35</a>. See Breuer und Freud, Studien über Hysterie. Deuticke, Leipzig und
+Wien, 1895, p. 55.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f36'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r36'>36</a>. <span lang="fr">État mental des hystériques, Paris, 1893 and 1894. Quelques définitions
+récentes de l’hystérie, Arch. de Neurol., 1893, XXXV-VI.</span></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f37'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r37'>37</a>. Oppenheim: Hysteria is an exaggerated expression of emotion. But
+the “expression of emotion” represents that amount of psychic excitement
+which normally experiences conversion.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f38'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r38'>38</a>. Strümpel: The disturbance of hysteria lies in the psycho-physical, there
+where the physical and psychical are connected with each other.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f39'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r39'>39</a>. Janet, in the second chapter of his spirited essay “Quelques definitions,”
+etc., has treated the objection that the splitting of consciousness
+belongs also to the psychoses and the so called psychaesthenia, but in my
+opinion he has not satisfactorily solved it. It is essentially this objection
+which urged him to call hysteria a form of degeneration. But through
+no characteristic is he able to separate sufficiently the hysterical splitting
+of consciousness from the psychopathic, etc.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f40'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r40'>40</a>. The group of typical phobias, for which agoraphobia is a prototype,
+cannot be reduced to the psychic mechanisms here developed. Furthermore
+the mechanism of agoraphobia deviates in one decisive point from
+that of the real obsessions and from phobias based on such. Here there
+is no repressed idea from which the affect of fear has been separated.
+The fear of this phobia has another origin.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f41'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r41'>41</a>. E. Hecker, Über larvierte und abortive Angstzustände bei Neurasthenie,
+Centralblatt für Nervenheilkunde, December, 1893.—Anxiety is
+made particularly prominent among the chief symptoms of neurasthenia
+by Kaan, Der neurasthenische Angstaffekt bei Zwangsvorstellungen und
+der primordiale Grübelzwang, Wien, 1893.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f42'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r42'>42</a>. Die Abwehr-Neuropsychosen, Neurol. Centralbl., 1894, Nr. 10 u. 11.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f43'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r43'>43</a>. Obsession et phobies, Révue neurologique, 1895.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f44'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r44'>44</a>. Moebius, Neuropathologische Beiträge, 1894, 2. Heft.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f45'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r45'>45</a>. Peyer, Die nervösen Affektionen des Darmes, Wiener Klinik, Jänner,
+1893.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f46'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r46'>46</a>. Freud, Abwehr-Neuropsychosen.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f47'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r47'>47</a>. Neurologisches Centralblatt, 1896, Nr. 10.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f48'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r48'>48</a>. I myself surmise that the so frequently fabricated assaults of hysterical
+persons are obsessional confabulations emanating from the memory
+traces of infantile traumas.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f49'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r49'>49</a>. In an article on the anxiety neurosis (Neurologisches Centralblatt,
+1895, Nr. 2) I stated that “an anxiety neurosis which can almost typically
+be combined with hysteria can be evoked in maturing girls at the first
+encounter with the sexual problem.” I know today that the occasion in
+which such virginal anxiety breaks out does not really correspond to the
+first encounter with sexuality, but that in such persons there was in
+childhood a precedent experience of sexual passivity which memory was
+awakened at the “first encounter.”</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f50'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r50'>50</a>. A psychological theory of the repression ought also to inform us why
+only ideas of a sexual content can be repressed. It may be formulated
+as follows: It is known that ideas of a sexual content produce exciting
+processes in the genitals resembling the actual sexual experience. It may
+be assumed that this somatic excitement becomes transformed into psychic.
+As a rule the activity referred to is much stronger at the time of the
+occurrence than at the recollection of the same. But if the sexual experience
+takes place during the time of sexual immaturity and the recollection
+of the same is awakened during or after maturity, the recollection
+then acts disproportionately more exciting than the previous experience,
+for puberty has in the mean time incomparably increased the reactive
+capacity of the sexual apparatus. But such an inverse proportion seems
+to contain the psychological determination of repression. Through the
+retardation of the pubescent maturity in comparison with the psychic
+function, the sexual life offers the only existing possibility for that inversion
+of the relative efficacy. The infantile traumas subsequently act
+like fresh experiences, but they are then unconscious. Deeper psychological
+discussions I will have to postpone for another time. I moreover
+call attention to the fact that the here considered time of “sexual maturity”
+does not coincide with puberty, but occurs before the same (eight
+to ten years).</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f51'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r51'>51</a>. One example instead of many: An eleven-year-old boy has obsessively
+arranged for himself the following ceremonial before going to bed: He
+could not fall asleep unless he related to his mother most minutely all
+experiences of the day; not the smallest scrap of paper or any other rubbish
+was allowed in the evening on the carpet of his bedroom. The bed
+had to be moved close to the wall, three chairs had to stand in front of it,
+and the pillows had to lie in just such a position. In order to fall asleep
+he had to kick with both legs a number of times, and then had to lie on
+the side. This was explained as follows: Years before while putting
+this pretty boy to sleep, the servant girl made use of this opportunity to
+lay over him and assault him sexually. When this reminiscence was later
+awakened by a recent experience it made itself known to consciousness
+by the compulsion in the above mentioned ceremonial which sense could
+really be surmised and the details verified by psychoanalysis. The chairs
+before the bed which was close to the wall—so that no one could have
+access to it; the arrangement of the pillows in a definite manner—so that
+they should be differently arranged than they were on that evening; the
+motion with the legs—to kick away the person lying on him; sleeping on
+the side—because during that scene he lay on his back; the detailed confession
+to his mother—because in consequence of the prohibition of his
+seductress he concealed from his mother this and other sexual experiences;
+finally, keeping the floor of his bedroom clean—because this
+was the main reproach which he had to hear from his mother up to that
+time.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f52'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r52'>52</a>. When the meagre success of this treatment was later removed by an
+exacerbation, she did not again see the offensive pictures of strange
+genitals, but she had the idea that strangers saw her genitals as soon as
+they were behind her.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f53'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r53'>53</a>. Lecture delivered before the Vienna Medic. Doktorenkollegium, on
+December 12, 1904.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f54'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r54'>54</a>. From Löwenfeld, “Sexualleben und Nervenleiden,” IV ed., 1906.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f55'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r55'>55</a>. See Chapter VII, and Zur Aetiologie der Hysterie, Wiener, Klinische
+Rundschau, 1896.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f56'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r56'>56</a>. An English translation in preparation.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f57'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r57'>57</a>. Zeitschrift für Sexualwissenschaft, herausgegeben von Hirschfeld, I,
+1908.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f58'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r58'>58</a>. Compare Breuer and Freud <span lang="fr">Studien über Hysterie, 1895. P. Janet,
+Névroses et ideés fixes, I (Les rêveries subconscientes)</span>, 1898. Havelock
+Ellis, Sexual Impulse and Modesty (German by Kötscher), 1900. <span lang="de">Freud,
+Traumdeutung, 1906, 2d ed., 1909. A. Pick, Über pathologische Träumerei
+und ihre Beziehungen zur Hysteria, Jahrbuch für Psychiatrie und Neurologie,
+XIV, 1896.</span></p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f59'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r59'>59</a>. H. Ellis similarly expresses himself, l. c., p. 185.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f60'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r60'>60</a>. Compare Freud, Traumdeutung, 2d ed., p. 302.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f61'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r61'>61</a>. Compare Freud, Three Contributions to the Sexual Theory, 1895.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f62'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r62'>62</a>. The same thing holds true for the relation between the “latent”
+thoughts of the dream and the elements of the manifest content of the
+dream. See the Chapter on the “Work of the Dream” in the author’s
+Traumdeutung.</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f63'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r63'>63</a>. Indeed J. Sadger, who recently discovered this sentence in question,
+independently by psychoanalysis, claims for it a general validity (<span lang="de">Die
+Bedeutung der psychoanalytische Methode nach Freud, Centralbl. f. Nerv.
+u. Psych., Nr. 229.</span>)</p>
+</div>
+<div class='footnote' id='f64'>
+<p class='c011'><a href='#r64'>64</a>. Three Contributions to the Sexual Theory.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class='pbb'>
+ <hr class='pb c002'>
+</div>
+<div class='tnotes x-ebookmaker'>
+
+<div class='chapter ph2'>
+
+<div class='nf-center-c0'>
+<div class='nf-center c004'>
+ <div>TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES</div>
+ </div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+<table class='table0'>
+ <tr>
+ <th class='c019'>Page</th>
+ <th class='c019'>Changed from</th>
+ <th class='c020'>Changed to</th>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c006'><a href='#t10'>10</a></td>
+ <td class='c021'>the so called χατ’ εξοχὴν of traumatic hysteria or of a series of</td>
+ <td class='c022'>the so called κατ’ ἐξοχὴν of traumatic hysteria or of a series of</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c006'><a href='#t65'>65</a></td>
+ <td class='c021'>scenes like the one of being forced to hold our her hand in</td>
+ <td class='c022'>scenes like the one of being forced to hold out her hand in</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td class='c006'><a href='#t123'>123</a></td>
+ <td class='c021'>be identified with personel or hereditary “degeneration.”</td>
+ <td class='c022'>be identified with personal or hereditary “degeneration.”</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+
+ <ul class='ul_1'>
+ <li>Typos fixed; non-standard spelling and dialect retained.
+
+ </li>
+ <li>Used numbers for footnotes, placing them all at the end of the last chapter.
+ </li>
+ </ul>
+
+</div>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 75132 ***</div>
+ </body>
+ <!-- created with ppgen.py 3.57e (with regex) on 2024-12-27 06:54:37 GMT -->
+</html>
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #75132 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/75132)