172:. A hand paralysis may symbolize masturbation guilt or a struggle to inhibit hostility." "Difficulty in swallowing food has been interpreted by analysts as evidence of something 'unpalatable' in the person's life situation; nausea is inability to 'stomach' something unpleasant; vomiting is rejection; asthmatic difficulties symbolize the existence of a load on one's chest; pain in the shoulder or arm indicates an inhibited impulse to strike out aggressively; and neuro
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155:". "Difficulty in swallowing may represent an unpalatable situation; an asthmatic episode may symbolize a load on the chest; itching may simbolize irritation or that 'something has gotten under the person's skin'." "A chronically uncontrollable contraction of the hand into a clenched fist may symbolize hostility as much as angry words do.
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that have no basis in organic disease. One of them could say: 'I can't stand on my own two feet,' expressing a conviction that he or she must depend on the help of others to meet life's challenges, while the other could reply: 'I can't stand it!', declaring an inability to endure a particular
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and functional blindness have been interpreted in various cases as an expression of guilt consequent on real or fancied misdeeds, a fear of the outer world and a magical attempt to do away with it, or a reaction-formation to the unconscious wish to be a
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Some believe that understanding the significance to the patient of the organ affected by the illness is essential for accurate diagnosis and treatment. For example, chronic
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not influenced by such psychoanalytic ideas rejects both the semantic correlation with the target organ and that the cause is an unconscious conflict. If anything,
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used the term "organ dialect" as early as 1912, when he wrote a paper of that name. He later borrowed the term "organ jargon" that had been coined by
118:(lower backache) with no identifiable organic cause may mean that the patient is feeling put upon, is being a martyr, or is aiming too low in life.
71:, I would here lay stress on the point that the relation to the bodily organ ... has usurped the place of the whole content of the thought. The
215:, these disorders represent an infantile use of body language by individuals who are unable to express themselves effectively by verbal means.
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pressure or difficult situation". One might discover that a client, experiencing
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627:(1983). "The development of psychosomatic medicine during the past 25 years".
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uses in his 1915 essay "The
Unconscious" attributing its coinage to
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Chronic
Disease and Psychological Invalidism: A Psychosomatic Study
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is a somatic expression of the saying, 'He gets under my skin'."
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Freudian
Dictionary. A Comprehensive Guide to Freudian Concepts
515:. American society for research in psychosomatic problems.
98:, and also synonymously employed the term organ language.
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affecting a "constitutional" target organ, correlated by
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for which there is no medical explanation, is expressing
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or somatic function would be semantically related to the
341:"Organ Dialect/Organ Jargon/Organ Language - AdlerPedia"
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as a form of symbolic communication. It is also called
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585:(1984). "New Observations on Body Organ Language".
473:"4 | Bodily reactions to mental stress (pp. 74ff.)"
565:"An Introduction to the Problem of Organ Language"
159:may, in a distorted fashion, express sexuality or
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535:"Organ-speech [Le langage d'organe]"
183:Divergence with the psychiatric paradigm
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254:"The Unconscious (1915) (pp. 116—150)"
446:Rosen, Ephraim; Gregory, Ian (1965).
265:. With an introduction of the editor
189:Psychoneuroendocrinoimmunology (PNEI)
79:trait: it has become "organ-speech" (
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630:Journal of Psychosomatic Research
588:Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics
387:American Psychiatric Association
108:American Psychiatric Association
540:Revue française de psychanalyse
483:Springer Science+Business Media
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142:"Two persons may suffer from
643:10.1016/0022-3999(83)90093-4
413:The Dictionary of Psychology
383:APA Dictionary of Psychology
163:-like hostility and anger.
122:In other words, the target
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298:José Luis Valls (2019).
673:Mind–body interventions
570:Rivista di psicoanalisi
471:John Sheahan (2012) .
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688:Psychoanalytic theory
230:Somatization disorder
22:psychosomatic illness
553:10.3917/rfp.783.0658
531:Vassilis Kapsambelis
416:(reprint ed.).
271:Simon & Schuster
668:Freudian psychology
449:Abnormal Psychology
225:Conversion disorder
198:psychosomatizations
157:Hysterical seizures
693:Somatic psychology
408:Raymond J. Corsini
75:speech displays a
67:In agreement with
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561:Giovanni Hautmann
269:. New York City:
208:factors. For the
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30:bodily expression
16:According to the
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200:are due to
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420:. p.
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273:. p.
236:References
206:hereditary
194:Psychiatry
187:See also:
174:dermatitic
153:heartbreak
102:Definition
410:(2002) .
310:Routledge
252:(1997) .
144:leg pains
132:repressed
703:Language
609:45115381
563:(1990).
533:(2014).
509:(1946).
458:Saunders
363:June 23,
353:Illinois
219:See also
59:In 1915
37:conflict
651:6864600
617:6514957
392:May 18,
349:Chicago
177:itching
161:tantrum
116:lumbago
63:wrote:
55:History
28:is the
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359:. 2023
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202:stress
170:voyeur
128:tissue
81:German
32:of an
605:JSTOR
257:(PDF)
124:organ
69:Tausk
61:Freud
647:PMID
613:PMID
487:ISBN
426:ISBN
394:2021
365:2023
318:ISBN
279:ISBN
639:doi
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