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There are three kinds of anxiety: reality, neurotic, and moral. Reality anxietyis the fear of danger from the external world, and the level of such anxietyis proportionate to the degree of real threat. Neurotic and moral anxieties areevoked by threats to the “balance of power” within the person. They signal tothe ego that unless appropriate measures are taken the danger may increaseuntil the ego is overthrown. Neurotic anxiety is the fear that the instincts willget out of hand and cause one to do something for which one will be punished.Moral anxiety is the fear of one’s own conscience. People with a well-developedconscience tend to feel guilty when they do something contrary to their moralcode. When the ego cannot control anxiety by rational and direct methods, itrelies on indirect ones—namely, ego-defense behavior.Ego-Defense MechanismsEgo-defense mechanisms help the individual cope with anxiety and preventthe ego from being overwhelmed. Rather than being pathological, egodefenses are normal behaviors that can have adaptive value provided theydo not become a style of life that enables the individual to avoid facing reality.The defenses employed depend on the individual’s level of developmentand degree of anxiety. Defense mechanisms have two characteristicsin common: (1) they either deny or distort reality, and (2) they operate onan unconscious level. Table 4.1 provides brief descriptions of some commonPertahanan ego.
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