Maybe you've heard, "you're compensating" or "that's projection," in response to something you've said or done before. If that happened, you were being accused of using some of the more commonly-known defense mechanisms! In this article, we'll cover the key defense mechanisms you need to know about, with examples.
This series follows along with our Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing Flashcards which are intended to help RN and PN nursing students study for nursing school exams, including the ATI, HESI, and NCLEX.
What are defense mechanisms?
Defense mechanisms are conscious or unconscious coping mechanisms used to decrease anxiety.
Defense mechanisms by themselves are certainly not indicative of a mental health disorder. As you read this list, you may identify many of these within yourself and your own behavior from time to time!
Some defense mechanisms can be very useful and effective, as they may prevent violence, lashing out, or protect the patient from unmanageable stress.
The defense mechanisms we'll cover here are avoidance, compensation, conversion, denial, displacement, dissociation, identification (introjection), intellectualization, projection, rationalization, reaction formation, regression, repression, splitting, sublimation, suppression, and undoing.
Psychiatric Mental Health - Nursing Flashcards
Avoidance
Avoidance is avoiding people or situations that cause distressing thoughts or feelings. A patient demonstrating avoidance stays away from those things.
Compensation
Compensation is when one focuses on their strengths as opposed to their perceived weaknesses.
For example, someone who struggles academically might focus on excelling in sports instead. Or, someone who is self-conscious about their height may enhance other physical characteristics, like the size of their muscles.
Conversion
Conversion is the development of physical symptoms in response to stress without an underlying medical cause. You can think of this as someone "converting" their stress to a physical ailment.
Denial
Denial is refusing to accept the reality of a situation. Denial is also one of the five stages of grief. For example, a patient who does not accept their cancer diagnosis is in denial.
Displacement
Displacement is transferring feelings or emotions from one target to another.
For example, if a patient is given a poor diagnosis and takes it out on their nurse by yelling at them, that would be an example of displaced anger, fear, or overwhelm.
Dissociation
Disassociation is when someone compartmentalizes or disconnects from reality.
A classic example of disassociation is a soldier in combat who feels like they are observing themselves from the outside.
Identification (introjection)
The defense mechanism identification, which is also called introjection, is when someone adopts the beliefs, behaviors, or feelings of another person.
Intellectualization
Intellectualization is avoiding the emotions associated with a particular situation, and instead focusing on the facts and logic.
Projection
Projection is when one attributes their own thoughts and feelings onto someone else who may not have those thoughts and feelings.
Cathy explains this as being like a movie projector— you are projecting your own thoughts and feelings onto someone else like a movie projector projects images onto a screen.
Projection as a defense mechanism is fairly well-known in popular culture. If you accuse someone of something and they retort, "That's projection," you know they think it's actually you who is doing the thing.
Rationalization
Rationalization is an attempt to justify unacceptable behavior using a logic-based explanation.
For example, if a student cheated on a test, and says, "I didn't have to know that stuff anyway," they are attempting to rationalize their unacceptable behavior.
Reaction formation
The defense mechanism reaction formation is when someone expresses the opposite feelings or behavior from what they actually feel, because their true feelings may seem unacceptable or anxiety-producing to them.
For example, young people may tease someone they have a crush on. "Killing someone with kindness" who you don't like is another example of reaction formation.
Regression
Regression is a defense mechanism where a person reverts to an earlier developmental level in response to a stressor.
For example, if a family has a new baby, and that baby's older sibling, who is already potty-trained, suddenly starts wetting their bed/wetting their pants, that is regressing in response to a stressor (the baby).
Repression
Repression is the subconscious, involuntary blocking of unpleasant feelings or painful memories.
With repression, you don’t realize you’re doing it (vs. suppression).
Splitting
Splitting is another defense mechanism. With splitting, an individual fails to recognize both the positive and negative attributes of another person. Splitting can be described as an all-or-nothing mentality.
For example, a patient may say, "This nurse is terrible, and I hate her, and she's the worst nurse ever," about a nurse they don't like, and say, "this nurse is amazing and wonderful and perfect," about a nurse they do like.
Patients with borderline personality disorder may employ splitting as a defense mechanism.
Sublimation
Sublimation is taking unacceptable impulses and transforming them into socially acceptable behaviors.
For example, someone gets in a big argument and wants to punch the other person, but instead they go home and punch their pillow, or they go to the gym and punch a punching bag.
As a reminder, not all defense mechanisms are maladaptive or bad. Arguably, punching a pillow is much better than punching a person!
Suppression
Suppression is the conscious or voluntary blocking of unpleasant feelings or painful memories.
Again, it's important to not get repression and suppression confused. When someone is suppressing, they are aware they are doing it. With repression, they are not aware.
Undoing
The defense mechanism undoing is when a person attempts to cancel out an unacceptable behavior or thought by doing something to reverse it.
For example, if a manager is excessively harsh on an employee during their performance review, then feels bad about it, so then they are excessively nice/do special things for the employee—that's undoing. They are attempting to undo their behavior.
Level Up RN's teaching on defense mechanisms is intended to help prepare you for psychiatric/mental health nursing exams. The Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing video series is intended to help RN and PN nursing students study for nursing school exams, including the ATI, HESI and NCLEX.
2 comments
Hi! this was so useful thank you so much.
Can you make an example for compensation?
Thank you.
Thats really very useful thank you so so much.