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Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Self Actualization and Why It may be So Difficult

 

Walking Reflection jpg by Tomascastelazo, creative commons attribution share alike 4.0


This post will continue on from my posts (3/24, 3/18, and 4/14) summarizing how I incorporated ideas from from fields outside of mental health into my psychotherapy model, as well as how I tried to fit together seemingly contradictory theoretical aspects of several other psychotherapy schools, I discussed how families operate by rules mostly set by the prevailing culture, and  how those rules change and how families may not be able to keep up, leading members to share intrapsychic conflicts.

But how does this all manifest itself inside the brains and minds of individuals, and why they do they feel they have to sacrifice aspects of themselves in order to stabilize the family? Why can’t they just go ahead and do whatever they really want to? I mean, if we’d like to believe in free will (and I do), why do they make this choice?

The answer boils down to how the rules of interpersonal engagement are laid down in the brain during  childhood, and how individuals generally feel when they ignore the rules.

Babies come into the universe knowing absolutely nothing about how the universe works and how they can best adjust to their circumstances. They literally do not even know their own body parts can be controlled. We are programmed to learn about our universe through interactions with primary attachment figures. As children spontaneously emit various behaviors (including expressing thoughts that occur to them) that parent find acceptable, the attachment figures  do something called mirroring (first described psychoanalyst Heinz Kohut) - they validate, affirm, and reflect back to the child creating sense of value, grandiosity, and self-worth. That allows a person to build healthy self-esteem and a stable internal identity.

The rate of the creation of synaptic pathways in the brain through this process, particularly in infancy, is phenomenal (less useful pathways are later “pruned” through a process called neural plasticity).

When babies grow older, and throughout much of their lives, they continue to emit new self-generated behavior. When that behavior is grossly at odds with their self image and for which they had not received validation, the evolutionary process that created kin selection kicks in, and they get very uncomfortable. If they are actively invalidated by parents and the rest of the family system when they do or experience something, it creates a sense of existential terror that psychotherapists called groundlessness or anomie. It’s like they don’t know who they are any more. The worse that attachment figures attack ideas and behaviors that don’t jibe with the family homeostasis (as are many efforts at self-actualization), the worse a person’s terror.

People do have the ability to persist in new thought and behavior patterns despite this feeling, and if they stick to them, the feeling of groundlessness eventually dissipates. It’s also often the case that the attachment figures are themselves ambivalent about the behavior in question, but refuse to talk about this for fear of being invalidated by their own attachment figures. They then give children mixed messages about what is expected of them. How I believe children read these contradictory messages will be summarized in the last post in this series.


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