What is repetition?

The repetition of the urge is the term used in psychology to explain where the patient will revive the traumatic last event. The patient does not consider the experience pleasant and often feels the same emotions as when the event was originally held, to traumatize the patient again. Sometimes the repetition of compulsive events does not correspond to the original events exactly, but again creates the feelings that the patient felt at the time of the original event.

A patient who is experiencing a reintroduction can relive his past experience in many ways. A person may have the same dream every night or several times a week, where he interacts with the situation with the same results. Other people can relive their past events and hallucinations during the day when they see the past before them. Other patients are again experiencing past events by constantly involving others in a conversation about the topic touched by a traumatic event and slipping into the story of the event.

Other people could be pulled into forced the patient's repetition and fulfills other people's roleswho were originally present for a traumatic event. The patient could move someone who was present at an action close to a person at present, and change the way the patient normally treats a person. For example, the patient could treat his therapist kindly because he displays the personality of his mother on the therapist instead of seeing her as his therapist. Alternatively, the patient could project his feelings at the time of the event on other people, for example, provided that the patient feels angry because the patient feels anger of the past traumatic events.

Some psychologists believe that patients are involved in repetition of urge as a way to overcome the past. The patient experiences past events in an effort to overcome what he could not have before, drought, how he stands up to the rapist, or successfully helps a beloved person who suffered. However, the patient is usually unsuccessful in his attempts.

How a psychotherapist perceives the repetition of the urge depends on his training. Cognitive therapist would treat nutissue by training the patient to think rationally, instead of experiencing past events. Behavioral therapists are working on the patient's condition to stop thinking about past events that the therapist would consider to be a bad custom to break. A psychoanalytic therapist would consider this behavior operating at the level of an unconsciousness of a person and would try to change the patient how he coped with the traumatic past events.

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