I am leafing again
through the book in which Freud gave the most complete account of the
phenomenon known (after him) as the Freudian slip. First published in 1901
as The Psychopathology of Everyday Life, it's a collection of
essays that was probably better-known and more widely read in Freud's lifetime
than any of his other works.
In
my favorite local used bookstore, a shelf elf placed a copy of an elderly
Macmillan edition, with A.A.Brill's translation, in my line of sight. The paper
label on the spine had rubbed nearly away, like the label on a well-soaked
bottle of wine, so I had to pull the book off the shelf to see what was facing
me, which begins to sound like a Freudian joke in itself.
The
merits of Freud's study of slips of the tongue and memory lapses are threefold.
First, he assigns meaning to incidents that many of us tend to
overlook. Forgetting the name of a town where you once stayed, or giving the
wrong name to someone you know perfectly well, isn't simply a memory lapse or
passing confusion; it speaks of something in you and your life situation which
merits close attention, because you can learn from it. Second, Freud does
dreamwork with these incidents, applying the same principles of analysis to
episodes in waking life as he applies to dream symbols. Third, his prime lab
rat, first and last, is himself. Like Jung (and unlike lesser scientific minds
that fail to realize that knowledge is state-specific) he knows that
understanding begins with self-knowledge, and that the most important data on
inner events (and their interplay with outer events) must be gathered from
first-hand experience.
We
follow Freud down some interesting trails as he studies such phenomena as
forgetting names and otherwise well-known phrases and word substitution. He
recounts a chance encounter with a fellow-traveler on a train who begins to
quote the famous line, in Latin, in which Queen Dido of Carthage issues a
terrible curse against Aeneas, the hero who loved her and left her. Exoriare
aliquis nostris ex ossibus ultor (Aeneid, IV 625). "Let someone
arise from my bones as an avenger."
In the days where a good education still required Latin, Freud's educated companion would be expected to get the quotation right. But he cannot recollect the harmless indefinite pronoun aliquis. By the end of a long conversation in which Freud guides his travel companion through the free association process he also applies to patients' dreams, they understand that there may be deep significance to the suppression of a seemingly harmless pronoun. In aliquis the speaker now recognizes the echo of "liquid" and "liquefaction" in the Latin word. This reminds him that he's alarmed that his girlfriend may have missed her period. He's scared that he is the "someone" who will be cursed if he abandons his girl and a baby he doesn't want.
In the days where a good education still required Latin, Freud's educated companion would be expected to get the quotation right. But he cannot recollect the harmless indefinite pronoun aliquis. By the end of a long conversation in which Freud guides his travel companion through the free association process he also applies to patients' dreams, they understand that there may be deep significance to the suppression of a seemingly harmless pronoun. In aliquis the speaker now recognizes the echo of "liquid" and "liquefaction" in the Latin word. This reminds him that he's alarmed that his girlfriend may have missed her period. He's scared that he is the "someone" who will be cursed if he abandons his girl and a baby he doesn't want.
Freud
called errors in speech or memory Fehlleistungen, which means
"faulty actions" or "misperformances." His English
translator dubbed these phenomena "parapraxes" (nborrowing from Greek
words for "another" and "action") - a term used in
psychology - and "symptomatic misperformances'. Freud maintained that
word-amnesia and name substitution are related to "disturbing
complexes" that prompt the psyche to seek to repress memories and
information that may cause us pain. We hear of a man who simply cannot remember
the name of a business partner who stole his girlfriend and married her; he
just doesn't want to know. Freud can't remember the name of a town he knows
well (Nervi) when treating a neurotic at a time when he himself is feeling
nervous and may be heading for a migraine.
While
Freud's theory of repression may apply to some of his examples, there's both
more and less going on with our slips and memory lapses than he allows for.
Common sense tells us that memory gaps can be the result of all sorts of life
factors, from fatigue to drug or alcohol abuse to migraine to information
overload. Einstein once made people laugh because, asked for his phone number,
he had to look it up in the book. He declared that he had so much on his mind
that he didn't need to burden it by adding the need to remember things he could
easily look up.
I
am generally pretty good with names, so when I call someone I know by a name
that isn't their own I pay attention to what may be showing through my slip, In
one of my workshops, I kept calling a man "Michael" though I was perfectly
well aware that his name was "Don." Finally I asked, "Who's
Michael?" Through tears, he explained that Michael had been his partner
for many years; Michael had died but Don felt him close and was actually
wearing his sweater that day.
One
of my rules for life navigation is: Notice what's showing through your
slip. To which I will now add: And don't tag it a Freudian
slip until you've explored what else may be going on.
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