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Thus repression certainly does not arise in cases where the tension produced
by lack of satisfaction of an instinctual impulse is raised to an unbearable
degree. The methods of defence which are open to the organism against that
situation must be discussed in another connection.
Let us rather confine ourselves to clinical experience, as we meet with it
in psycho-analytic practice. We then learn that the satisfaction of an instinct
which is under repression would be quite possible, and further, that in every
instance such a satisfaction would be pleasurable in itself; but it would be
irreconcilable with other claims and intentions. It would, therefore, cause
pleasure in one place and unpleasure in another. It has consequently become a
condition for repression that the motive force of unpleasure shall have acquired more
strength than the pleasure obtained from satisfaction. Psycho-analytic
observation of the transference neuroses, moreover, leads us to conclude that
repression is not a defensive mechanism which is present from the very beginning, and
that it cannot arise until a sharp cleavage has occurred between conscious and
unconscious mental activity - that the essence of repression lies simply in turning something away, and keeping
it at a distance, from the conscious. This view of repression would be made more complete by assuming that, before
the mental organization reaches this stage, the task of fending off
instinctual impulses is dealt with by the other vicissitudes which instincts may undergo
- e.g. reversal into the opposite or turning round upon the subject’s own self.