Monday 30 September 2019

Psychological Projection


October 2019

 by Dr Elizabeth McCardell, M. Couns., PhD


     Over the past couple of months,  I’ve  been getting abusive phone calls from a stranger projecting a whole lot of stuff on me. Turns out, other innocent people, and writers to this paper, have been getting similar calls from this person (identified by the common phone number). While the abuser isn’t threatening violence, and thus, may not – yet – be charged with the misuse of telecommunications (use of a carriage service to harass or offend), it is nevertheless a bit unnerving. I’ve blocked the number, and advise others to do the same.

     It’s incidents like these that provide useful fodder for articles, such as this one.  The lack of truth to  her ravings point to classic psychological projection and this is an interesting subject.

     What is projection and why do people engage in it?

     Psychological projection is a defence mechanism used to unconsciously  cope with difficult feelings or emotions, positive and negative. This coping mechanism arises essentially from  a person’s Shadow side (as C. G. Jung described it). It usually involves projecting undesirable feelings or emotions onto someone else, rather than admitting to and dealing with the unwanted feelings in oneself. The rants against me were mostly about how I, the privileged one, never listens to the unprivileged. I couldn’t get a word in edgewise in this bombardment of words; there was literally no room for me to speak at all. Droll, eh, and ironic, since I wanted to invite her to come and speak with me directly. This well describes, however, how projection works. This woman can’t listen to anything anyone else says, so she projected this incapacity onto me and I became, in her eyes, the one who cannot listen.

     Psychological projection is common. As Jung says, ‘Everything that is unconscious in ourselves we discover in our neighbour, and we treat him accordingly.’ Such psychic processes are well and truly obvious in everyday life, and politics (!). It is well to remember that projections, like all other defence mechanisms, are an attempt at self-soothing, although destined to failure, because they stir up too many unmanageable emotions, rather than quietening them down in the attacker. Unprovoked attack rarely manifests anything but rejection and resistance in the one attacked. Dialogue is not possible.

     It could be said that the psychological projection expressed by our caller was something of an almost Herculean effort to haul back some control of her ailing and fragile sense of self. Why else would a person repeatedly ring strangers to yell at them?

     In psychological terms, ownership of one’s projections is part of the healing of the whole self. Jung was very clear about this. His whole psychology was one that promoted individuation. Our task is to recognize the subjective origin of our projections, withdraw them from the outside world and to integrate this element of our personal into conscious awareness.

     To be clear, individuation is the transformative process whereby the personal and collective unconscious is brought into consciousness, and what belongs to oneself is recognized as separate from what belongs to others. The business of psychological projection is actually quite useful for it identifies the unowned areas in our lives, thus giving a signpost to what needs to be worked on within ourselves.