Defense mechanisms are automatic psychological operations that protect the person from experiencing intolerable anxiety, pain, or threats to their self-concept. They operate unconsciously — the person does not choose to deploy them and typically does not recognize their operation. The concept originates with Sigmund Freud and was systematized by Anna Freud in The Ego and the Mechanisms of Defence (1936).
Defenses are organized along a maturity continuum:
Immature (high reality distortion): denial (refusing to acknowledge evident reality), projection (attributing one’s own feelings to others), splitting (seeing people as all-good or all-bad), acting out (expressing conflicts through behavior rather than feeling them).
Neurotic (moderate distortion): repression (pushing threatening material out of awareness), displacement (redirecting emotion to a safer target), rationalization (constructing logical justifications for emotionally driven decisions), reaction formation (adopting a stance opposite to the unconscious impulse).
Mature (minimal distortion): sublimation (channeling unacceptable impulses into constructive activity), humor (acknowledging painful reality through comedy), suppression (consciously setting aside distressing material for a more appropriate time).
Defense mechanisms are not pathological — everyone uses them. They become clinical concerns when they are rigid, costly, reality-distorting, or interpersonally destructive.
Wilhelm Reich extended the concept into the body, describing character armor — chronic muscular tension patterns that physically embody psychological defenses. The person who represses anger holds tension in the jaw; the person who defends against vulnerability holds the chest rigid. This connects defense mechanisms to somatic awareness and sensory-motor amnesia — both the psychological and somatic dimensions operate outside conscious awareness and resist purely cognitive intervention.
Related terms
- Affect — what defenses protect against: intolerable affective states
- Trauma — defenses as responses to overwhelming experience
- Psychopathology — defenses in the broader context of psychological suffering
- Somatic Awareness — the bodily dimension of defensive patterns
- Introduction to Psychological Defenses — the curriculum lesson