How to be happy though human / by W. Béran Wolfe.
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Negative Patterns of Life
When we have eliminated the above easily recognized
indices of the existence of the inferiority complex we may
still detect its presence in certain characteristic life-patterns
which in their entirety reveal the absence of a courageous
affirmation of life. The commonest of these negative,
hesitating, or actively unsocial patterns is the neurosis.
The neurosis is not a disease—it is a cowardly attitude
toward the problems of life. The neurosis frequently
expresses itself in painful symptoms. The common
denominator of every neurosis, no matter how bizarre its
structure, is the factor of social irresponsibility. A
neurosis is a pattern of life in which painful alibis are
substituted for the performance of the ordinary tasks
and obligations of life which appear fantastically difficult
to the mis-educated neurotic. The fiction “ I cannot ” is
substituted for the admission “ I will not ” in every
case. The shibboleth of the neurosis may be detected in
such neurotic phrases as “ I would marry, but for . . . ”
or “ I would have made a success of my job, if . . . ” or
“ I would go out in society, but . . .” and the like.
In the life pattern we call crime, the individual, for lack
of proper initiation into the fellowship of mankind, feels
himself a stranger in a hostile country. He misinterprets
the realities of life as personal insults, and in consequence
is aggressive against a society which he cannot understand,
aggression against society, or its champions, the
; and the courts, seems thoroughly justifiable to the
criminal who has complete faith in his first premise that
society has banded together in an offensive alliance
against him. Punishment does not deter the criminal—-
it corroborates his belief that he is justified in using
trickery, malice, stealth, against the hated individuals
who are “ in ”. Here again a basic sense of inferiority
and the inability to meet the demands of social life compel
the criminal to make a short cut to power and security.
Alcoholism and drug addiction are the life-patterns
of those discouraged individuals who escape into the