How to be happy though human / by W. Béran Wolfe.
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CHAPTER TEN
Patterns of Failure About Neuroses
The Neurotic Decalogue—Types of Neuroses—Fallacies of Freudian
Psychoanalysis—Adler and the Hormic Point of View—Fundamental
Dynamics of Neurotic Behaviour—Techniques of Evasion—The
Flight from Reality—“ Split Personality ” : a Neurotic Fiction—
Suicide—The High Cost of Neurosis—Psychological “ Rackets ” and
the Cure of Neuroses—How a Neurosis Is Cured—Who Shall Treat
the Neurotic ?
EVERY age and every people has its characteristic
plagues. Locusts troubled the ancient Egyptians,
the Black Death ravaged mediaeval Europe, syphilis
spread like wild-fire during the fifteenth and sixteenth
centuries, measles has decimated the South Sea Islanders,
and yellow fever, until recently, has made the tropics
uninhabitable for white men. The neurosis is the
characteristic plague of the machine age. This insidious
and almost universal condition affects every walk of
modern life, nations as well as individuals, parents as well
as children, capitalists as well as proletarians, intellectuals
as well as morons, and you.
Although the neurosis has never been so prevalent as
it is to-day, its origins are veiled in prehistoric antiquity.
The first written description of a neurosis is in the Book of
Genesis. When Cain answered God “ Am I my brother’s
keeper ? ” he voiced a typically neurotic rejoinder and
betrayed a full-fledged neurosis (as did his parents when
they blamed the serpent for their disobedience). The
modern neurotic who says, “ I would marry but I am
afraid I shall be impotent ” or his equally neurotic
neighbour who believes, “ I could be happy if people
did not treat me so badly ” ; the modern woman who
excuses her idleness with the statement, “ I should like
to work, but you cannot expect a woman to compete in