Passing your National Licensing Exam

Defense Mechanisms: Repression


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Repression is one of those ideas that sounds simple until you try to use it in real life or in the therapy room. We’re talking about the kind of “forgetting” that isn’t forgetting at all: an unconscious, active defense mechanism that hides memories, feelings, and impulses because your mind decides they’re too dangerous to hold.

We start by making the key distinctions clear, especially repression vs ordinary forgetting and repression vs suppression. From there, we walk through the core characteristics clinicians actually look for: how repressed material stays alive, how it returns through anxiety, depression, relationship patterns, dreams, and behavior, and why emotional flatness in the face of objectively painful content can be a loud signal. We also spend time on the somatic side of repression, including how trauma can show up as chronic pain, tension, fatigue, and other body symptoms when the story itself can’t be spoken yet.

Then we widen the lens to show how repression can shape different presentations, from dramatic surface emotion that protects deeper vulnerability in histrionic patterns, to rigid control that buries anger and need in obsessive-compulsive personality traits, to attachment pain and shame dynamics in borderline presentations. We also connect repression to projection in paranoid patterns and to the fragmented intrusions seen in PTSD and complex trauma. Throughout, we keep coming back to the same clinical stance: repression is protective first, and our job is to build enough safety and capacity for integration, not force insight.

If you found this helpful, subscribe, share it with a colleague or friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What’s one “symptom breadcrumb” you’ve learned to take more seriously?

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This podcast is not associated with the NBCC, AMFTRB, ASW, ANCC, NASP, NAADAC, CCMC, NCPG,  CRCC, or any state or governmental agency responsible for licensure.

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Passing your National Licensing ExamBy Linton Hutchinson, Ph.D., LMHC, NCC

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