Acting out
In the psychology of defense mechanisms and self-control, acting out is the performance of an action considered bad or anti-social.[1] In general usage, the action performed is destructive to self or to others. The term is used in this way in sexual addiction treatment, psychotherapy, criminology and parenting. In contrast, the opposite attitude or behaviour of bearing and managing the impulse to perform one's impulse is called acting in.
For other uses, see Acting Out.The performed action may follow impulses of an addiction (e.g. drinking, drug taking or shoplifting). It may also be a means designed (often unconsciously or semi-consciously) to garner attention (e.g. throwing a tantrum (ataque) or behaving promiscuously). Acting out may inhibit the development of more constructive responses to the feelings in question.
In analysis[edit]
Freud considered that patients in analysis tended to act out their conflicts in preference to remembering them – repetition compulsion.[2] The analytic task was then to help "the patient who does not remember anything of what he has forgotten and repressed, but acts it out"[3] to replace present activity by past memory.
Otto Fenichel added that acting out in an analytic setting potentially offered valuable insights to the therapist; but was nonetheless a psychological resistance in as much as it deals only with the present at the expense of concealing the underlying influence of the past.[4] Lacan also spoke of "the corrective value of acting out",[5] though others qualified this with the proviso that such acting out must be limited in the extent of its destructive/self-destructiveness.[6]
Annie Reich pointed out that the analyst may use the patient by acting out in an indirect countertransference, for example to win the approval of a supervisor.[7]