Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder Defensive StructureOCPD (Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder) defenses are intellectualization, isolation of affect, undoing, reaction formation, displacement, and regression. These defenses are used to control anxiety at all costs with the heavy price of personal constriction (McCullough & Maltsberger, Gabbard & Atkinson, editors, 1996, p. 1001). This allows individuals with OCPD to appear deliberate and poised. However, they must manage the internal turmoil of their unresolved struggle between obedience and defiance which threatens to upset the balance they have so carefully developed. They must control against both external eruption of their anger and the internal disruption of emotions and impulses:
Individuals with OCPD (Obsessive-Compulsive Personality Disorder) attempt to not recognize the contradictions between their impulses and their behavior. They do this by restricting self-awareness and avoiding introspection. Not only do they accept authority-based demands and expectations; they believe them to be right. This can often bring these individuals institutional commendation and support. These rewards serve to reinforce their inclination toward self-righteousness and obedience (Millon, 1981, p. 226). Stone (1993, p. 347) notes that individuals with OCPD live in the future (compared to the Cluster B individuals who live mostly in the present). They are obsessed with foreseeing all dangers and possible mistakes. Their behavior has the defensive quality of warding off parental or authority figure's anger by double-checking that no mistakes have been made (Stone, 1993, p. 347). There are many service providers who rely on the same defensive patterns as do individuals with OCPD. They are also likely to overvalue order and correctness. Without awareness of this on the part of service providers, they are likely to collude with the OCPD clients' defenses; this is a common problem and it always impoverishes the treatment (McCullough & Maltsberger, Gabbard & Atkinson, editors, 1996, p. 1002). next: Diagnostic Criteria and Personality Profile for OCPD top . pages 1 2 3 4 5 . send to friend . personality disorders site map Reviewed: 04/2006 |