What is Anal Retentiveness?
(From Wikipedia, the
free encyclopedia)
The term
anal-retentive (also anally retentive), commonly abbreviated to anal, is
used conversationally to describe a person who pays such attention to detail
that the obsession becomes an annoyance to others, potentially to the detriment
of the anal-retentive person. The term derives from Freudian psychoanalysis.
Origins
In Freudian
psychology, the anal stage is said to follow the oral stage of infant or
early-childhood development. This is a time when an infant's attention moves
from oral stimulation to anal stimulation (usually the bowels but occasionally
the bladder), usually synchronous with learning to control his or her excretory
functions, a time of toilet training. Freud theorized that children who
experience conflicts during this period of time may develop "anal"
personality traits, namely those associated with a child's efforts at excretory
control: orderliness, stubbornness, a compulsion for control. Although
"anal retentive" survives in common usage, the concept is not taken
very seriously by psychoanalysts today. Chicago psychoanalyst Robert
Galatzer-Levy speaks of how this theory of Freud is mostly a product of its
time when indoor plumbing was new and less numerous per household, and families
were large, causing "much more control of defecation than was necessary in
a world of chamber pots and outhouses."
If these qualities
continue into later life, the person is said to be "anal-retentive".
Conversely, those who reject anal-retentive characteristics are said to have
"anal-expulsive" personality types.
Although Freud's
theories on early childhood have been influential on the psychological
community, research suggests that the overall pattern of parental attitudes has
a much more concrete effect on how an infant will grow up. There is no
conclusive research linking anal stage conflicts with "anal"
personality types.

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