In these neurotics are often found defective development involving the bony and other structures.
Neurotics are not met with to any extent among barbarous races, but are numerous in civilised communities, where the weak are preserved from early death and then subjected to the struggle for existence.
Neurotics are individuals naturally imperfect in some directions, but by the law of economy of growth they are often superior in others.
The repressed infantile psyche which exists in us all, and in certain neurotics turns back and attaches itself to the image of the parent, finds also in the crowd a path for expression.
There are neurotics who commonly feel that certain aspects of their behavior are really not of their own authorship, but come to them as the result of influences acting from without.
The first and most striking correspondence between the compulsion prohibitions of neurotics and taboo lies in the fact that the origin of these prohibitions is just as unmotivated and enigmatic.
All compulsion neurotics are superstitious in this manner and often against their better judgment.
This real world which neurotics shun is dominated by the society of human beings and by the institutions created by them; the estrangement from reality is at the same time a withdrawal from human companionship.
The compulsion neurotics act as if the 'impossible' persons and things were the carriers of a dangerous contagion which is ready to displace itself through contact to all neighbouring things.
The primary obsessive actions of these neurotics are really altogether of a magical nature.
The stamp of degeneracy impressed upon neurotics by other schools of medicine was altogether eradicated.
The ceremonials and inhibitions of compulsionneurotics exhibit this characteristic too and yet they go back to a merely psychic reality, to resolution and not to execution.
Only neurotics still blur the mourning for the loss of their dear ones with attacks of compulsive reproaches which psychoanalysis reveals as the old ambivalent emotional feeling.
We find its asocial effects in neurotics producing new rules of morality and continued restrictions, in expiation for misdeeds committed, or as precautions against misdeeds to be committed[228].
As was to be expected, the compulsion neurotics behave just like savages in regard to names.
Neurotics comprehend all poisons whose effects are mostly referable to the nervous system, necessarily a most diverse group, which we are not yet in a position to minutely analyze.
The neurotics and psychotics I found more and more of when I invalidated the Lieberman findings?
Neurotics and psychotics swarm in the streets of Mob Territory.
This is a frequent mechanism in the psychoneuroses--not that neurotics are likely to have committed any great crime, but that they feel subconsciously that some of their wishes or thoughts are wicked.
There were demoniacs in Bible times and neurotics in the Middle Ages, as there are nervous invalids and half-well people to-day.
Since there are as many marriedneurotics as single, it is evident that even marriage is not a sure preventive of nervousness.
While the morbids and neurotics of our modern Plays are for ever noisily turning out the dusty corners of their warped psychologies, in order to discover some loose end of Nature in them to condone their erotic eccentricities.
Life manifests in these neurotics in the form of vivacities merely; not as vitalities.
But when we do not take this into account we can herein readily recognize the danger of being misled by the situation as it exists in neurotics into adopting a mistaken and one-sided orientation toward life.
In the further consideration of our dealings with hysterical and compulsion neurotics we soon meet with a second fact, for which we were not at all prepared.
On the strength of this characteristic we had separated it from the first group of neurotics (hysteria, anxiety and compulsion neuroses).
It shows the patient up in the light of the myth; it shows that each of these neurotics was himself an Oedipus or, what amounts to the same thing, became a Hamlet in the reaction to the complex.
This analogy tempts us to classify as traumatic those experiences as well upon which our neurotics appear to be fixated.
Dreams ofneurotics differ in no essential point from the dreams of normal persons; you might even say they cannot be distinguished.
It is not to be doubted for a moment that one may recognize in the Oedipus-complex one of the most important sources for the consciousness of guilt with which neurotics are so often harassed.
The neurotics are those children upon whom this severity has had a bad effect--but there is risk in all education.
This, then, is the way of normal development, upon which the neurotics merely enlarge.
Among the experiences which recur continually in the early history of neurotics and, in fact, are never lacking, some are of particular significance and accordingly I consider them worthy of special treatment.
Among the neurotics we find again the motivation of the third wish, which remains in fairy tales only.
Let us devote a little time to the consideration of the fact that analytic investigation of neurotics shows the libido to be bound up with the infantile sexual experiences of these persons.
What makes it difficult for neurotics at times to tell the difference between their dreams and reality is that the emotions felt in dreams are accompanied by the same inner secretions as when felt in the waking life.
The bodily sensations following certain dreams are evidential facts which some neurotics do not know how to controvert.
Neurotics sleep very little, and the more severe their case is, the less they sleep.
The proof for this assertion I have obtained from the psychoanalysis of hysterics and other neurotics during a period of twenty years, the results of which I hope to give later in a detailed account.
The use of the latter material is justified by the fact that the years of childhood of those who are later neurotics need not necessarily differ from those who are later normal except in intensity and distinctness.
The whole significance of the anal zone is mirrored in the fact that there are but few neuroticswho have not their special scatologic customs, ceremonies, etc.
In all the neurotics without exception we find feelings of inversion in the unconscious psychic life, fixation of libido on persons of the same sex.
This is not only because neurotics represent a very large proportion of humanity, but we must consider also that the neuroses in all their gradations run in an uninterrupted series to the normal state.
There are neurotics who have shown their increased sensitiveness and their resistance against adaptation in the very first weeks of life, in their difficulty in taking the mother's breast, and in their exaggerated nervous reactions, &c.
If a neurosis were the inevitable consequence of a trauma it would be quite incomprehensible why neurotics are not incomparably more numerous.
Every practising physician has an indefinitely high percentage of neurotics among his patients; he is therefore more or less obliged to look out for new and suitable systems of treatment.
Neurotics are medicines which tend, immediately they enter the blood, to be discharged from it upon the nervous system.
Neurotics are employed to control these symptoms as they arise, but Haematics are used to combat the cause of the disorder.
But we must not confound with Neurotics those medicines which exert a slow operation in the blood which results at length in a nervous affection.
Most Neurotics are capable of acting without entry into the blood at large; mere contact with the nerves, as when they are applied externally, being sufficient for their action on those nerves.
In the third place some Neurotics tend simply and primarily to depress nervous force.
For Neurotics and Astringents, which operate directly on these two systems, are alike transitory in the results of their action.
Thus I must chiefly limit my remarks on Neurotics to defining what their action is, finding it impossible to state with certainty how they act.
Neurotics are thus applied to various symptoms, and to many disorders.
That of Neuroticsand Astringents, particularly the former, is transient.
As Neurotics act directly on nerve, so these act directly and especially on muscular fibre.
Again, Neurotics are chiefly used in cases in which the nervous system is unusually excited or depressed, and are of no permanent efficacy in diseases depending on blood-disorder.
How then are we to explain the analogous action of these paralyzing Neurotics on animals and vegetables?
Such Neurotics as Opium are employed at a more advanced stage, when the inflammation cannot be suddenly put a stop to, and our object is to counteract the effects it has produced.
That Neurotics are medicines which pass into the blood.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "neurotics" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.