Self-accusation: a single-pole factor in which points are included associated only with negative emotions addressed towards the 'Self'.
In this way, her
self-accusation of hypocrisy functions subversively, even insidiously, as proof of her own sincerity.
Melancholia, according to Freud, shares some features with mourning, but can be distinguished from the latter by the insistent
self-accusations made by the person suffering.
The poem at issue, "The Mirror of the Sinful Soul," is an outpouring (over 1400 lines) of
self-accusation and self-abasement, recalling Paul and Augustine in its theological stance.(3) Marguerite sympathized with the evangelical movement in France and by her patronage sheltered many of its members.
Unable to get off the medications, she had to deal with the risks of their use during pregnancy, which she then subjected to the same sort of guilty
self-accusations as she previously had used to limit her romantic prospects.
His musings concern Samson's
self-accusations about effeminacy, masochism, and the nature of early modern manhood, and given the persuasive framework that Daniel has set up in the book, the chapter brings his arguments to a satisfying, if slightly predictable, conclusion.
According to de Oliveira's interpretation, a similar trial can be observed in patients seeking psychotherapy, who are constantly accusing and sentencing themselves through their negative core beliefs (CBs), but are unaware of such
self-accusations and unable to organize their own self defense (2).
The synchronized
self-accusations and absurd extorted confessions about having conspired against Stalin and the Communist party closely resembled bled the witch trials.
Their conflicted, ambivalent communication, dishonest and concealing metaphoric evasions on part of the father and straight but with rambling
self-accusations on the part of the son, end when clarity is brought by the morning return of the daughter-in-law who has made up her mind to leave both of them.