In the 1930’s John Bowlby worked as a psychiatrist. He worked in Child Guidance Clinic in London, where he treated several emotionally distressed children. This experience led Bowlby to consider the importance of the child’s relationship with their mother in terms of their social, emotional and cognitive development. Psychological disorders are linked with distress. According to Sigmund Freud, the things that we experience in our lives, beliefs, emotions, and feelings are not available to us on a conscious level. He believes that most of what drives us is hidden in our unconscious. …show more content…
Freud thinks that depression was a reaction to loss, either real or imagined and that the ways we feel or behave are linked to how we have been treated in our childhood. He also believes that the individual finds it harder to cope as an adult with loss or abandonment if they have experienced that as a child. For example if a child loses a parent when they were younger or they walked out on the family, the individual will find it harder to cope if someone abandoned them as an adult because it would remind them of their childhood. People, who have not experienced such things as a child, would find it easier to cope with the reality that someone has left then and they would eventually get over it. Freud believed that personality was made up of three parts id, the ego and the super-ego these are systems all developing at different stages in our