Sigmund Freud by Sidney Chafetz
You
feel it. You really do. The lump moves up your esophagus and
stops short. Something is stuck in
your throat – leaving you with frightening thoughts: ‘Is this lump blocking my
airway? Will it choke me? Do I have cancer?’ In all likelihood, your doctor will
tell you there is no physical cause. Still, the lump is real.
It’s just not what you think.
That
lump in your throat is known by two different medical terms: Cricopharyngeous spasm and Globus
Hystericus. Some say it is “stress related”. And, it is. But, when there is no
organic cause, some misinformed doctors, or friends, might pass it off as,
“made up”, “bogus” or “just in
your head”. Don’t believe
them. The lump in your throat is
much more complicated than that. It’s a symptom. An
emotional symptom – a lump of unexpressed feeling - converted into a physical
sensation.
Neuroscientists
and neurologists are beginning to take seriously that these physical sensations
are quite real and not imagined. (Newsweek Daily Beast, November 28, 2011) The original diagnostic name was
conversion hysteria, dating back to the days of Freud and his cohorts, Charcot
and Breuer; hence, the “Hystericus” in Globus Hystericus. Hysteria, in the public arena, has a
bad name. It arouses visions of
overly dramatized emotional reactions. Even worse – putting on a show for
attention. Really, though, the
basis for hysteria is something quite different: anxiety.
Yes,
Globus is an anxiety reaction. But, defining something as ‘anxiety’ is a
catchall phrase that says nothing about the person who is suffering. Anxiety, like Globus, is a
symptom. Freud understood symptoms
in an interesting way. As a
compromise between two different parts of your mind: One that wants to openly communicate a feeling. The other
that says something like: ‘That’s stupid, weak, or unacceptable’– and bars the
feeling from your awareness. These
opposing parts have no choice but to make a deal. They ‘agree’ on a form of
expression that isn’t the real thing. A symptom. The symptom conveys
the feeling, but in a disguised way. So, what could that lump in your throat be trying to say?
You
all know the expression: “I have a lump in my throat” when you feel like crying
and can’t. It’s, also,
pretty common to choke back angry words. What, then, might be involved in the onset of Globus? Something happens that stirs up
old feelings – feelings you probably aren’t aware of. A loss is re-experienced; one that happened long ago. It could be the death of a
parent; a parent leaving; feeling less favored than a sibling; or other early
deprivations that made you feel unwanted or left out. The feelings of sadness
and anger surrounding these old losses have been pushed aside; the loss left
not fully mourned.
When
feelings have no place to go and no one to hear them, they are put in that
category of ‘unacceptable’. If they try to come out and are
stopped – they get stuck. So – the lump in your throat that won’t go away, but has no medical
diagnosis? Don’t let anyone,
including you; write it off as ‘nothing’.
Think about what was happening before you first realized it was there. Did something make you sad? Did you feel abandoned? Pushed aside?
Angry? If you aren’t sure, and the
troubling lump persists – consider seeing a therapist. You might be
surprised. When therapy helps you
replace the symptom with the real feelings behind it - that lump in your throat
no longer has a reason to exist.
Hi
ReplyDeleteI can't believe nobody commented on this yet! I've been searching the web for this and there is so little to be found about the Globus Hystericus, yet your article explains it so beautifully. Thanks for making this information available. I have shared your link twice on my blog now. Spreading the word :)
Best wishes
Anna