This in Freud's mind would be a bundled action because the person did not feel comfortable canceling so instead his subconscious took over and provided a way for him to get out of going by doing what he secretly wanted to do in the first place, which was to remain at home.
Accidental self-injury has long been attributed to the theory of bungled actions. If a person gets into a car accident and is killed or almost killed one may later discover that the person in the wreck was depressed and was facing a court date, or a divorce or financial ruin. The accident in the car according to Freud would not be an accident at all but would instead be the person's unconscious desire to escape the reality of what was about to happen in his or her life by ending that life (Freud, 1960).
In an accident where the person in question doesn't necessarily harm himself but instead harms others it could be a repressed desire to harm someone they know.
For instance, if a man gets into a fist fight with a driver on the road who he accuses of cutting him off at the red light, it could really be that the person in question was angry with his brother and wanted to hit him, however, he could not bring himself to hit a loved one so at the first opportunity he got into a fist fight and hit the brother through the hitting of the other driver on the road.
This would be another example of Freud's bungled actions theory.
Freud's theory actually points to a hidden unconscious world of repressed desires and motives for everything that occurs.
If bungled actions is factual every accident that occurs is actually not an accident but an attempt to complete something the person feels is wrong to want to do.
Repressed urges can include the desire to have sex with someone outside of appropriate circles, the desire to hurt others, the desire to embarrass others or many other actions in which...
(Rapaport 1942: 149) It is important here to have some framework with which to discuss parapraxes Aitchison, as a psycholinguist blends both the disciplines of psychology and linguistics to give a more balanced view overall. She proposes first two broad definitions for type of parapraxis. (1998: 244) the first is when a wrong item or word is unintentionally chosen, these are generally referred to as slips of the tongue and an
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