
SOUTH TAMPA THERAPY FREE RESOURCES BLOG
Why We Use Defense Mechanisms (And Why They’re Not a Bad Thing)
Have you ever noticed yourself cracking a joke when things get serious? Or brushing off a painful experience with, “It wasn’t that big of a deal”? These subtle patterns might not seem like much, but they’re actually doing something important.
They’re protecting you.
In psychodynamic therapy, we call these kinds of responses defense mechanisms—and despite how that might sound, they’re not bad, immature, or wrong. They’re creative, adaptive strategies we develop to cope with stress, pain, and overwhelming emotions. Most of the time, they happen without us even realizing it.
Have you ever noticed yourself cracking a joke when things get serious? Or brushing off a painful experience with, “It wasn’t that big of a deal”? These subtle patterns might not seem like much, but they’re actually doing something important.
They’re protecting you.
In psychodynamic therapy, we call these kinds of responses defense mechanisms—and despite how that might sound, they’re not bad, immature, or wrong. They’re creative, adaptive strategies we develop to cope with stress, pain, and overwhelming emotions. Most of the time, they happen without us even realizing it.
Let’s take a closer look at what defenses really are—and why they deserve our compassion, not our judgment.
What Are Defense Mechanisms?
Defense mechanisms are unconscious ways we protect ourselves from emotional discomfort, internal conflict, or painful memories. They show up as patterns of thinking, behaving, or relating that helped us get through tough moments—especially when we were young and didn’t have better tools yet.
Some are easy to spot. Others are so woven into our daily lives that we hardly recognize them.
Common Defenses You Might Recognize:
Intellectualizing – staying in your head to avoid feeling what's in your heart
Minimizing – “It’s fine, I’m fine,” even when it’s really not
People-pleasing – taking care of others to avoid rejection or conflict
Sarcasm or humor – using wit to dodge emotional vulnerability
Withdrawal – shutting down or pulling away when you feel hurt
Perfectionism – striving for control to avoid shame or failure
These aren’t random habits. They’re protections. And at one point, they worked.
Why We Develop Defenses in the First Place
Most defenses begin in childhood, when we’re still figuring out how to handle big emotions in a world that may not feel safe or validating. If you grew up in an environment where your feelings were dismissed or your needs were unmet, you learned to adapt.
A child who felt emotionally unsafe might grow into an adult who avoids closeness.
A child who feared rejection might become someone who over-gives or self-sacrifices.
A child who was often blamed might develop a harsh inner critic to stay “one step ahead” of judgment.
This is your nervous system’s way of protecting you. Not dysfunction—survival.
What Therapy Offers
In therapy, we don’t rush to tear down defenses. We get curious about them.
We ask:
What is this defense trying to protect?
When did I first learn to use it?
What might it feel like to lower this guard—just a little?
As we create a space of emotional safety and trust, defenses start to soften—not because we force them away, but because we no longer need them in the same way.
Over time, that allows for more freedom, more authenticity, and a deeper sense of connection—with yourself and others.
Learning to Hold Defenses with Compassion
It’s so easy to beat ourselves up for the very strategies that helped us survive. But self-judgment only keeps us stuck in shame. What we really need is self-compassion and a sense of context.
You weren’t weak for developing defenses. You were wise.
Now, with more support and insight, you get to choose which defenses still serve you—and which ones you’re ready to thank and release.
Ready to Explore This Kind of Work?
Hi, I’m Amber, a Master’s-level counselor at South Tampa Therapy. I specialize in warm, collaborative psychodynamic therapy that honors your lived experience and helps you gently explore the “why” behind your patterns—with compassion, not criticism.
If this kind of inner work speaks to you, I’d love to connect.
👉 Book a session with me here.
South Tampa Therapy | Psychodynamic Counseling • Relational Insight • Self-Compassion
What Is Psychodynamic Therapy About?
Psychodynamic therapy is grounded in the belief that emotional difficulties often stem from internal
experiences that are not fully conscious. It believes that our early relationships, unspoken losses, and unmet
needs often shape how we see ourselves and relate to others. These early experiences can leave emotional
imprints that continue to influence our current patterns of thought, feeling, and behavior—even when we are
not aware of their origins.
Psychodynamic therapy is grounded in the belief that emotional difficulties often stem from internal
experiences that are not fully conscious. It believes that our early relationships, unspoken losses, and unmet
needs often shape how we see ourselves and relate to others. These early experiences can leave emotional
imprints that continue to influence our current patterns of thought, feeling, and behavior—even when we are
not aware of their origins.
Emotions as Signals of Deeper Experience
Psychodynamic therapy sees emotions as meaningful signals that point toward something deeper. It encourages
exploration through questions such as: Why might I feel this way? Where did this reaction come from? How
might my past relationships be shaping how I experience the present? These inquiries are not just theoretical.
They help bring awareness to internal conflicts, emotional blind spots, and patterns that may otherwise
continue to operate outside of conscious awareness.
Bringing the Unconscious Into Awareness
One of the central aims of psychodynamic therapy is to help make the unconscious more conscious. The
therapy assumes that much of our distress arises from automatic patterns we have developed to manage pain,
protect ourselves, or maintain connection. These may include relational roles we fall into, emotional defenses
that once served us, or internalized voices that guide how we treat ourselves. By bringing these dynamics into
the light, therapy creates space for new choices and more flexible ways of responding.
Understanding the Function of Symptoms
Psychodynamic therapy also assumes that symptoms often serve important psychological functions. For
example, anxiety might act as a protective barrier against grief, and self-criticism may be an internalized strategy
for safety or control. These experiences are not seen as errors to correct, but as meaningful adaptations to earlier
circumstances. The goal is to understand them with clarity and compassion, rather than to silence or override
them.
Treating the Whole Person
At its core, psychodynamic therapy aims to treat the person, not just the problem. It views each individual as
unique, with a layered emotional history that matters. The process invites a deeper understanding of the
self—how it was formed, what it has learned to expect, and what it needs in order to grow. When this kind of
insight develops, many symptoms begin to soften. Not because they were pushed away, but because the person
has shifted from within.
Thanks for reading.
My name is Amber, and I’m a Master’s-level mental health counselor in training, practicing under supervision
at South Tampa Therapy. I offer warm, collaborative psychodynamic therapy rooted in insight, self-
compassion, and a deep respect for your lived experience. If this kind of work speaks to you, you can book a
session with me here: https://SouthTampaTherapyBOOKAPPT.as.me/Amber