From Little Hans to Hidden Desires: Freud’s Case Studies of the Unconscious

 




Why would a young boy develop a devastating fear of horses, or a grown man unconsciously try to choke his wife in his sleep? These perplexing situations may appear unrelated, but Sigmund Freud believed they both reveal the hidden influence of the unconscious mind.

As the father of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud enlightened that the human mind operates on three levels: the conscious, the subconscious, and the unconscious. While the conscious mind deals with everyday awareness, the subconscious stores memories just below the surface, and the unconscious conceals suppressed emotions and desires that often shape behaviour in surprising ways.

To illustrate this, Freud analysed real cases—such as Little Hans, a child whose phobia uncovered deep family conflicts, and an adult whose dangerous unconscious behaviour was traced back to hidden desires. Together, these cases illustrate the profound impact of the unconscious mind and the therapeutic process, which can bring these buried conflicts into awareness and help resolve them.

Case Study 1: Little Hans

There was a 5-year-old boy named Hans, who was living in Vienna with his parents. They noticed that Hans had developed a phobia of horses. He was terrified that the horse might bite him or fall on the street and hurt him. After observing repeated episodes of fear, his father consulted Sigmund Freud, the most famous psychologist and father of the Psychoanalytic Theory of Personality. His parents met Freud to diagnose and provide successful treatment.

After analysing his condition, Freud diagnosed the levels of Hans’s mind as follows:

  1. Conscious Mind: The little child said, “I am terrified of horses,” and he was completely aware of his fear.
  2. Subconscious Mind: When questioned further, Hans replied that he had once seen a horse fall in the street. Consequently, he started fearing horses, though this memory was not always in his conscious awareness.
  3. Unconscious Mind: After several meetings, Freud concluded that Hans’s fear was actually about an unconscious conflict. According to Freud’s Oedipus complex, Hans had developed unconscious jealousy toward his father because of his attachment to his mother. He feared losing his parents’ love and suppressed these feelings, which unconsciously surfaced symbolically as a fear of horses (which Freud interpreted as a symbol of his father).

What is the Oedipus Complex?

According to Freud’s Psychosexual Theory of Personality, the Oedipus complex occurs in the phallic stage of development (ages 3–6). At this stage, a child unconsciously feels sexual desire for the parent of the opposite sex and rivalry toward the parent of the same sex.

Case Study 2: Unconscious Behaviour in an Adult

In another case, a woman told her son-in-law, “You kill your wife (my daughter), I will kill my husband (your father-in-law), and then we will marry.” While the conversation was going on, her daughter (the son-in-law’s wife) suddenly entered the room, and the discussion was interrupted. Both became silent and continued with their daily lives.

A few months later, the wife complained to her husband: “If you want to kill me, then kill me, but why are you pressing my throat at night?” The husband, unaware of his actions, always replied: “Why would I do that? I love you more than anyone.”

After repeated complaints, the couple consulted a psychologist. Following several sessions, the psychologist also spoke with family members and requested permission to observe the couple directly. During his observation, he found the wife’s complaint to be true. At night, while sleeping, the husband unconsciously tried to strangle his wife.

The psychologist suggested that the wife place a dummy in her place and hide a pistol inside the dummy once the husband was asleep. After a few hours, the husband woke up, began strangling the dummy, and then fired the pistol at it. On hearing the gunshot, he regained awareness from his unconscious state and was shocked, believing he had killed his wife. However, he was then informed that a dummy had been placed instead of his wife so that his unconscious desire could be acted out safely and the problem could be addressed.

Finally, the psychologist explained to the couple the earlier conversation between the mother-in-law and the son-in-law. He further clarified that the destructive desire originally belonged to the mother-in-law but had unknowingly been transferred into the husband’s unconscious mind. When it surfaced into consciousness, the disturbing episodes occurred. With the reenactment and realisation, the conflict was resolved, and the psychologist assured them that they could now live happily together.

✅ Final Thought

Sigmund Freud’s case studies remind us that human behaviour is not always guided by logic or conscious choice. Hidden fears, suppressed desires, and unresolved conflicts often shape the way we think, feel, and act—sometimes in ways we don’t even recognise. By exploring the conscious, subconscious, and unconscious layers of the mind, psychotherapy enables these buried forces to emerge, bringing clarity, healing, and freedom from patterns that would otherwise remain mysterious.

 

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1 Comments

Chakit Khattar said…
It’s intriguing and makes us as readers curious.