Bad luck is associated with fate neurosis, as it is a type of compulsive repetition that a person encounters in all the actions he performs. Therefore, it is necessary to understand its meaning, causes, symptom, and methods of treatment.
Fate Neurosis is a kind Repetition Compulsion of that means disorder that causes its sufferer to repeatedly encounter the same problems, troubles, and difficulties despite the possibility of avoiding them, and despite apparent efforts to avoid them. The sufferer seems to arrange things—unconsciously and unintentionally—in such a way that they cause harm and injury. A person with fatalism is someone who seeks out problems and creates trouble for himself, delights in pain, relaxes in fatigue, and delights in misery. He convinces himself that he is an unlucky person and that everything that happens to him is predestined and written, then it is a psychological phenomenon in which a person repeatedly relives a particular event or the circumstances of that event. This involves reliving the event or placing themselves in situations where the event is likely to occur again
The most important causes of fate neurosis are feelings of guilt and sin and the desire to punish oneself. but the other causes related to repressing a painful incident that happened to him since childhood and then led to failure in a specific way, or it may be related to an old memory of a specific action that the person failed to perform, so it became entrenched in his subconscious. Thus, these repressed elements in the unconscious lead the individual to repeat the failed experience as a contemporary experience rather than remembering it as something belonging to the past, it is related to the pain principle. At the same time, repressed pleasant experiences lead the individual to relive the experience as if it were contemporary and not from the past. This is linked to the pleasure principle, It can also be included under what is called the law of attraction.
The symptoms of fate neurosis include recurring entanglement in the same problems, troubles, and difficulties despite being able to avoid them; failure at work despite the potential for success; poor social adjustment despite intelligence; recidivism; and psychological distress when the individual's circumstances improve, their hopes are realized, and their needs are met (such as when a bankrupt person becomes wealthy and squanders his fortune on gambling, or when a spinster marries and suffers from frigidity, etc.).
Restructuring the mental structure of these people is one of the most important treatment methods used to eliminate fate neurosis, or what is called bad luck. It is a cognitive treatment that aims to rebuild ideas and eliminate the false ideas that have become entrenched in their subconscious, especially those related to the factors of success and failure. That is, they need to rebuild their self-concept from scratch, emphasizing that they are capable, capable of achieving their goals, and that they possess the necessary capabilities. Their thoughts must also shift from pessimism to optimism, from helplessness to ability, from surrender to effort and perseverance. Religious guidance can then be sought through faith in God and the willingness to work to achieve goals, for a person attracts what he thinks about. That means, whoever thinks about success succeeds, and whoever thinks about failure fails.
Finally, it can be said that luck is not a mysterious concept, but rather it is closely linked to the human psyche, as is the case with the law of attraction. The brain leads a person to achieve what he believes in, whether it is negative or positive. No matter how deep the causes are, and how severe the symptoms are, it is possible to treat fate neurosis by rebuilding the ideas of these people regarding themselves, rebuilding their concept of themselves from the beginning, and believing in the possibilities of success. In addition to religious guidance, and trying to consolidate these ideas in the brain to achieve total success.
Fate Neurosis is a kind Repetition Compulsion of that means disorder that causes its sufferer to repeatedly encounter the same problems, troubles, and difficulties despite the possibility of avoiding them, and despite apparent efforts to avoid them. The sufferer seems to arrange things—unconsciously and unintentionally—in such a way that they cause harm and injury. A person with fatalism is someone who seeks out problems and creates trouble for himself, delights in pain, relaxes in fatigue, and delights in misery. He convinces himself that he is an unlucky person and that everything that happens to him is predestined and written, then it is a psychological phenomenon in which a person repeatedly relives a particular event or the circumstances of that event. This involves reliving the event or placing themselves in situations where the event is likely to occur again
The most important causes of fate neurosis are feelings of guilt and sin and the desire to punish oneself. but the other causes related to repressing a painful incident that happened to him since childhood and then led to failure in a specific way, or it may be related to an old memory of a specific action that the person failed to perform, so it became entrenched in his subconscious. Thus, these repressed elements in the unconscious lead the individual to repeat the failed experience as a contemporary experience rather than remembering it as something belonging to the past, it is related to the pain principle. At the same time, repressed pleasant experiences lead the individual to relive the experience as if it were contemporary and not from the past. This is linked to the pleasure principle, It can also be included under what is called the law of attraction.
The symptoms of fate neurosis include recurring entanglement in the same problems, troubles, and difficulties despite being able to avoid them; failure at work despite the potential for success; poor social adjustment despite intelligence; recidivism; and psychological distress when the individual's circumstances improve, their hopes are realized, and their needs are met (such as when a bankrupt person becomes wealthy and squanders his fortune on gambling, or when a spinster marries and suffers from frigidity, etc.).
Restructuring the mental structure of these people is one of the most important treatment methods used to eliminate fate neurosis, or what is called bad luck. It is a cognitive treatment that aims to rebuild ideas and eliminate the false ideas that have become entrenched in their subconscious, especially those related to the factors of success and failure. That is, they need to rebuild their self-concept from scratch, emphasizing that they are capable, capable of achieving their goals, and that they possess the necessary capabilities. Their thoughts must also shift from pessimism to optimism, from helplessness to ability, from surrender to effort and perseverance. Religious guidance can then be sought through faith in God and the willingness to work to achieve goals, for a person attracts what he thinks about. That means, whoever thinks about success succeeds, and whoever thinks about failure fails.
Finally, it can be said that luck is not a mysterious concept, but rather it is closely linked to the human psyche, as is the case with the law of attraction. The brain leads a person to achieve what he believes in, whether it is negative or positive. No matter how deep the causes are, and how severe the symptoms are, it is possible to treat fate neurosis by rebuilding the ideas of these people regarding themselves, rebuilding their concept of themselves from the beginning, and believing in the possibilities of success. In addition to religious guidance, and trying to consolidate these ideas in the brain to achieve total success.