Sunday, May 22, 1955 THE 1Vl1CHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Case Studies Illustrate Factors Behind Delinquency Specific Behavior Must Be Analyzed AL WAS 14 when he was referred to a psychiatric clinic by a ju- venile court because of serious de- linquency. His disturbed behavior began when he was 10 years of age. At that time he skipped school oc- casionally, was defiant toward teachers and generally upsetting to the classroom routine. He was re- ferred to the Visiting Teacher and received individual attention from her to which he appeared to re- spond with some improvement in his general behavior in school. To a lesser degree his difficulties continued however. At the age of 12 he began to get into more seri- ous trouble, truanting from home, staying out all night and stealing from stores. At 14 he began to steal cars and was referred to us after a highway accident in which a, stolen car he was driving overturn- ed in a ditch. FAMILY history indicated dis- turbance at many levels. The parents were divorced when Al was five years of age. The father, markedly disturbed, had been ir- responsible in the home, abusive to his wife and to Al, especially when he had been drinking. The mother had worked in a factory from the time of the divorce. There was a younger sister, age 12, who was getting along well and pre- sented no major problems. In the clinic, physical examina- tion revealed a well developed 14- year old boy in good health. In psychologic testing on the Wech- sler Intelligence Tests Al attained a verbal I.Q. of 96, a performance I.Q. of 118. He was found to be of superior intellectual potential, functioning extremely well in tests requiring visual motor coordination and skill. I NTERVIEW with the mother re- vealed a careworn, anxious and somewhat depressed woman of .6 who felt much concern about Al and felt guilty about his difficul- ties. She described her marriage as an impossible one from the begin- ning, characterized herself as somewhat impatient with the chil- dren largely because of fatigue. As she described her own life, it was evident that she was basically inhappy and ungratified, finding satisfactions for the most part only in her children. In psychiatric interview Al was seen to be a bright, somewhat sul- len and very hostile 14-year old, at first very defensive and guarded in response to questioning. It was im- mediately apparent, despite his rather cold and disinterested atti- tude, that he had marked anxiety p .._. Early Deprivation Can Distort Life BILL was referred for psychiatric study at age 9 because of vandalism, running away, indis- criminate stealing and failure to adjust at school. History indicated that Bill was born out of wedlock to a 17-year- old girl who was totally unable to care for him. He lived with his mother in her mother's home until the age of 7 months, at which time he was placed by the family in a boarding home. He remained there only 4 months, then hospitalized 3 months for malnutrition. After this period he was placed in a large nursery for group care and remained until the age of 2% years, when he went to a foster family. It tas an excellent home, anxious to have Bill and very giv- ing, THE CHILD, however, adjusted poorly from the beginning. He wandered away from the home, was destructive and very primi- tive in his behavior. Despite the strongest efforts on the part of the foster parents to reach him, he seemed remote from them and failed to return their affection. Finally after 2 years the foster parents realized that Bill was not responding and asked that he be placed elsewhere. Since this time Bill has been in a series of foster homes and his delinquency has be- come more marked with the pass- ing years. In interview Bill was seen to be a very charming, out-going boy of 9, of average intellectual po- tential. He was little concerned about his difficulties, talked glib- ly and easily and in the course of interviews revealed a very shallow, empty inner life. THE origin of Bill's trouble, as we now understand his condi- tion, was in his first years. Because of numerous placements he had had no opportunity to establish a primary mother relationship, and by the time a suitable opportunitv was afforded him, the damage was too great and he was unable to respond. Bill, originally potentially normal and in fact potentially gifted, was now at the age of 9 a gross delinquent. Early depriva- tion had denied him the oppor- tunity for the incorporation of so- cial values through early human relationships. As a result of understanding children like Bill, an important change has occurred in the plan- ning for abandoned and neglected infants. Instead of institutional care, such children are now of- fered opportunity for a one-to- one mother relationship in a foster home as close to the time of birth as possible. THE CAUSES of delinquency are varied and complex. Som children become delinquents because it is the generally accepte behavior of the community they live in. e A and much concern about himself. Gradually he was able to express his anxiety, and in projective iii- terviews revealed a troubled inner life that motivated his delinquen- cy. In the course of interviews he described his confusion about the divorce. He had many fantasies about his father and these were markedly ambivalent. He wanted very much to view his father in a positive light and try to find ex- tehuations for what he knew and remembered of the father's earlier brutality and neglect. A RECURRENT fantasy was re- lated to his own responsibility for the divorce. He felt that he had been "bad" when his father was at home, that he had not obeyed, and that his father was angry with him. He remembered specific minor incidents in which he had irritated his father and fantasied that these had led to the father's leaving home. Through the years the mother, concerned with the boy's delin- quency, had unwittingly compared him with his father. She would tell him, when she was most disturb- ed, that he was just like his fa- ther, irresponsible and ungrateful. In his fantasy Al was in many ways identified with his father and, along with his need for his father, he had a need to be like him. At the same time he was frightened of this identification, and detailed history indicated many evidences of regression through which Al tended to protect himself from growing up like his father. There were many other concerns and conflicts present in the thought content and fantasies of this boy. Careful study indicated clearly the disabling nature of his neurosis. It was possible to relate his delinquencies to the content of his inner life, and Al proved an- xious for help and was able to ac- cept it. THIS abreviated case history is typical of that found in many delinguent children and adoles- cents. There was a time when the diagnosis would have been con- duct disorder - truancy, stealing, destructiveness. This of course is purely descriptive and gives us no insight into the inner life motivat- ing the behavior. Many children may present a similar behavior pattern, but the motivation under- lying the behavior may be very different in each child. The tech- niques and the insights that allow for the investigation and the un- derstanding of the inner life are the contributions of modern dy- namic psychology. f f ', t I) i l dr-_- L11 For a going away gift to her... For a graduation gift . .. For all or any thank you gift.. . COSTUME JEWELRY-Beautifully packaged as a gift should be . .. from $1.00. 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