“[...] this observing self often kills and withers anything that is under its scrutiny. The individual has now a persecuting observer in the very core of his being. It may be that the child becomes possessed by the alien and destructive presence of the observer who has turned bad in his absence, occupying the place of the observing self, of the boy himself outside the mirror. If this happens, he retains his awareness of himself as an object in the eyes of another by observing himself as the other: he lends the other his eyes in order that he may continue to be seen; he then becomes an object in his own eyes. But the part of himself who looks into him and sees him, has developed the persecutory features he has come to feel the real person outside him to have. [Self-consciousness, Freyd]” PsychologyIdentitySelf ConsciousnessChild PsychologySigmund FreudFreyd Book:The Divided Self( An Existential Study in Sanity and Madness)[DIVIDED SELF REV/E][Paperback] Source: The Divided Self( An Existential Study in Sanity and Madness)[DIVIDED SELF REV/E][Paperback]