Top 10 Insane Facts About Sigmund 
Freud
10.
Drug Abuse
Sigmund Freud abused drugs, and when we say
that, what we mean is that Freud really, really,
really liked cocaine.
Freud loved cocaine so much that he discussed
it openly with his fiancé, and performed
experiments centered on cocaine with himself
as the subject.
While that may be the greatest excuse for
drug use ever, he also did write several papers
on the wonders of this drug, touting its use
in all sorts of things, including anesthesia.
However, he did enjoy the high that the drug
gave him, and definitely used it for more
than just medicinal reasons.
9.
Misogyny
Freud had a bit of a problem with the ladies,
which is a bit of an understatement.
A better question would probably be what problem
he didn’t have with women.
Freud believed that women’s problems stemmed
essentially from them not having a male sex
organ, and felt that women didn’t have a
good sense of justice.
He also considered women to be weak socially,
to have a jealous nature, and to be exceedingly
vain.
Freud was also known to believe women to be
the problem in society, especially when it
came to sexual tension between the genders.
8.
Psychosexual Theories
oedipus
Freud had a collection of very strange theories,
many of which are pretty much discredited
today.
His main belief was that young children, even
infants, had unconscious sexual feelings.
Among these were various stages of fixation,
such as oral, anal and phallic.
Someone with an oral fixation gained in this
early stage may end up constantly needing
to chew on something, or have something in
their mouth, while someone who wasn’t raised
properly during the anal stage could be anal-retentive,
which is where the expression comes from.
He also had theories involving the Oedipus
Complex, which had young boys attracted to
their mothers, and the Elektra Complex, which
had young girls attracted to their fathers.
7.
Cancer
Many people may not realize that Freud had
a very long running battle with cancer.
This was mainly due to his constant habit
of smoking cigars, leading to mouth cancer
later in life.
At one point Freud managed to actually quit
for over a year, but eventually went back
to the habit again full-time.
According to some, he smoked as many as twenty
cigars in a typical day and had to go through
34 operations, still eventually succumbing
to cancer.
Despite Freud’s knowledge of psychology,
he was unable to ever truly break the habit.
6.
Father Of Psychoanalysis
Freud is famous for being the inventor of
psychoanalysis, though some argue whether
he was the first to use the method.
Freud, though, was unquestionably the first
to popularize the method, and influenced many
great psychologists such as Carl Jung.
Psychoanalysis often involves attempting to
understand a patient through their childhood
development and greatly involves the unconscious.
His psychoanalysis has been criticized, and
still enjoys a certain controversy among the
psychology community today.
His beliefs have always been considered controversial,
but his contribution to the field of psychology
and his influence cannot be denied.
5.
Womb Envy
Some of Freud’s contemporaries were women,
and a bit more feminist than he was (then
again, it sounds like just about everybody
is more feminist than Freud.)
In response to his belief that many of women’s
ills belonged to the fact that they did not
have a penis and were jealous of men for having
one, a female contemporary came up with the
alternate theory of womb envy.
Also known as vagina envy, this is an alternate
theory that states men are actually jealous
of women, because they do not have a womb
and thus cannot create life.
To make up for this jealousy, men try to construct
businesses instead so it feels like they are
creating something.
One feminist even makes the argument that
Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein is essentially
a story about a man with womb envy.
4.
Dream Theories
Sigmund Freud placed a lot of importance on
the unconscious, so perhaps not all too surprisingly
he had quite a hang up on dreams.
Freud believed that dreams had parts that
you remember, and those that you did not.
His theory was that what you actually remembered
was just something that represented what you
were actually thinking during the dream, and
that it was meant to disguise the true thought.
Freud even wrote a book on dreams called,
creatively titled “The Interpretation of
Dreams.”
His main belief at the time was that dreams
are a way of fulfilling things we wish we
could do while conscious, but were unable.
3.
The Unconscious
Freud was one of the first to really propose
serious theories on the unconscious, and it
was truly a cornerstone of nearly all of what
he believed.
The unconscious, for our purposes, is supposed
to be all of the processes in our brain that
we perform without really thinking.
However, Freud saw it as much more than this.
He believed that the unconscious drives how
we behave, often acting on feelings that have
been repressed inside us since he were very
young.
He believed very strongly that nearly all
actions that people performed were the result
of unconscious processes, which would mean
that our free will does not perform quite
the way we first thought.
While it is certain that we do have an unconscious
mind, it is hard to say just how many of Freud’s
theories regarding it are actually true, or
even have elements of truth to them.
2.
Oral Fixation
There is a popular story that Freud was once
with a class smoking one of his favorite cigars
when one of his students suggested that perhaps
his constant need to have something in his
mouth meant that he had an oral fixation,
basically pinning him with his own made-up
disorder.
To this, Freud famously replied “sometimes
a cigar is just a cigar.”
Funnily enough, it turns out that some people
have investigated this quote and discovered
that the entire thing probably never even
happened.
However, as we mentioned earlier, Freud did
indeed love his cigars.
He was been quoted as saying that cigars were
essential to his life, and he believed that
they improved his work.
In short, if oral fixation is real, he clearly
had it, sassy comeback or none.
1.
Polyglot
A polyglot is someone who can speak many languages,
basically a super linguist.
And Sigmund Freud was a serious polyglot,
with a strong knowledge of German, Italian,
Greek, English, Spanish, Hebrew and Latin.
For those of who aren’t counting, that is
a grand total of seven languages, which makes
us look bad as most people are lucky to be
proficient in their own language.
Freud was also quite the little genius, already
reading Shakespeare at the tender age of eight.
He was also accepted into a prestigious high
school and graduated with honors, eventually
proving himself as the kookiest psychologist
ever to walk 
the Earth.
