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The Genius Who Battled His Own Mind

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychopractitioner
6 min read

Vincent van Gogh: A Psychological Portrait

A CBT Analysis of an Artist Seeking Connection

Vincent van Gogh (1853-1890) continues to fascinate us today, not only for his artistic genius but also for his profound psychological suffering. His tumultuous journey, marked by depression, existential crises, and premature death, offers us a remarkable opportunity to explore Young's schemas, personality traits, and adaptive mechanisms of a creator in distress. Beyond the myth of the "mad genius," we discover a man acutely aware of his difficulties, desperately yearning for love and acceptance.

Young's Schemas: The Architecture of Suffering

Abandonment Schema (Disconnection & Rejection Domain)

Vincent embodied the prototype of the abandonment schema. Son of a pastor, he grew up in an atmosphere of family disappointment. His father, Theodorus van Gogh, represented moral and religious authority, but also emotional absence. Vincent attempted to follow his father's footsteps by becoming a pastor to gain his approval, but his failure in this role (notably his ministry among the miners of Borinage between 1878-1879) reinforced his sense of rejection.

This dynamic is clearly visible in his relentless correspondence with his brother Theo. Between 1875 and his death, Vincent wrote over 700 letters to Theo, constantly seeking validation and fraternal love. The abandonment schema also manifests in his chaotic romantic relationships: his unrequited love for his cousin Kee Vos (1881), then his ill-fated affair with Sien Hoornik, a prostitute (1882), reveal a desperate quest for connection with figures representing unavailability.

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Defectiveness Schema (Imperfection/Shame Domain)

Vincent was paralyzed by the deep conviction that he was a failure. His multiple professional attempts (educator, missionary, salesman for the Goupil company) all ended in collapse. This accumulation of failures fed a corrosive defectiveness schema: he could accomplish nothing; he was fundamentally maladjusted.

Particularly revealing is his incident on December 23, 1888 in Arles, when he mutilated his ear following a dispute with Paul Gauguin. This extreme act crystallizes his sense of unworthiness. He writes to Theo: "I almost killed myself... Then I came to and went to the doctor and told him: I'm a bit sick, put me in the asylum." Vincent acknowledges his defectiveness and requests hospitalization, revealing acute awareness of his breakdown.

Emotional Deprivation Schema

Vincent viscerally felt the absence of emotional warmth in his family environment. His correspondence reveals a muted suffering: "Sometimes I have a terrible desire to change, to have a different life. I wouldn't be surprised if I changed radically one day." This deprivation schema paradoxically fuels his overflowing creativity: art becomes the medium for compensation for missing love.

Big Five Profile (OCEAN): Personality Dimensions

Openness to Experience: VERY HIGH (9/10) Vincent constantly explored new techniques, colors, and pictorial approaches. His transition from impressionism to pointillism to expressionism demonstrates this permanent thirst for discovery. His letters overflow with aesthetic theories and literary references (Zola, Hugo, Dickens). Conscientiousness: LOW (3/10) Despite his talent, Vincent struggled to manage his practical life: chaotic financial management, neglect of his physical health, impulsivity in important decisions. He was financially dependent on Theo, and his physical environment was generally disorderly. Extraversion: MODERATE THEN DECLINING (4/10 → 2/10) Though intellectually lively and idealistic, Vincent experienced periods of increasing isolation. In Arles, he envisioned forming an "artist community," but his social interactions remained fragmentary and often unhappy. His isolation at Saint-Paul-de-Mausole (1889-1890) reflects this progressive withdrawal. Agreeableness: LOW TO MODERATE (4/10) Vincent was a perfectionist, uncompromising in his artistic and spiritual convictions. He could be hurtful in his criticism, quick-tempered, and difficult to reconcile with. His rupture with Gauguin illustrates this low agreeableness. Neuroticism: EXTREMELY HIGH (9/10) Emotional volatility, anxious rumination, catastrophic thinking, cyclical depression: all markers of neuroticism are present in Vincent. His "dark nights of the soul" alternate with hypomanic phases of brilliant creativity.

Attachment Style: Anxious-Ambivalent Attachment

Vincent displays the classic characteristics of anxious-ambivalent attachment (Bowlby-Ainsworth). His relationships reveal an alternation between hyperactivation (incessant seeking of proximity and reassurance) and deactivation (wounded retreat following disappointment).

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With Theo, this pattern is clearly observable: Vincent alternates between intense calls for help and reproaches about perceived unavailability. He constantly requests visits, letters, and proofs of love, then withdraws into guilt about being "a burden."

This attachment insecurity fuels his risky behaviors (alcoholism, self-harm) as maladaptive strategies for emotional regulation.

Defense Mechanisms: Facing the Unbearable

Sublimation Vincent transformed his suffering into artistic creation. His self-portraits are not ordinary narcissism but obsessive explorations of his own malaise. The "Starry Night" series (1888-1889) would sublimate his cosmic anguish into transcendent beauty. Projection He attributed to his external circumstances (Arles too noisy, the Dutch too cold) the sources of his intrapsychic distress. This external projection prevented him from confronting his deep vulnerabilities. Denial and Rationalization Though aware of his crises, Vincent tended to minimize their severity: "It's just a little nerves." He rationalized his destructive behaviors through artistic or spiritual explanations.

CBT Perspectives: Toward Potential Psychotherapy

A CBT approach could have helped Vincent to:

1. Restructure Automatic Thoughts Identify and challenge core beliefs ("I'm a failure," "No one will love me") with objective evidence (growing recognition of his art, Theo's devotion). 2. Develop Emotional Regulation Skills Instead of escalating to self-destructive acts during frustration, Vincent would have benefited from mindfulness techniques, breathing exercises, and cognitive distancing. 3. Work on Secure Attachment Interventions focused on relational security could have reduced his anxious hyperactivation and emotional dependence on Theo. 4. Prevention of Depressive Relapse Behavioral therapy (behavioral activation, activity scheduling) could have structured his cycles of isolation and depression.

Conclusion: The CBT Lesson of Vincent van Gogh

Vincent van Gogh reminds us of an essential clinical truth: artistic genius does not immunize against psychological suffering. More profoundly, his story illustrates how early abandonment and defectiveness schemas can structure an entire existence, despite the subject's lucid awareness.

Yet Vincent is not a fixed pathological case. His letters attest to a remarkable understanding of his internal mechanisms. This self-reflection—what we call "mentalization" in modern clinical practice—constitutes the very foundation of any possible psychological change.

Today, facing patients suffering from similar schemas, we can invoke Vincent: yes, your old wounds structure your present, but conscious therapeutic work can create alternative pathways. Vincent's art shows us the way—


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