Neruda: Why This Poet Loved the Way He Wrote
Pablo Neruda: Psychological Portrait
A CBT analysis of an overflowing poetic passion
Pablo Neruda (1904-1973), whose real name was Neftalí Ricardo Reyes Basoalto, embodies the archetype of the passionate poet whose work springs from unfiltered emotional depths. His journey — from young Chilean romantic to the erotic verses of Twenty Love Poems and a Song of Despair (1924) to the radical political commitment of Canto General (1950) — reveals a psyche traversed by fundamental tensions between the intimate and the collective, love and rage, sensuality and idealism. A psychological analysis of Neruda allows us to decipher how his personality structure shaped one of the major poetic voices of the twentieth century.
Young's Schemas: Emotional Deprivation and Self-Sacrifice
The first dominant early maladaptive schema in Neruda is Emotional Deprivation. Raised by his stepmother Rosa Neftalí Basoalto after the death of his mother Rosa Malva when he was only two months old, Neruda internalized a primary wound of maternal absence. This emotional deprivation generates an insatiable emotional hunger, particularly visible in the Twenty Love Poems, where each beloved woman becomes a receptacle destined to fill this existential void. The verses "I want to do with you / what spring does with the cherry trees" manifest this tendency to merge with the other to ward off original solitude.
This emotional deprivation is accompanied by a schema of Self-Sacrifice particularly virulent in his political period. From the 1930s onward, especially after his diplomatic missions to Asia (1927-1935) and his adherence to the Communist Party in 1945, Neruda progressively erases himself in a collective cause. He considered his poetic work as a tool serving the revolution rather than as an exploration of self. Self-Sacrifice allowed him to transform Emotional Deprivation into a quest for higher meaning — the revolution becomes the absent mother who never gave him her love. This configuration explains why Neruda divided his readers: admired for his commitment, criticized for subordinating art to ideology.
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Big Five Profile: The Emotional Imprint
Openness (very high): Neruda is the embodiment of boundless creativity. His corpus of over 3000 poems, his overflowing sensory experiences (he collected objects, women, ideas with frenzy), his constant evolution of poetic forms testify to an exceptional capacity to explore the unexpected. This radical openness also explains his three marriages, his multiple love affairs, and his ability to reinvent his art every ten years. Conscientiousness (low to moderate): Although disciplined in his writing work, Neruda lacked emotional structure. He accumulated responsibilities (diplomatic career, political commitment, simultaneous households) without truly prioritizing them. His relationship with Matilde Urrutia (his third wife, whom he met in 1952) shows this impulsivity: he courted her as a maid in his mistress Delia del Carril's home, creating a destructive love triangle. The absence of compensatory moral consciousness also explains his blind support for Stalin, even after the revelation of the purges. Extraversion (high): Neruda was gregarious, loved political gatherings, captivated female readers, passionate debates. His personal charisma — despite his increasing corpulence and unconventional face — attracted crowds. He embodied the committed poet of international congresses, the public figure of revolt. Agreeableness (moderate): Paradoxically, Neruda could be emotionally cruel. He abandoned the women who had nourished his inspirations: Maryka Antonieta Haagenar (his first wife), Delia del Carril (his political mentor) were successively abandoned. This uneven agreeableness reflects the interference of Emotional Deprivation: capable of fusional tenderness, but incapable of stable commitment based on the other. Neuroticism (very high): Neruda's cardinal trait. Chronically depressed, subject to anxiety crises, allergic to criticism, he lived in permanent emotional volatility. The journal he kept reveals passages of abyssal melancholy alternating with overflowing creative euphoria. This instability nourished his poetry but also damaged his intimate relationships.Attachment Style: Anxious-Preoccupied
Neruda presents a classic anxious-preoccupied attachment. The early maternal deprivation created a hyperactivation of the attachment system: he constantly seeks to verify that others won't abandon him. His three marriages respond to this pattern: when a woman becomes established in the relationship, Neruda begins to question her love ("Why this faithfulness? Am I truly loved?") and undertakes a new quest elsewhere, compulsively repeating the original trauma of separation.
With Matilde, Neruda found a more tolerant partner. She accepted his infidelities, his eccentricities. This relative security allowed a progressive decrease in neuroticism and access to a certain serenity in his later works (One Hundred Love Sonnets, 1959), although too late to resolve fundamental wounds.
Defense Mechanisms: Sublimation and Somatization
Sublimation is the predominant mechanism in Neruda. Each emotional wound is transfigured into a masterful poem. Lost loves become Hymns of Resurrection. Political pain crystallizes into Canto General. This transmutation is remarkably healthy compared to its alternatives (alcohol, toward which he leaned, represented a somatization of anxiety).However, Neruda also employs projection and idealization: he attributed superhuman qualities to his lovers, then collapsed when reality brought them back to common humanity. Stalinism functioned the same way — projection of the revolutionary ideal onto a totalitarian reality.
CBT Perspective: Identifying Distortions
A CBT approach applied to Neruda would identify several pathological cognitive distortions:
Black-and-white thinking: love or nothingness, revolution or imperialist lies. No nuance. Catastrophizing: each separation was experienced as existential annihilation rather than relational evolution. Mind reading: permanent conviction of being betrayed ("You don't really love me") without external validation.CBT therapy could have helped Neruda:
- Contextualize the original trauma (maternal death) without generalizing it to all relationships
- Develop tolerance for emotional uncertainty
- Establish differentiation between political ideal and historical reality
- Build self-esteem independent of romantic validation
Conclusion: Poetry as an Incomplete Remedy
Pablo Neruda remains the paradigmatic example of a personality where early schemas become creative forces. Emotional Deprivation and Self-Sacrifice produced work of rare intensity. But they also condemned the poet to permanent emotional wandering, moral contradictions (communist but a property owner, revolutionary but bourgeois), to chronic inability to maintain emotional balance.
The universal CBT lesson is as follows: artistic sublimation, while positive, does not cure attachment wounds. Neruda would have had a healthier life if he had first treated his Emotional Deprivation through therapeutic work, rather than channeling it exclusively into creation. Poetic genius is not enough to resolve intrapsychic conflicts. As Neruda himself wrote: "It is not poetry's fault if it arrives laden with pain."
Also Read
Recommended Reading:
- Reinventing Your Life — Jeffrey Young

About the author
Gildas Garrec · CBT Psychopractitioner
Certified practitioner in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), author of 16 books on applied psychology and relationships. Over 900 clinical articles published across Psychologie et Sérénité.
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