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Why Fitzgerald Was Obsessed with Love (and It Destroyed Him)

Gildas GarrecCBT Psychopractitioner
6 min read

F. Scott Fitzgerald: A Psychological Portrait

A CBT analysis of a writer confronted with his own depths

Francis Scott Key Fitzgerald (1896-1940) remains one of the most fascinating figures in twentieth-century American literature. Author of The Great Gatsby and Tender Is the Night, he embodies the paradox of creative genius undermined by self-destruction. His work, tinged with persistent melancholy, reveals a complex psyche where ambition, insecurity, and an endless quest for perfection intertwine. A CBT reading of his personality allows us to understand how his dysfunctional cognitive patterns fueled his literary genius while hastening his decline.

Young's Dysfunctional Schemas

Fitzgerald presents several particularly active Young's schemas, formed early in a family context marked by fragile social status and contradictory parental expectations.

The insufficiency schema constitutes the core of his psychology. Despite (or because of) his early success—This Side of Paradise published in 1920 made him famous at 23—Fitzgerald maintains a deep conviction of never being enough. His notebooks reveal chronic obsession: "I became an author because of my flaws." This conviction persists even after the critical triumph of The Great Gatsby in 1925. He writes to his editor Maxwell Perkins: "I've just finished the best novel of my life, the one I've always dreamed of." Yet he immediately adds: "But will anyone recognize it?" This tension between producing a masterpiece and radical doubt about its intrinsic value characterizes the insufficiency schema. The emotional abandonment schema takes root in precarious relationships with his parents—a professionally unsuccessful, alcoholic father and an eccentric, distant mother. Fitzgerald externalizes this fear of abandonment in his romantic relationships. His obsession with Ginevra King (1910-1917), a wealthy young woman who rejected him, fuels the female characters in his work. Like Daisy Buchanan, Ginevra becomes the object of desperate pursuit. The abandonment by Zelda Sayre following her psychiatric hospitalization in 1930 reactivates this schema with destructive intensity. The subjugation schema reflects his compulsive desire to please, to be loved, validated by social elites. Living in the era of American modernization and the "Jazz Age," Fitzgerald idealized wealth as access to happiness and social acceptance. This subordination of self to external expectations generates persistent identity fragmentation: the genuinely talented writer coexists with the profligate socialite who scandalized with his drunken behavior. This duality nourishes his best creations—Gatsby is precisely this man divided between authenticity of heart and the fiction of social status.

Big Five Profile: Exacerbated Sensitivity

Fitzgerald's psychological profile according to the OCEAN model reveals an artistic but profoundly unstable temperament.

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Openness to experience: very high. Fitzgerald embodies the creative explorer. His narrative innovation—the "stream of consciousness" technique influenced by Joyce, his stylistic innovations—testifies to remarkable mental plasticity. He traverses genres, experiments with forms, pushes literary conventions. Conscientiousness: low. This is the weak link in his personality. His notebooks document fluctuating self-discipline: "Monday morning I take my life back in hand; Thursday I sink back into debauchery." Periodic alcoholism, ruinous spending, inability to complete projects—The Last Tycoon remains unfinished—reflect a consciousness altered by impulsivity and absence of self-regulation. Extraversion: moderately high. Fitzgerald frequented Parisian and Hollywood social circles assiduously in the 1920s-1930s. Yet this extraversion masks emotional fragility. Parties and alcohol become dysfunctional coping solutions to persistent social anxiety. Agreeableness: low. His relationships are marked by recurring conflicts. Particularly with Zelda: jealousy, mutual infidelity accusations, sharp criticism. In professional relationships, he displays exacerbated susceptibility to criticism, even constructive ones. Neuroticism: very high. This is the dominant trait. Chronic anxiety, recurrent depression, emotional instability—correspondence with Perkins testifies to extreme mood fluctuations. The escalating alcoholism of the 1930s constitutes a desperate attempt to regulate this overflowing neuroticism.

Attachment Style: Anxious-Preoccupied

Fitzgerald manifests an anxious-preoccupied attachment style, characterized by intense emotional dependency and chronic fear of abandonment.

His relationship with Zelda Sayre embodies this dynamic. Their 1918 meeting triggers quasi-fusional passion. Fitzgerald writes to Zelda's father before even obtaining her promise: "I will marry her if she accepts me." This urgency, this immediate need for fusion, reveal underlying anxiety. During the golden years (1921-1930), when Zelda remains his idealized love object, Fitzgerald functions relatively well creatively. But Zelda's psychiatric hospitalization in 1930 crystallizes the fear of abandonment. He writes then: "Zelda's crisis stole my emotional life." This formulation—externalizing his distress onto the other—perfectly illustrates preoccupied attachment.

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Predominant Defense Mechanisms

Projection dominates his defensive architecture. Unable to tolerate his own insufficiencies, Fitzgerald projects them onto others: critics are incompetent, editors don't understand his genius, American society is corrupt. Paradoxically, this projection fuels his lucid social critique in Gatsby. Alcoholic rationalization constitutes his primary adaptive mechanism. Alcohol temporarily silences the inner critical dialogue, anesthetizes attachment anxiety. His notebooks reveal this awareness: "I drink to forget that I must write; I write to forget that I drink." Sublimation transforms psychological suffering into artistic creation. Tender Is the Night (1934) directly transposes marital and psychiatric crises into narrative material. This sublimation—biologically speaking, the transformation of problematic drives into socially valued activities—temporarily saves Fitzgerald from total self-destruction.

CBT Perspectives and Therapeutic Lessons

A CBT approach would have targeted three priority areas:

Cognitive restructuring against dysfunctional automatic thoughts: "I'm an impostor; my success is illegitimate; I'm not up to the task." Challenging these beliefs with factual evidence (real critical recognition, lasting influence) would have limited the compensatory escalation through alcohol. Behavioral management of impulsivity: establishing external structures—commitment to Perkins for productivity, strict limits on consumption—would have counterbalanced the low conscientiousness observed. Work on anxious attachment: relational therapy to distinguish love from fusion, accept interdependence rather than pursue complete merger.

Conclusion: The Alchemy of Fragile Genius

F. Scott Fitzgerald magnificently illustrates how psychopathology can coexist with creative genius. His insufficiency and abandonment schemas nourished a work of incomparable emotional acuity. But without appropriate CBT interventions—cognitive restructuring, behavioral regulation, attachment work—these same patterns hastened his death at 44.

The universal CBT lesson remains: awareness of our dysfunctional patterns does not equate to overcoming them. Emotional intelligence and creative productivity don't protect against self-destruction. Only structured work on our fundamental beliefs, compensatory behaviors, and relational patterns enables us to transform vulnerability into resilient strength rather than inevitable tragedy.


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