Concerning the psychic phenomenon and the Rorschach discourse, the theory of mental functioning has an important role on understanding how the Rorschach responses are constructed by the subject and what these responses represent psychicly. Freud?s conceptualization of mental functioning consists of two processes: primary and secondary. Later Piera Aulagnier (1975) added the third, positioned it as a first and the most archaic form of representation and named iü as ?the primal process? or ?processes originaire?. The primal, primary and secondary processes: The psychic processes are considered to be like metabolic processes or systems, all of which are essential in order to transform the effects of the encounter between the self and the external world. This is done by representational processes, and the way of representation is significantly different for each of the three systems. Each of these mental processes has its specific form of psychic representation: by the Aulagnier?s description, the primal process is represented by ?pictogram?, the primary process by the unconscious phantasies, and the secondary process by the the subject?s ego, in other words, ?the speaking I?. Considering the roots of psychosis which are laid back in the pre-historical times of the psyche, understanding the pictografic representation can lighten the dark areas of the enigma of psyhosis. Pictogram is a mental representation created by the infants? psyche from its bodily experience of the earliest sensations of the pleasure, following the model of the encounter between the mouth and the breast. The psychotic work of the psyche can be seen as a normal reaction to the encounter between the self and the world. It is the only way of the archaic psyche to cope with the destructive impulses which are derivated from the death instinct. The most general aim of the psyche is to preserve its equilibrium state. Any break in this state will be manifested as pain. This will lead the organism to eliminate the cause of the unpleasurable feeling. The only reaction by the psyche which it is capable of is to hallucinate. This way of modification of the encounter situation results with a denial of a state of lack. The hallucinatory of mouth-breast union temporarily imposes a silence on the real state of need. Therefore the first natural response of the psyche is a psychotic reaction. The behaviour of appealling of a real breast only appears after the failure of the pictogram?s omnipotence. The psyche?s first departure from reality is done in the favour of coming to a state where it doesn?t have to desire anything. In other words it is a desire of not to desire. As an other general rule of psychic functioning is, any kind of work must involve pleasure without which any cathexis is withdrawn from that action. There must be a real breast following the representational pleasure of the pictogram. It is this presence of the real breast which means a bonus pleasure for the infant added to hallucinatory satisfaction. Bonus pleasure principle is the only way of ending the omnipotence of the hallucinatory state.