Inherent Vice scopes out the death of the 1960s in a rapidly consumerizing Los Angeles, while Boogie Nights sees the fallout from that transition in an epic sojourn through the porn industry, and Magnolia reconfigures Y2K fears around the threat of total
emotional collapse in the new millennium.
Not exact matches
One of the defining images of the Rio Olympics was Neymar
collapsing into an
emotional heap after nailing the gold - medal - winning penalty kick
in front of his home crowd.
This delight leads to tragedy (see: the predictable holiday on the beach scene, where Annie cavorts without properly warm clothing, apparently leading to her illness, a scene that is
collapsed into parents» feelings of overwhelming guilt), a logic that is profoundly
emotional, and hard to reconcile with religious faith (Innes offers up the explanation that «God works
in mysterious ways»).
To say that Jennifer Lawrence is a star — as infinitely watchable picking her nose as picking off enemies with a bow and arrow (spoiler: She doesn't actually pick her nose)-- is to invite one long durrrrr
in reply, and it's no surprise how nimbly she moves between warrior stance and
emotional collapse.
Giving nothing for the audience to grasp onto or connect with is always a risky strategy especially
in a film with such a simple narrative and although our protagonist has one redeemable quality, being a loving family man, it is only when Kuklinski's world starts to
collapse around him that we are shown little pieces of reason, logic and humanity as he becomes
emotional, desperate, abusive, and even panicky.
With appreciable sensitivity and intellectual curiosity, the director Joshua Marston turns public and private spaces — a sanctuary where a congregation sits angrily divided, an office where a pastor
collapses in anguished prayer — into zones of spiritual and
emotional confusion.
The movie wastes one sincere, quietly
emotional performance by Max Deacon as the boy who thinks his last moments will come
in that
collapsed plant.
In the haunting triptych of fragility and identity Moonlight, she is Teresa, the drug dealer's girlfriend with a consoling heart and keen emotional radar; in Hidden Figures, she's Mary, the youngest member of a trio of unsung female African - American mathematicians working behind the scenes at NASA to keep John Glenn's Mercury capsule from collapsing like a soda can on launch and re-entr
In the haunting triptych of fragility and identity Moonlight, she is Teresa, the drug dealer's girlfriend with a consoling heart and keen
emotional radar;
in Hidden Figures, she's Mary, the youngest member of a trio of unsung female African - American mathematicians working behind the scenes at NASA to keep John Glenn's Mercury capsule from collapsing like a soda can on launch and re-entr
in Hidden Figures, she's Mary, the youngest member of a trio of unsung female African - American mathematicians working behind the scenes at NASA to keep John Glenn's Mercury capsule from
collapsing like a soda can on launch and re-entry.
Professional regulators
in all the professions are slow to realize and deal with the mental illness and
emotional collapse of many of their members.
This is followed by the depressive phase
in which the child's
emotional expansiveness created by separation
collapses in the child's psychological isolation, which is then followed by the child's return to the parent to repair the relationship with the parent (the rapprochement phase).
If, on the other hand, the child can read the inner psychological and
emotional needs of the narcissistic / (borderline) parent and respond
in ways to meet those needs, then the child can stabilize the
emotional and psychological functioning of the narcissistic / (borderline) parent and prevent this parent's
collapse into disorganization, hostility, and rejection of the child.
In the role as a «regulating other» for the narcissistic / (borderline) parent, the child readily adopts the parentally - desired role as the «victimized child» of the other «abusive parent» in order to keep the narcissistic / (borderline) parent from collapsing into intense emotional states of anxiety, sadness, or ange
In the role as a «regulating other» for the narcissistic / (borderline) parent, the child readily adopts the parentally - desired role as the «victimized child» of the other «abusive parent»
in order to keep the narcissistic / (borderline) parent from collapsing into intense emotional states of anxiety, sadness, or ange
in order to keep the narcissistic / (borderline) parent from
collapsing into intense
emotional states of anxiety, sadness, or anger.
In the moment, while the child is interacting with the unpredictable and emotionally dangerous narcissistic / (borderline) parent, the primary motivation of the child is to keep the narcissistic / (borderline) parent in a regulated emotional state and so avoid the parent's collapse into hostile - angry - rejecting, overly sad and depressed, or hyper - anxious emotional display
In the moment, while the child is interacting with the unpredictable and emotionally dangerous narcissistic / (borderline) parent, the primary motivation of the child is to keep the narcissistic / (borderline) parent
in a regulated emotional state and so avoid the parent's collapse into hostile - angry - rejecting, overly sad and depressed, or hyper - anxious emotional display
in a regulated
emotional state and so avoid the parent's
collapse into hostile - angry - rejecting, overly sad and depressed, or hyper - anxious
emotional displays.
The body responds as if the trauma is still occurring and keeps the person
in a state of constant readiness and unnecessary reactivity, leading to a constellation of familiar symptoms, including anxiety, panic, hyper - vigilance, flashbacks,
emotional lability, depression, pain, patterns of bracing and
collapse, cognitive dysfunction, behavioral problems, addictions, and an ongoing sense of intrusion and overwhelm.
In response to the intense and unpredictable emotional displays by the narcissistic / (borderline) parent, the child becomes hyper - vigilant regarding the emotional and psychological state of the narcissistic / (borderline) parent in order to prevent the parent's collapse into intense, dysregulated emotional displays of anxiety, sadness, or anger, and the child becomes what the parent needs (i.e., the «regulatory other» for the parent) in order to keep the parent in a regulated emotional stat
In response to the intense and unpredictable
emotional displays by the narcissistic / (borderline) parent, the child becomes hyper - vigilant regarding the
emotional and psychological state of the narcissistic / (borderline) parent
in order to prevent the parent's collapse into intense, dysregulated emotional displays of anxiety, sadness, or anger, and the child becomes what the parent needs (i.e., the «regulatory other» for the parent) in order to keep the parent in a regulated emotional stat
in order to prevent the parent's
collapse into intense, dysregulated
emotional displays of anxiety, sadness, or anger, and the child becomes what the parent needs (i.e., the «regulatory other» for the parent)
in order to keep the parent in a regulated emotional stat
in order to keep the parent
in a regulated emotional stat
in a regulated
emotional state.
As the child adopts the role as the «regulatory other» for the narcissistic / (borderline) parent's pathology
in order to avoid the
emotional collapse of the narcissistic / (borderline) parent into chaotic and unpredictable displays of intense parental anxiety, sadness, or anger it becomes relatively easy for the narcissistic / (borderline) parent to then communicate to the child through clear but subtle «
emotional signals» and «relational moves» that the parent's
emotional regulation is dependent on the child adopting the «victimized child» role
in the narcissistic / (borderline) parent's trauma reenactment narrative.
I experienced far worse bullying
in the workplace, which stole my joy, almost destroyed my
emotional health and contributed to the
collapse of my marriage.