People who meet through weaker social ties may
experience less social support for the relationship.
Not exact matches
Trainees who come to study in a foreign country are more vulnerable than people who come to take a high - level job or to reunite with families because they often are
less experienced, have fewer economic means, and lack local
social support.
The increased processing of and reactivity to
social exclusion and
social pain can increase the risk of patients withdrawing from
social life and therefore
experience less support.
Caregivers»
experienced better health outcomes when they were older, caring for a spouse, had higher income, better
social support, sense of control, and caregiving had
less of a negative impact on their everyday lives.
No
less a figure than the artist Hans Haacke — whose long - standing commitment to rendering transparent economic,
social, and aesthetic structures throughout culture has led him to be immanently associated with the paradigm — used the phrase «consciousness industry» as early as the mid-1980s to describe the sophisticated networks of institutional
support necessary to make visible ostensibly adversarial avant - garde artistic gestures.4 Works seeking to emphasize the moral, political, and intellectual forces that determine and enforce culture, he observed, were nevertheless dependent on a museum or gallery platform designed to privilege aesthetic
experience.
Individuals exposed to adverse childhood
experiences tend to be
less equipped to take on a parenting role when they are adults and, in the context of adverse circumstances and the absence of some form of
social support and / or intervention, they are more likely to adopt inappropriate parenting behaviours and perpetuate a cycle of negative and adverse parenting across generations.
For example, optimists report
experiencing more satisfaction in marital relationships (Smith, Ruiz, Cundiff, Baron, & Nealey - Moore, 2013), more
support in their
social relationships (Abend & Williamson, 2002; Brissette, Scheier, & Carver, 2002; Wimberly, Carver, & Antoni, 2008), and are
less likely to have an anxious attachment style (Heinonen, Räikkönen, Keltikangas - Järvinen, & Strandberg, 2004).
Break - ups can result in negative emotions and feeling
less sure of who you are.6 Yet, when college students predict how bad things will be after a break - up, they think it'll be worse than it is.7 In fact, over 41 % of college students view their break - ups as positive
experiences, with this being even more likely if the former partner was holding you back.8 To get over a break - up try writing about the positive aspects of the
experience, 9 relying on
social support, 10 and avoiding getting back together with your former partner.11 In fact, rather than jumping right back into a relationship, spend some time alone and focus on yourself because having a clear sense about who you are will lead to better relationships down the road.12
One possible reason why
social support has these benefits is that people who
experience their environments as socially supportive may react to stress with
less biological reactivity.
In addition, the more
social support students received from friends, family and significant others, the
less they
experienced loneliness.