Sentences with phrase «far less emotion»

You can imagine that the trader who only entered 4 daily chart trades that month had far less emotion, frustration and stress, and far more time and ease of mind than the guy who entered 15 4 hr chart trades and ended up with the same result.

Not exact matches

Empathy with the overwhelming feelings of your child will get you a lot further when it comes to connecting with your child, building your child's self - worth and helping them handle their emotions in less destructive ways than telling your child off or letting your self - esteem be hurt by the harsh words.
Facts don't convince people, or rather convince people far less effectively than emotions and stories do.
If Velvet's party of anti-heroes were written by lesser writers, the thirst for revenge would have tired us out far too early; revenge is a state of mind of heightened emotion and impact, and over the course of a full - length JRPG the passion and anger would have boiled over far too soon.
Then again, how many horror movies have tried to appeal to lesser emotions than humor with even more gruesome sights, less intelligence, and a far higher body count?
The author, in a true - to - life passage, intersperses Aunt Hester's seemingly glamorous yarns with the far less appealing situations and emotions behind them.
There is a large amount of data regarding canine behavior, emotion, communication, etc., but far less information exists for cats.
The second and far less successful part of the show is broken into what Mr. Tuchman calls the «five underlying impulses within the spiritual - abstract nexus» - Cosmic Imagery, Dualities, Synesthesia, Spiritual Geometry and Vibrations (according to Mr. Tuchman, Kandinsky believed that «human emotions consist of vibrations of the soul, and that the soul is set into vibrations by nature»); each impulse was defined in Symbolist art and literature.
The neurobiological mechanism underlying emotion regulation deficits (simply put: a more active emotional response system and less effective regulation of the emotional response) is both (1) the normative developmental imbalance during adolescence (reviewed above), and (2) a parallel process that underlies and further exacerbates risk for addiction and comorbid psychopathology more generally.
Like children with an AD, parents with an AD might also not possess adaptive resources for expressing and managing positive and negative emotions, thereby further contributing to less adaptive emotional patterns of parent - child dyads (Morris et al. 2007).
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