Sentences with phrase «human emotional needs»

The importance of human emotional needs started to be appreciated early in the 20th century.
It provides a list of suggestions for preventing families from becoming dysfunctional during times of stress and change by focusing on meeting basic human emotional needs within the family.
Neither on mystical revelation nor on theological necessity nor on human emotional needs.

Not exact matches

We need to dig one step deeper and uncover the emotional complexities behind human decision - making.
«Some psychologists assert that a human being's deepest emotional need is to be heard and understood,» she says.
Psychologists agree on a fundamental human motivation such as the need to belong, which is our emotional need to be accepted by members of a group affecting our behavior.
We need bosses who equip businesses with promising talent; who excel at creativity and lateral thinking; and who have the emotional intelligence to herd the complicated urges and behaviours of their employees — most of whom, all hype aside, remain stubbornly human — toward building something great.
It is not something that merely celebrates and seals a deep human emotion — although it does echo to the very core of our emotional and psychological needs.
«The fundamental needs of the human person are the focus of Catholic education - intellectual, physical, emotional, social, spiritual and eschatological (our eternal destiny).
You're right... a whole host... political, social, emotional, physical, mental... in other words, it's being human in the disquise of being something special and «unique»; an odd need we humans seem to have.
Inserting a god as the explanation for all of the unknown - not to mention assigning this god an array of human - like emotional characteristics... wants, needs, demands, rewards & punishments, etc. - is not valid.
If God possesses even emotional attributes that humans possess, it all of a sudden would mean that God had biological needs, since emotions are important for the performance and life of the organism they exist in.
What is needed today, I believe, is the radical attempt to work Out a theological pattern for Christian faith which is in the main influenced by process - philosophy, while at the same time use is made of what we have been learning from the existentialist's insistence on engagement and decision, the understanding of history as involving genuine participation and social context, and the psychologist's awareness of the depths of human emotional, conational, and rational experience.
You don't need to think about your own emotional maturity and development of individuality, your discipline, training and education, your willingness to cooperate and compromise and work with other people; you don't need to think about developing deep and meaningful human relationships and trying to keep them in order.
I do say that in creation the ideal for the fullness of human life is found in that union of the male and female toward which we are driven by our deep emotional need, driven by our intense physical desire, and driven by an inner sense of our incompleteness.
They open the door to a deeper conversation about values, human nature and the fragility of eros, and force us to grapple with some of the most unsettling questions: How do we negotiate the elusive balance between our emotional and our erotic needs?
Social interaction is a typical human activity that helps us to meet our emotional needs.
All humans are hard - wired with two basic emotional needs — attention and power.
As with all humans, outward behavior is merely a reflection of our inner selves: our needs, our hurts, our emotional states.
I feel there are many adult babies out there who are now seeking to have their emotional needs met and instead of seeing their child as a human being full of promise who is designed to have his needs met by his parents, who simply wants to love and be loved, they see the child as competition who had better get with the program because now it's ALL about parent.
• The need to exercising self - compassion as you process emotions • Emotional purging in a conscious way to move to an easier parenting journey • Moving passed mindfulness and consciousness to peacefulness • Functioning as a peaceful human being • Moving from «doing» to «being» • The value of peaceful presence, free of emotional trigger, for your kids • Modelling ownership of behavior for your kids • Peacefulness as a practice that takes time • Parenting as an extension of nature: gradually forging new pathways in your relationships and being expansive, not staying «stuck» • The healing power of authenticity with your kids • Aiming for perseverance and presence, not perfection • Exercising compassion for others and recognizing we don't know their struggles • Learning how not to try to control others and focus on self to remain peaceful • Journalling as a practice to release emotions • Finding opportunities for stillness • Releasing others from the responsibility for reading your mind • Shifting to a solution focus to create momentum • Fear: being curious about it to avoid being driven by it • Showing up in your own home to make a difference in the world • Practical ways to nourish yourself • Unconditional love — what does that lEmotional purging in a conscious way to move to an easier parenting journey • Moving passed mindfulness and consciousness to peacefulness • Functioning as a peaceful human being • Moving from «doing» to «being» • The value of peaceful presence, free of emotional trigger, for your kids • Modelling ownership of behavior for your kids • Peacefulness as a practice that takes time • Parenting as an extension of nature: gradually forging new pathways in your relationships and being expansive, not staying «stuck» • The healing power of authenticity with your kids • Aiming for perseverance and presence, not perfection • Exercising compassion for others and recognizing we don't know their struggles • Learning how not to try to control others and focus on self to remain peaceful • Journalling as a practice to release emotions • Finding opportunities for stillness • Releasing others from the responsibility for reading your mind • Shifting to a solution focus to create momentum • Fear: being curious about it to avoid being driven by it • Showing up in your own home to make a difference in the world • Practical ways to nourish yourself • Unconditional love — what does that lemotional trigger, for your kids • Modelling ownership of behavior for your kids • Peacefulness as a practice that takes time • Parenting as an extension of nature: gradually forging new pathways in your relationships and being expansive, not staying «stuck» • The healing power of authenticity with your kids • Aiming for perseverance and presence, not perfection • Exercising compassion for others and recognizing we don't know their struggles • Learning how not to try to control others and focus on self to remain peaceful • Journalling as a practice to release emotions • Finding opportunities for stillness • Releasing others from the responsibility for reading your mind • Shifting to a solution focus to create momentum • Fear: being curious about it to avoid being driven by it • Showing up in your own home to make a difference in the world • Practical ways to nourish yourself • Unconditional love — what does that look like?
personal preferences, influenced by recent Western cultural values and social ideology, NOT studies of the natural biology and needs of the human infant have argued against babies arousing at night to feed a lot; and, indeed, the «sleep like a baby» or «shush the baby is sleeping» model, while some kind of western ideal is NOT what babies are designed to do nor experience, and it is definitely not in their own biological or emotional or social best interest.
Interestingly, but not really surprising, when a human infants inherent need for contact and proximity (reassurance through touch, parent directed vocalizations, emotional support) are met by parents early in their lives rather than becoming «dependent» as is always suggested in the popular press the reverse is actually true: that is, early dependence leads to early independence and self sufficiency and, perhaps even, enhanced self — confidence.
When we learn all we can about meeting our infants» biological needs for optimal physical and emotional human development we can give our babies and ourselves, as parents, the best possible beginning.
A secure bond or connection with at least one other human being is the greatest emotional need of every child.
Emotional needs are intrinsic to our nature as human beings.
It felt as though blind adherence to the principle of «breast is best» had become more important than treating babies, toddlers and parents as whole human beings, with a broad range of physical, emotional and practical needs.
Cultural innovations and child care practices and, importantly, the dynamic social values and ideologies that legitimize them, shift quite rapidly relative to evolutionary - based changes in fundamental infant biology.1 This raises the possibility that widely recommended infant care practices can be at odds with the human infant's biological, psychological and emotional needs and expectations, at least as inferred from the human infant's evolutionary past.
The lawyer and human right activist explained that SGBV aside physical effect also had economic, psychological and emotional implications and stressed the need for the press to recognise their role in the campaign and play it effectively.
Unfortunately, they also can't find the emotional intimacy that all humans naturally need.
Filed Under: conscious parenting, emotional wellbeing, healing, human connection, human needs, living authentically, relationships, self - acceptance
Filed Under: conscious parenting, emotional wellbeing, finding joy, human needs, intentional living, life's purpose, living authentically, mental health, self - acceptance, teen wellness, unconditional love
Filed Under: conscious parenting, emotional wellbeing, human connection, human needs, intentional living, mental health, Raising Resilient Kids, self - acceptance, unconditional love
Emotional Need: Here it is more a feeling insecurity among humans who live their lives as singles or who are forced to live their lives as singles for some reason or others.
Store the baggage, be it emotional, physical or human, you no longer have any need for it.
He focuses on using his unique emotional intelligence and understanding of human interaction to break down emotional barriers, instill confidence, and equip people with the tools they need for success.
It's a very old, emotional need in human beings, going back to the Bible — Cain and Abel, «an eye for an eye» kind of thing — so it is deep within us.
For a premise that promises all shtick and no substance, «Fading Gigolo» offers a surprisingly tender portrayal of loneliness and connection in the big city — for every outlandish situational set - up there is an equally touching reminder of the base human need for companionship, both emotional and physical.
At the present time the educative system does not offer any answer to personal emotional needs, because it prioritizes academic contents dictated every year with the same methodology, while leaving in background the emotional area, without considering that the person is a human being who must be developed in all his scopes.
Developed through emotional attachment with other human beings, empathy is our ability to recognize, feel, and respond to the needs and suffering of other people.
Erika Torres, the district's executive director of Student Health and Human Services, said nurses and counselors try to address students» social and emotional needs that might be a barrier to coming to school.
Through these same characters, Faulks exposes the shared and unchanging nature of humans» emotional needs.
And studies show time and time again that we're flawed human beings and usually need the emotional push to keep us going.)
When that emotional health is unwell, your dog may need the help of a human psychiatrist equivalent.
They also have emotional needs and crave attention and love from their human families.
I will take care of the emotional needs of my Shar - Pei giving proper socialization with family members and other humans as well as all other animals, especially other dogs, and also giving it stimulating activity and playtime to keep it alert.
Typically, for humans, a hospice care team is comprised in a holistic manner of Nursing support, Certified Nursing Assistance for daily hygiene needs, as well as Spiritual Care support and a Social Worker for the holistic psychosocial and emotional needs of the patient's support system (or plausibly lack of support system).
Realizing that dogs are living in our human world, and taking the time to understand their motivations, their emotional needs, and learning how to communicate with each other.
They need to be around other animals, and especially humans, for their emotional well being.
Guided by the research on resiliency, social and emotional learning, and human - animal interaction, the Mutt - i - grees Curriculum actively engages students and promotes social and emotional competence, academic achievement, and awareness of the needs of shelter pets.
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