Sentences with phrase «more emotional sensitivity»

Not exact matches

Like many other activities of ministry — rendering a theological judgment, structuring a sermon, being present to persons in acute crisis, discerning the plan of action and strategy to which a congregation is called at a particular moment in its life — choosing a myth requires the complex interworking of rational judgment, adequate information, emotional openness and self - awareness, intuition, sensitivity, prayerful reflection, and more.
In a culture that fails to recognize, understand or validate the significance of the psychology of childbirth for the mother or baby, care is given without that sensitivity, leaves a birthing woman and her newborn baby's emotional wellness unchecked, can make labor, birth and postpartum all the more difficult, and increase the risk of her and her baby feeling traumatized.
The parent's ability to respond to the child's emotional state is what will prevent attachment sensitivities from becoming problems of a more severe nature.
In case studies where teachers read about boys with academic strength and emotional sensitivity, clues for good candidates for gifted education, teachers were more likely to refer white students for gifted testing.
This practice has the potential not only to help persons with any type of chronic inflammatory state (most, if not all, chronic diseases including autoimmune disorders, Multiple Chemical Sensitivity, and emotional imbalances) but, perhaps more importantly, it gives us the gift of self - empowerment.»
This can include looking at heavy metals, food, environmental and chemical sensitivities, electromagnetic fields, cognitive issues, trauma and emotional stress, hormonal imbalances, detox capacity, improving lymphatic drainage (see April's Holistic Outlook column), anti-inflammatory nutrition, and more.
Let us help you understand more about the causes of food sensitivities, how they affect your health and how the World's Healthiest Foods website can help you to select the foods that will help you maintain optimal physical, mental and emotional well being.
Crowe's journalistic eye shines through the scenes set in the sports world, which feel firmly drawn from life, but his emotional sensitivity shines through in the more personal scenes, which are far more perceptive and complex than the much - repeated catchphrases.
here, but then if I did that, there'd be no room for an actual review), in which the firelight silhouettes Jade's body through her nightgown, making this scene more about the physical payoffs than the emotional sensitivities.
From participation in cooperative learning activities, students with emotional disorders can (1) learn from positive role models how to control emotions and behave appropriately in group settings; (2) develop sensitivity to the needs of others and understand people «as individuals rather than as stereotypical members of a particular group»; 14 (3) increase their ability for self - direction; (4) increase their interest in learning; and (5) gain an increase in self - esteem.15 Likewise, students who are not disabled are given the opportunity to become more understanding and accepting of students who are emotionally behaviorally disordered.
Launched today in Paris, the latest theme is entitled Emotional to emphasise how the idea behind his photos was to create a calendar «not around perfect bodies, but on sensitivity and emotion, stripping down to the very soul of the sitters, who this become more nude than naked».
There are certain topics that are more commonly negotiated during mediation then others, as these topics typically involve heightened emotional sensitivity.
Children's emotional sensitivity levels vary: some worry about lots of things while others are more relaxed.
Specifically, this clip highlight's a female's tendency to be expressive (an orientation towards emotional communication that displays sensitivity and feelings), in contrast to a male's propensity for more instrumental communication (an orientation that emphasizes active, confident, and independent discourse).3 Although both genders have the capacity to communicate in a highly expressive fashion, females are often more encouraged than their male counterparts to focus on their emotional experiences.
Although the existing research suggests diverse outcomes, scholars have documented that young children exposed to trauma (for example, maltreatment and other forms of violence) are more likely than children who have not been exposed to trauma to experience physiologic changes at the neurotransmitter and hormonal levels (and perhaps even at the level of brain structure) that render them susceptible to heightened arousal and an incapacity to adapt emotions to an appropriate level.21 This emotional state increases their sensitivity to subsequent experiences of trauma and impairs their capacity to focus, remember, learn, and engage in self - control.22
In order to identify those at risk for developing a mental illness, this study will target personality risk factors, including hopelessness, anxiety sensitivity, impulsivity and sensation seeking, which have been shown to reliably predict substance misuse, anxiety, emotional and behavioural disorders in young people.23 24 It is hypothesised that the intervention cognitive training programme (focusing on executive functioning) will be more effective than the active control cognitive training programme (focusing on cognitive abilities other than executive functioning) in reducing psychopathology.
Sensitivity towards these bodily conditions and more specifically, towards changes in one's physiological state as represented by IS to one's heartbeat, has been shown to moderate the effect of bodily responses on emotional arousal [34, 35].
Specifically, established findings show that adolescents are at a developmental stage in which the limbic - striatal system (responsible for emotional drive, emotional response, arousal, novelty - and sensation - seeking, and reward sensitivity) is more quickly and fully developed than the PFC and related circuitry, which is not fully developed until adulthood (responsible for self - regulation, emotional control, impulse and cognitive control, planning, decision making, and executive functioning)(see [3 • •, 29 • •, 34, 35, 36, 37 • •, 38] for reviews).1
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z