Sentences with phrase «sadness than anger»

The news that Dennis Skinner has decided to back David Miliband for the Labour leadership will be greeted more in sadness than anger by most people on the Left.

Not exact matches

Palmer reached out to a wide range of pediatricians to find out how they feel about these parents, and he was surprised to encounter mostly sadness rather than anger on the part of these doctors, who often feel like they've let their patients down by not convincing them to vaccinate.
But Facebook wants to show what it thinks you're most interested in — and that might ultimately mean mostly happy posts, rather than ones that evoke sadness or anger.
In the stands Brady's sisters, Maureen, Julie and Nancy, cried, more in anger than sadness.
This is also more common than many moms realize, and it's important to reach out to your doctor if you're experiencing strong feelings of sadness, anger, negative feelings toward your LO, and more.
A recent Gallup poll revealed more stay - at - home moms report experiencing sadness or anger in their day than moms who work outside of the home.
«I have to say, more in sadness than in anger, that many have been complicit in my own horrors over the past seven years,» he said.
Researchers discovered that we pay more attention when an emotion (such as happiness, sadness or anger) is expressed through vocalizations than we do when the same emotion is expressed in speech.
More importantly, the researchers have also discovered that we pay more attention when an emotion (such as happiness, sadness or anger) is expressed through vocalizations than we do when the same emotion is expressed in speech.
The researchers found that the participants were able to detect vocalizations of happiness (i.e., laughter) more quickly than vocal sounds conveying either anger or sadness.
People's emotional well - being, which reflects daily experiences of joy, stress, sadness, anger and affection that make life pleasant or unpleasant is affected differently by having money than people's life evaluation, which refers to thoughts about their life, research has found.
The guilt that creeps up when you feel anxiety or sadness or anger because you know you still have it better than so many people.
As such, there is an element of sadness and pain involved in the revenge, rather than anger of exhilaration, as we're constantly reminded of the happiness in life of the loving couple, and the amorality of those who did the deed.
It is easier to feel anger than the more vulnerable sadness or powerlessness.
The anger, sadness, and other negative feelings that come with divorce can do more than just create stress; these emotions may also stretch out the divorce process.
«If you struggle with sadness, anger, thoughts that won't leave you alone, anxiety (a restless uncomfortable feeling), or just feel like life is harder for you than most of the people you know, you are suffering needlessly.
He may do so by becoming critical of his wife, given that he may feel more comfortable with his anger than with his sadness, or he may deal with his underlying fear that he does not matter, by dialing back his expectations and retreating inward where he can feel safer and not so vulnerable.
As long as we can not accept all of our human experience, including the full gamut of human emotions, from assertive anger, to the pain of disappointment, from the sadness of loss, to our need for closeness, we will always fall short of realizing our most precious project: to become who we are, not more than who we are.
Research performed by emotion - focused psychologists Leslie Greenberg and Jeanne Watson, has actually found a greater connection between depression and anger, than depression and sadness.
In general, children report regulating anger and sadness more to friends than mothers and fathers because they expect to receive a negative response — such as teasing or belittling — from friends.
In most Western countries, women are expected to express more internalizing emotions like sadness and anxiety than men, whereas men are expected to express more disharmonious emotions (e.g., anger) that assert one's own interests over others» (Brody 2000; McIntyre and Pope Edwards 2009).
Parents reported that they engaged in significantly less emotion coaching for anger, M = 19.53, than for fear, M = 20.96, Wald χ 2 (1) = 3.62, p <.001, or for sadness, M = 20.96, Wald χ 2 (1) = 4.33, p <.001.
Although this finding was consistent across the AD and non-AD groups, it suggests that parents may find it more challenging to emotion coach anger than fear or sadness.
Similarly, both the AD, Wald χ 2 (1) = 6.46, p <.001, and non-AD groups, Wald χ 2 (1) = 4.33, p <.001, were significantly more likely to show emotion regulation for anger than sadness.
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