Sentences with phrase «seeking emotional comfort»

When seeking emotional comfort, do you prefer men or women?
Another poor choice is for the adult to seek emotional comfort from the child.
She understands that people can seek emotional comfort and that sometimes a trauma can lead to issues with addiction.

Not exact matches

They sought to determine whether parents involved in the study (mostly mothers) shaped their children's later behavior by offering food to make them feel better when they were upset (emotional feeding), and whether parents whose children were easily soothed by food (those who calmed when given food) were more likely to offer them more food for comfort at a subsequent time.
In order to escape from your troubles and soothe your aching mind, you might seek comfort in numbing activities such as emotional eating, drinking or laying on your couch and watching junk TV all day long.
This can be problematic for those seeking true emotional intimacy, as so much of it is rooted in comfort, ease and familiarity — and achieving those things requires spending time together.
She suggested that he develop relationships with other Christian men for support, rather than seek out women for emotional comfort.
He primarily dwells in flash and photoshop, but to break his artistic constipation he seeks the comforts of surfing or playing frisbee with Sir Winston (his zealous emotional support dog).
If someone dies in a broadside collision as a result of a defendant's negligence, the decedent's family can seek up to $ 500,000 in emotional damages for loss of comfort, companionship, and society.
Seeking an Animal Caretaker position at The Hounds by employing exceptional knowledge of caring for pets by ensuring their physical and emotional comfort through provision of excellent animal care.
Robert Weiss, the founder of the Sexual Recovery Institute, wrote in the Huffington Post that many of the people who struggle with sex addiction are «seeking sexual intensity as a substitute for emotional self - regulation and the comfort of genuine human connection.»
Emotional vulnerability was defined as high distress reactions to fear stimuli coinciding with limited efforts by the infants to look at or seek assistance or comfort from their mothers.
The criteria for inhibited RAD were: (a) absence of a discriminated, preferred adult, (b) lack of comfort seeking for distress, (c) failure to respond to comfort when offered, (d) lack of social and emotional reciprocity, and (f) emotion regulation difficulties.
We all have preferred ways of coping with stress and distress: Some of us favor going inward to find our emotional footing, while for others, seeking comfort and reassurance from another is the fallback position.
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