Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Good News: Have faith in the Lord your God, for He will watch over you and heal you in times of physical and emotional pain. Woman's Day/Getty Images Psalm 146:8
In severe cases, the depression of a broken heart can create a sustained type of stress that constitutes an emotional trauma which can be severe enough to leave an emotional imprint on individuals' psychobiological functioning, affecting future choices and responses to rejection, loss, or disconnection. [21]
Signs of trauma vary by age and person, according to SAMHSA. In adults, these can include mental health issues, relationship difficulties, physical symptoms, substance abuse, self-destructive ...
This principle involves the pendulatory tendency to weave back and forth between traumatic material and healing images and parasympathetic responses. [22] Ahsen's "principle of bipolar configurations" asserts that "every significant eidetic state involves configuration . . . around two opposed nuclei which contend against each other.
Eponymous medical signs are those that are named after a person or persons, usually the physicians who first described them, but occasionally named after a famous patient. This list includes other eponymous entities of diagnostic significance; i.e. tests, reflexes, etc.
"Emotional manipulation can be subtle and hard to identify," says Dr. Ernesto Lira de la Rosa, Ph.D., a psychologist and Hope for Depression Research Foundation media advisor. "It is important to ...
At the San Diego Naval Medical Center, the eight-week moral injury/moral repair program begins with time devoted simply to allowing patients to feel comfortable and safe in a small group. Eventually, each is asked to relate his or her story, often a raw, emotional experience for those reluctant to acknowledge the source of their pain.
Psychological pain, mental pain, or emotional pain is an unpleasant feeling (a suffering) of a psychological, non-physical origin. A pioneer in the field of suicidology, Edwin S. Shneidman, described it as "how much you hurt as a human being. It is mental suffering; mental torment."