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Psychological resilience, or mental resilience, is the ability to cope mentally and emotionally with a crisis, or to return to pre-crisis status quickly. [1]The term was popularized in the 1970s and 1980s by psychologist Emmy Werner as she conducted a forty-year-long study of a cohort of Hawaiian children who came from low socioeconomic status backgrounds.
I thought about watching “The Secret of NIMH” together and making them spaghetti carbonara, their favorite meal from dad. I thought about walking through snowy nights with my youngest in her Boba Wrap when she was a baby. It was the only way she could get to sleep back then. I doubted I could ever be a good father again, the father they ...
Davin Williams has re-learned to walk and talk after his parents were told he may spend his life on a ventilator following a car accident Family Recalls How They Found 'Hope' After 20-Year-Old Son ...
The risk for suicide may be higher on New Year’s Day and Mondays, a large study has found. Experts contextualize the findings and share coping strategies. If you’re mentally struggling during ...
After a year marked by student deaths at NC State, the university wants students to know about resources available to them. Back to school can mean back to stress: How to get mental health help at ...
A research study conducted in 1974 attempted to set up a new type of scale to measure people's death acceptance, rather than their death anxiety. After administering a questionnaire with questions regarding the acceptance of death, the researchers found there was a low-negative correlation between acceptance of one's own death and anxiety about ...
If mental time travel is unique to humans, then it must have emerged over the last 6 million years since the line leading to modern humans split from the line leading to modern chimpanzees. Perhaps the first hard evidence for the evolution of mental time travel in humans comes in the form of Acheulean bifacial handaxes associated with Homo ...
Green introduced the concept in an essay which was written in French in 1980, published in 1983, and translated into English in 1986. [1] He described the dead mother complex as involving a mother who was initially emotionally engaged with her child, but who then "switched off" from emotional resonance to emotional detachment, perhaps under the influence of loss and mourning in her own family ...