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  2. Criticism of marriage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_marriage

    A similar argument is found in Franz Kafka's journal entry titled "Summary of all the arguments for and against my marriage": I must be alone a great deal. What I accomplished was only the result of being alone. [5] As a high-profile couple, Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir always expressed opposition to marriage. Brian Sawyer says ...

  3. Social rejection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_rejection

    The topic includes interpersonal rejection (or peer rejection), romantic rejection, and familial estrangement. A person can be rejected or shunned by individuals or an entire group of people. Furthermore, rejection can be either active by bullying, teasing, or ridiculing, or passive by ignoring a person, or giving the "silent treatment".

  4. Integrative behavioral couples therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Integrative_behavioral...

    For example, if a major theme concerned partners' difficulties in achieving emotional intimacy, the couple might discuss a recent incident in which they were able to achieve a sense of closeness with each other or an incident in which one or both reached out to the other but felt rebuffed.

  5. Couples therapy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Couples_therapy

    It is estimated that nearly 50% of all married couples get divorced, and about one in five marriages experience distress at some time. [citation needed] These numbers vary between countries and over time; in e.g. Germany only 35.74% ended with a divorce, half of those involving children under the age of 18.

  6. Cynicism (contemporary) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cynicism_(contemporary)

    Cynicism is an attitude characterized by a general distrust of the motives of others. [1] A cynic may have a general lack of faith or hope in people motivated by ambition, desire, greed, gratification, materialism, goals, and opinions that a cynic perceives as vain, unobtainable, or ultimately meaningless.

  7. Emotional blackmail - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotional_blackmail

    Daniel Miller objects that in popular psychology the idea of emotional blackmail has been misused as a defense against any form of fellow-feeling or consideration for others. [ 24 ] Labeling of this dynamic with inflammatory terms such as "blackmail" and "manipulation" may not be so helpful as it is both polarizing and it implies premeditation ...

  8. Resentment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resentment

    Resentment (also called ranklement or bitterness) is a complex, multilayered emotion [1] that has been described as a mixture of disappointment, disgust and anger. [2] Other psychologists consider it a mood [3] or as a secondary emotion (including cognitive elements) that can be elicited in the face of insult or injury.

  9. Appraisal theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Appraisal_theory

    Social psychologists have used this theory to explain and predict coping mechanisms and people's patterns of emotionality. By contrast, for example, personality psychology studies emotions as a function of a person's personality, and thus does not take into account the person's appraisal, or cognitive response, to a situation.