...High school is similar to eating a box of chocolates: High school is like a eating a box of chocolates. Each day you learn and gain new experiences just like biting into a different chocolate in the box. Likewise, similar to each new chocolate you eat there will be up and downs to it. Maybe you will like the chocolate however, regardless you move on just like in the life of highschool. High School is also like a box of chocolates in a way that, Once you finish the box of chocolates, you understand it is time to move on to something else to eat however, you still sit and reflect on each chocolate you have eaten and even miss then just like a senior in highschool. High School is similar to watching a new movie: Similar to freshmen, when starting...
Words: 438 - Pages: 2
...experience and a range of emotions. However, people have to manage these feelings to live a fulfilling life. There are many emotional and cognitive responses which an individual may face after knowing about the diagnosed disease and its prognosis. It is a very difficult situation for the individual and the family. In addition, the individual’s mentally gets changed after knowing his condition. The individual must try to overcome those feelings and remain strong to fight with the diagnosed disease. Emotional roller coaster feeling is a very common feeling in an individual’s life. Diagnosis of the disease can bring flood of emotions. Along with emotional disorder, grief is another common reaction to the illness. The people may experience various stages of grief including denial, bargaining, anger and sadness. The person may feel that he/she is on a roller coaster of emotions such as accepting one day and angry the next (Picci, Oliva, Trivelli, Carezana, Zuffranieri, Ostacoli, & ... Lala, 2015). In these situations, it is important to surround yourself with positive and supportive people and try to find small things that you can enjoy every day. Cognitive response includes stress. Stress is a feeling you have when you face a situation you think you cannot manage. You can feel anxious, irritable, forgetful, sleepless and unable to cope. There are many effects of stress i.e. emotional problems such as anxiety, depression, tension, anger. In addition there are behavioural changes...
Words: 609 - Pages: 3
...ride the roller coaster. Going up the roller coaster you’re all tense and scared but just in a few seconds you'll be happy as you go down the roller coaster , similar to Bipolar disorder which is the fourth most important cause of worldwide disability in 15-45 year-olds(Clinical review). Bipolar disorder, or BPD, is a disorder which prevails amongst the youth and affects them for the rest of their lives. BPD is a disorder that affects people as they often fluctuate between manic phases and depressive phases. Because Bipolar disorder is a complex physiological and psychological disorder that...
Words: 805 - Pages: 4
...A year that is there to make memories that will last a lifetime, to have an emotional roller coaster about leaving the people you have grown up with, and the numerous applications to fill out could be a definition for senior year. Every year leading up to senior year is taken as a leadway, but the dreaded year comes when students, who still have to raise their hand to go to bathroom, must make decisions about their future. Senior year is a reminder that not everything works out as planned and things have no choice but to change. Through the jumbled up mess of senior year students need to take time to relax and be a kid for the last time before they enter the real world as adults. The emotions will start out as a high going into the last first...
Words: 620 - Pages: 3
... the dog salivates instinctively in response to the food, but "learns" to salivate to the sound of the bell, much as you might find your mouth watering at the site, smell, or even memory of your favorite food. Pavlov used this relatively simple experiment as a model for describing much of the automatic/nonconscious learning that occurs in everyday life. In any case where you have “learned” to respond automatically to some sort of stimulus with fear, joy, excitement, or anticipation you have become classically conditioned. Cited: Ivan Petrovich Pavlov This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons. My classical condition started when I took my family to ride the incredible hulk roller coaster in universal studios, Orlando Florida amusement park. I had always wondered what it would be like to ride that roller coaster. You haven't truly lived until you've experienced The Incredible Hulk's wild and unique uphill launch. The effect is like being trapped inside an airplane that’s flying out of control. Quickly accelerating uphill defies logic, and feels both exhilarating and terrifying. It is not for the faint of heart, this coaster is both terrifying and exhilarating. It is located near the front entrance of the park. Every time I go there and enter the gates I begin to get a nervous but exhilarating feeling as I got closer to the ride, the anticipation to get strapped in and start the ride becomes unbearable. I could sense the fear as I wait in line to experience the thrill from...
Words: 958 - Pages: 4
...significant loss. But while there is no right or wrong way to grieve, there are healthy ways to cope with the pain that, in time, can ease your sadness and help you come to terms with your loss, find new meaning, and move on with your life. What you can do Acknowledge your pain Accept that grief can trigger many different and unexpected...
Words: 1356 - Pages: 6
...Bipolar Disorder By: Nikki Dillenbeck PY 231 Grand Rapids Community College Everyone has ups and downs in their mood. Happiness, sadness, and anger are normal emotions and an essential part of everyday life. In contrast, Bipolar Disorder is a medical condition were their mood swings are more elaborate and out of proportion, and usually are not related to a certain situation. These mood swings their experiencing damages their normal functioning in everyday life. “People with bipolar disorder experience both the lows of depression and the highs of mania. Many describe their life as an emotional roller coaster, as they shift back and forth between extreme moods” (Comer, 2014, Page 197). The mania part of this disorder includes moods that are very dramatic and out of control. The intensity of the mood of mania can result in damaging yourself physically or mentally, and damaging relationships with the ones closest to you. Usually people experience an episode of this mania. Which means that it doesn’t just last minutes or hours, it can last a week, a month, or even longer sometimes. In this episode you experience high self-esteem, not much sleep, racing thoughts, distractibility, and increased talkativeness. There are two different types of bipolar disorder. Bipolar 1 disorder, and bipolar 2 disorder. Bipolar 1 is the full manic episodes, and major depressive episodes. Bipolar 2 has the mild manic episodes along with the major depressive episodes. Unlike the bipolar 1, the...
Words: 763 - Pages: 4
..."Bombs Bursting in Air," couldn't have been used any more appropriately as a figure of speech. The author immediately delivered the construct of interaction between her family. She suddenly weaves through her children's comprehension and emotional capacity by laying out the securities of her daughter's innocent views. Additionally, Johnson's essay revolved around capturing life's inconsistency. Initially, she procured the audiences' commonality of belief by encompassing the ideology that we as parents create walls for our children to protect them. She wonderfully displayed the emotional roller-coaster families proceed through during tragic, life-changing events. Furthermore, she presented a fundamental embodiment of strength when speaking...
Words: 284 - Pages: 2
..."Bombs Bursting in Air," couldn't have been used any more appropriately as a figure of speech. The author immediately delivered the construct of interaction between her family. She then weaves through her children's comprehension and emotional capacity by laying out the securities of her daughter's innocent views. Additionally, Johnson's essay revolved around capturing life's inconsistency. Initially, she procured the audiences' commonality of belief by encompassing the ideology that we as parents create walls for our children to protect them. She wonderfully displayed the emotional roller-coaster families go through during tragic, life-changing events. Furthermore, she presented a fundamental embodiment of strength when speaking to her...
Words: 284 - Pages: 2
...From the moment we are born we are reliant on others for our survival. The attachment patterns established in infancy affect how we as humans perceive ourselves, interact with those around us and live in our world. Infants who experience confusing, frightening or broken emotional communications during infancy often grow into adolescents and later, adults who have trouble understanding their own emotions and those of others and have difficulty building and maintaining relationships and leading successful lives. Infant Attachment as defined in our textbook, is the close emotional bond between an infant and its primary caregiver. According to John Bowlby (1969,1989 as cited in King), in his theory of attachment, the infant and the mother instinctively form an attachment, he believed that infants are biologically pre programmed to form these attachments, that an infant’s attachment behaviors are instinctive and will be activated by any conditions that seem to threaten the achievement of proximity, such a separation, insecurity and fear. The way Bowlby saw it; infants are born with an instinct to survive. They signal their needs to their caregiver by crying, clinging, searching. The responsiveness of the caregiver determines whether the infant feels loved, secure, and confidant. The way in which the caregiver reacts, also determines what type of attachment the infant will develop. Bowlby thought that our early relationships with our caregivers serve as our schemas for...
Words: 1382 - Pages: 6
...George Awtrey English April 16, 2011 Hamlet’s Psychological Analysis William Shakespeare was and still is one of the most renowned play writers of all time. Shakespeare had a talent like no other that allowed him to create plays that entertained viewers of his era and beyond. One of his most popular plays is Hamlet. Because this play was one of his more complex works it is also became of the most analyzed plays as well. The main character, Hamlet, has fascinated readers and audiences for centuries, and one of the first thing to point out about him is that he is indecisive (22 Newell). But even though he is thoughtful to the point of obsession, Hamlet also behaves rashly and instinctively. When he does act, it is quickly with little or no premeditation, like when he stabbed Polonius through the curtain without even checking to see who he was. He seems to step very easily into the role acting crazy, behaving erratically and upsetting the other characters with his careless speech (22 Newell). It is also important to note that Hamlet is extremely laid back and unconcerned with it comes to the state of affairs in Denmark and in his own family. He is extremely disappointed with his mother for marrying his uncle so quickly. He rejects, Ophelia, a woman he claimed to have loved once. At a number of points in the play, he contemplates his own death and even the option of suicide. But, despite all of the things with which Hamlet expresses dissatisfaction, it is remarkable that...
Words: 1744 - Pages: 7
...Life can be simple, complex, or somewhere in between, but it always has a lesson to teach us. Some are passed down to us through our parents, such as money doesn’t grow on trees. We are lucky enough to learn a few through close calls, “warning shots” that teach us through a mistake that could have been. But the worst kinds are learned “the hard way.” It is in these lessons that life has a funny little way of giving us a kick in the butt, when we aren’t paying attention. In my early childhood, life gave me an unexpected kick in the behind that I wouldn’t soon forget. I was an inquisitive young child, who was easily amused with doing things to get on my parents last nerve. I was four, and still a child with my imagination running on full speed all day. Naturally, when I saw an empty laundry basket next to the stairs, I got a fantastic idea. Slide down the stairs, riding the laundry basket? Sounded like a great idea at the time. I ran downstairs in a hurry. Checking for my mom, she was half-asleep watching TV, not me - perfect. Sprinting back upstairs I was filled with excitement and giddiness that only a child could feel. I figured that I had just created my very own at home roller coaster. So I grabbed the plain white basket with holes in the side and headed for the stairs that seemed to be calling to me. I was sprinting, because I was eager to get going before my mom came to stop me. At the top of the stairs, I loaded myself into my vehicle, tested out the sides, and made sure...
Words: 1020 - Pages: 5
...“victim” is that of each and every police officer who risk their lives every day. In the text, Dr. Gilmartin discusses cynicism and the effect it can have on an individual. Our every day dealings with people can cause law enforcement officers to form a very negative, distrustful mindset. This may very well benefit us in our professional life, but it can be very devastating in our personal affairs. Police officers easily blame cynicism on their experiences at work, but many fail to recognize the longterm effects it has on living a normal social, family, and emotional life. We must take the time to survive emotionally and avoid cynicism-based thinking and decisions. The consequences may be irrevocable, compounding the stressors already caused by the job. Most police officers start their careers with a solid sense of self—they have healthy relationships, high values, solid beliefs, goals, hobbies, and are physically fit to name a few (Gilmartin, p. 74). As officers live their “dream,” they are challenged to maintain an upbeat perspective on their emotional stability. This healthy sense of self begins to disappear and all dimensions in their life diminish. All that remains for many is the role of being a cop and nothing outside of the job. The author describes this as the “I Usta” syndrome and its long-term effects of hyper vigilance (Gilmartin, pp. 74-75). The...
Words: 686 - Pages: 3
...giving individual investigators, and . . . institutional review boards the right to determine how much discomfort, or temporary disability patients should endure for the purpose of research. Regardless of what controls are used, precisely such a determination must be made concerning the foreseeable adverse effects of the treatment under study and the observation procedures”. 3. Air travel in the United States has never been safer. Along with the new security measures taking place across the country, TSA continues to improve and refine our processes in order to provide customers with a high level of customer service. 4. Someone says “Dreams are a mirror of our real life”, and that are a reflection of our experiences and situations we’ve lived to in our life at that point. They are a sort of medicine or escape for our mind from our woes in the world. For that reason that same person says, “Nightmares are a result of having problems or having watched bad things.” It has been researched that bloody, scary, and...
Words: 573 - Pages: 3
...The Part Greg’s Character Development is Discussed Me and Earl and the Dying Girl is a story that showcases the life of a self-loathing high school teenager, Greg Gaines, who displays an extreme lack of confidence. Greg is a kid who uses strategic defense tactics to remain “invisible” to society, in order to survive the harsh horrors of high school. His life changes however, very quickly when he meets a girl named Rachel Kushner; a girl dying of leukemia that goes to school with Greg. Prior to meeting her, his only friend was Earl, who he only considers to be a “co-worker”, because of the “worst films in the world” they produce together. It is undeniable that Greg’s biggest character development relates to his growth in maturity,...
Words: 1780 - Pages: 8