Optimism
- Feeling optimistic means feeling that life experiences will be positive
Characteristics of a Mentally Healthy Person
- Feels comfortable with himself or herself
- Has good relationships with others
- Meets the demands of life
Shyness
Mental and Emotional Health
- Shyness is the feeling of being timid or bashful.
- Engage in activities that will make you part of a group an d don’t be afraid to try new things.
Types of Emotions
Section 7.1
Emotional Health
- Love
- Happiness
- Optimism
- Humor
- Fear
- Anger
- Guilt
- Depression
- Jealousy
Happiness
- Happiness is a feeling of joy and well-being or contentment
Love
- Love is the feeling of strong affection or caring for another person.
- We all have the need to love, and the need to be loved by others.
Organic Disorders
Fear
- Mental and emotional disorders resulting form a physical cause.
- For example, a brain tumor can affect mood, speech and comprehension.
- Fear is the feeling of danger
- Fear is often learned from experiences you had when you were young
- Use environmental planning and self talk to manage fear.
Types of Mental and
Emotional Disorders
Defense Mechanisms and Positive Strategies
Regression
- Using childlike ways of expressing emotions like anger or disappointment
- Example: throwing a tantrum when you don’t get to watch your favorite TV program.
Guilt
- Self-ideal is your mental image of what you would like to be.
- Self-concept is the current mental image you have of yourself.
- Guilt is the feeling that you have done something wrong or are responsible for something bad happening.
- To manage guilt, find the source of your guilt and try to correct it.
Denial
- Failure to accept reality
- Example: refusing to accept the death of a relative or a close friend, refusing to accept that a romantic relationship is over
Repression
- Blocking out unpleasant memories.
- Example: forgetting when you were in the hospital.
Jealousy
- Jealousy is the feeling of wanting something that someone else has or the fear of losing something that you have.
- To manage jealousy, discuss the it with the other person involved.
Depression
- Depression is a feeling of anxiety, loneliness, and despair.
- It can interfere with the ability to carry out daily activities.
- To manage depression, try to identify why you feel that way and try to put it in perspective.
Sublimation
Projection
- Putting (projecting) negative feelings on someone else.
- Example: blaming your teacher for failing a test you did not study for.
- Redirecting bad or unacceptable behavior into positive behavior.
- Example: channeling your aggression into an athletic sport where aggressive behavior is acceptable.
Eating Disorders
Somatization
When to Seek Help
- Converting emotions into bodily symptoms.
- Example: getting stomach cramps every time final exams are scheduled.
- Anorexia- excessive dieting resulting in a state of self starvation
- Bulimia- bingeing on food then purging to avoid weight gain
- A prolonged feeling of depression
- Feeling life is out of control
- Inability to concentrate or make decisions
- Difficulty getting along with family or friends
Dissociative Disorders
- A condition in which someone’s personality changes to the point that the person believes that sometimes he or she is someone else
Loneliness
Anxiety Disorder
- Loneliness is a feeling of isolation or alienation.
- Engage in activities that will make you part of a group.
- A condition in which fear or anxiety prevents one from enjoying life and completing everyday tasks
Displacement
- The transfer of negative feelings about someone to someone else.
- Example: you are very angry with you mother and you take it out on your sister or your best friend.
Types of Dissociative Disorders
Reaction Formation
Types of Anxiety Disorders
Types of Personality Disorders
- Expressing emotions that are the exact opposite of what you feel.
- Example: acting like a clown in a group to hide your feelings.
- Multiple personality disorder- having two or more distinctive personalities which can show different physical conditions and are often the exact opposite of each other
- Amnesia- loss of memory
- General anxiety disorder- constant feeling of anxiety and fear with physical symptoms
- Obsessive-compulsive disorder- persistent recurring thoughts accompanied with the need to repeatedly perform a certain action
- Panic disorder- intense feelings of terror that occur suddenly without a cause
- Phobia- persistent fear of something
- Antisocial personality disorder- showing a preference to remain distant from others’
- Paranoia- consistent mistrust of others for no reason
- Aggression- behavior that displays an inner conflict between being dependent and being assertive which results in erratic moods
Somatoform Disorder
Personality Disorder
- An emotional condition in which a parson's patterns of behavior negatively affect the person’s ability to get a long with others
- An emotional condition in which there are physical symptoms but no identifiable disease or injury. The physical symptoms are caused by psychological factors.
Types of Mood Disorders
Daydreaming
- Escaping from an unpleasant situation by using your imagination
- Example: in the dentists chair you focus on the fun you are going to have over the weekend
- Depression- experiencing feelings of sadness, loneliness, and hopelessness for an extended period of time
- Bipolar disorder (manic-depressive) - experiencing exaggerated feelings of euphoria, irritability, depression; Exaggerated mood swings; Reckless behavior
Anger
- Anger is a strong feeling of irritation.
- Everyone feels angry at some time, the important thing is how you deal with the anger.
- Channel emotions appropriately or do something physical but positive to manage anger.
Humor
- Humor provides a way of expressing negative emotions in a more positive way.
- Laughter can increase the effectiveness of your immune system in fighting disease.
- Intense fears
- Persistent difficulty sleeping
- Emotional problems dealing with physical illness
- Inability to stop destructive behaviors like drinking, overeating, and abusing drugs
Types of Somatoform Disorders
Types of Therapy
- Hypochondriasis- believing and showing signs of serious illness without any physical cause
- Psychoanalysis
- Behavioral Therapy
- Group Therapy
- Chemical Therapy
Who Can Help?
- Parent
- Teacher
- School counselor
- Doctor
- Clergy member
- Mental and emotional health services
Rationalization
- Justifying irrational behavior.
- Example: not doing your homework one evening because you feel like you’ve spent too much time on your schoolwork
Behavioral Therapy
Psychoanalysis
- Psychoanalysis is a form of therapy used to examine unresolved conflicts from the past
- Behavioral therapy focuses on the patients behavior rather then on the underlying cause.
Group Therapy
- In group therapy, people with similar problems meet with a therapist to discuss their problems
Chemical Therapy
- Chemical therapy is the use of drugs to treat mental and emotional disorders
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
- Self-actualization-fulfilling your potential
- Self-esteem-respecting yourself and others
- Love and affection-your ability to give and receive affection; Feeling of belonging
- Safety and security-your ability to protect yourself from harm
- Physiological needs-fulfilling your needs for food, water, shelter, sleep and sexual expression
Schizophrenia
- Impaired perceptions, thinking processes, emotional health, and physical activity
Mood Disorder
- A condition in which one mood is experienced almost to the exclusion of other feelings
Compensation
Common Defense Mechanisms
Seeking Help
- Covering a weakness by overachieving in another area
- Example: focusing all your attention on sports because you think you are a better athlete than student
- Reaction formation
- Regression
- Repression
- Sublimation
- Somatization
- Compensation
- Daydreaming
- Denial
- Displacement
- Projection
- Rationalization