Books on the topic 'Emotional stability'

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1

Price, Dara L. A study employing synonyms to illustrate the stability of emotional language. Sudbury, Ont: Laurentian University, Department of Psychology, 1997.

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2

Nash, Leslie Renay. The effects of family type during childhood upon emotional stability in adults. Sudbury, Ont: Laurentian University, Department of Psychology, 1997.

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3

Find out who's normal and who's not: The proven system to quickly assess anyone's emotional stability. Lakewood, NJ: Viter Press, 2009.

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4

Lieberman, David J. Find out who's normal and who's not: The proven system to quickly assess anyone's emotional stability. Lakewood, N.J: MJF Books/Viter Press, 2010.

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Fichte, Jannike. Resilienz und emotionale Stabilität von Managern. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-18032-4.

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6

Abolin, L. M. Psikhologicheskie mekhanizmy ėmot︠s︡ionalʹnoĭ ustoĭchivosti cheloveka. Kazanʹ: Izd-vo Kazanskogo universiteta, 1987.

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7

Graz, Kunsthaus, and Universalmuseum Joanneum, eds. Human condition: Mitgefühl und Selbstbestimmung in prekären Zeiten. Köln: König, 2010.

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8

Paramashivam, SPH Nithyananda. Nithya Kriya: Clarity & Emotional Stability. KAILASA's Nithyananda Hindu University Press, 2022.

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9

Spencer, Quinn. Emotional Resilience: Habits That Ensure Emotional Stability and Mental Toughness. Independently Published, 2018.

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10

Internal Affairs: Emotional Stability In An Unstable World. Force of Faith Pubns, 2003.

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11

Internal Affairs: Emotional Stability in an Unstable World. Harrison House Publishers, 2010.

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12

Hutton, Larry. Internal Affairs: Emotional Stability in an Unstable World. Harrison House Publishers, 2010.

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13

McFarlane, Penny. Dramatherapy: Raising Children's Self-Esteem and Developing Emotional Stability. Fulton Publishers, David, 2013.

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14

Jahangiri, Mahnaz. Finding Home: A Path to Emotional Stability & Self Healing. Samadi Yoga, 2022.

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15

Dramatherapy Raising Children's Self-Esteem and Developing Emotional Stability. David Fulton Publish, 2006.

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16

McFarlane, Penny. Dramatherapy: Raising Children's Self-Esteem and Developing Emotional Stability. Fulton Publishers, David, 2013.

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17

Jahangiri, Mahnaz. Finding Home: A Path to Emotional Stability & Self Healing. Samadi Yoga, 2022.

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18

Jahangiri, Mahnaz. Finding Home: A Path to Emotional Stability & Self Healing. Samadi Studios, Inc., 2020.

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19

Homan, Nicole. Planted Bible Study Series for Women : Book 2: Emotional Stability. Independently Published, 2021.

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20

Gray, Lorrie. Pause>Push>Praise Part 1: From Emotional Pain to Stability in Christ. Independently Published, 2018.

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21

Gray, Lorrie. PAUSE>PUSH>PRAISE Part 1: From Emotional Pain to Stability in Christ. Independently Published, 2017.

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22

Lucas, Jimmie L. For Forty Days: The Forty Day Voyage from Mental Captivity to Emotional Stability. Palmetto Publishing, 2021.

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23

Lucas, Jimmie L. For Forty Days: The Forty Day Voyage from Mental Captivity to Emotional Stability. Palmetto Publishing, 2021.

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24

Balance Your Life: How to Achieve Financial Independence, Emotional Stability, Physical Fitness and Spiritual Fulfillment. Nightingale, 1998.

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25

Chirban, John T. True Coming of Age : A dynamic process that leads to emotional stability, spiritual growth, and meaningful relationships. McGraw-Hill, 2004.

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26

Lynn, Wendy. The Undivided Self: An Awakening Journey for Achieving Emotional, Mental, and Physical Stability In Your Everyday Life. OptiMystic Press, Inc., 2017.

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27

Chirban, John. True Coming of Age: A Dynamic Process That Leads to Emotional Stability, Spiritual Growth, and Meaningful Relationships. American Media International, 2005.

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28

Chirban, John T. True Coming of Age : A dynamic process that leads to emotional stability, spiritual growth, and meaningful relationships. McGraw-Hill, 2004.

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29

Lynn, Wendy. The Undivided Self: An Awakening Journey for Achieving Emotional, Mental, and Physical Stability In Your Everyday Life. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, 2018.

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30

Lieberman, David J., and Sean Pratt. Find Out Who's Normal and Who's Not: Proven Techniques to Quickly Uncover Anyone's Degree of Emotional Stability. Gildan Media, 2010.

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31

Aranda, Doraliz. Hell at Work. What You Can Do When Your Employment Affects Your Physical, Mental and Emotional Stability. Primedia eLaunch LLC, 2018.

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32

Aranda, Doraliz. Hell at Work, When Your Employment Affects Your Physical, Mental and Emotional Stability, What Can You Do? Primedia eLaunch LLC, 2018.

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33

attached, leslie. Insecurity : Tools to Understand Your Relationships and Find Your Emotional Stability. THIS BOOK INCLUDES: INSECURE in LOVE + INSECURE ATTACHMENT. Independently Published, 2020.

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34

Oliver, Neil R. Self-Care: A Self-Care Guide for Psychological Calm, Emotional Stability, and Physical Well-Being in Times of Crisis. Neil R. Oliver, 2020.

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35

Attached, Leslie. Insecure Attachment: The Search of Emotional Stability, Tools to Promote Understanding and to Lay the Foundation for Strong and Healthy Relationships. Independently Published, 2019.

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36

Sheridan, Daisy, and Amber K. Bono. Resilience in Children: How to Build More Self-Confidence, Sociability, Emotional Stability, Optimism, Analytical Strength, Action Control and Realism in Children. Independently Published, 2021.

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37

Davenport, Lilian. Attachment Theory: Discover the Principles of Emotional Focused Therapy . Stop Jealousy and Anxiety in Love. Practical Tips to Increase Stability, Defuse Conflict, Build Lasting Relationships. Independently Published, 2019.

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38

Davenport, Lilian. Attachment Theory: Discover the principles of Emotional Focused Therapy . Stop Jealousy and Anxiety in Love. Practical Tips to Increase Stability, Defuse Conflict, Build Lasting Relationships. Faab International Ltd, 2020.

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39

Prints, Emilia. Workbook for Dare to Lead by Brene Brown: An Effective Guide to Becoming a Great Leader Possessing Bravery, Toughness and an Emotional Stability That Encourages Progress. Independently Published, 2022.

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40

Scott, E. Hitchcock, and George E. Muñoz. Integrative Approaches to Healing. Edited by Shahla J. Modir and George E. Muñoz. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/med/9780190275334.003.0029.

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Emotional balance and stability are important aspects of long-term abstinence from non-prescribed mood altering chemicals. Labiality (extreme mood swings) can contribute to relapse. This chapter challenges the traditional concept of healing, defined as a return to prior levels of functioning. Adverse childhood experiences, with their long-term contribution to adolescent and adult mood problems are noted. Interventions for adverse childhood experiences are recommended as part of the healing journey for emotional wellness. The limitations of traditional addiction treatment are discussed, as well as various possible detractors to good emotional health and sobriety. Interventions, processes, and various counseling theoretical practices are suggested for improving mood, emotional well-being, and sobriety. Ongoing assessment and monitoring of emotional well-being and relapse risk are critical. The quality of the relationship between the practitioner and patient is crucial in order to co-create a viable, individualized, holistic treatment plan.
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41

Gengler, Amanda M. Save My Kid. NYU Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479863938.001.0001.

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In “Save My Kid,” sociologist Amanda Gengler examines how families of critically ill children navigate the US healthcare system. Not all families are equipped with resources for critically ill kids, but the toolkits that are available to them shape their approach to seeking care and negotiating the treatment process, as well as their ability to maintain some degree of emotional stability in the midst of profound distress. ”Save My Kid” uncovers the powerful role emotional goals—deeply rooted in the emotional culture around illness and medicine in the United States—can play in driving medical decisions, healthcare interactions, and the end of children’s lives if and when they come. This book draws out the often unrecognized, everyday inequalities that unfold throughout the illness experience while shedding important light on the emotional foundations on which they rest.
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42

Vouloutsi, Vasiliki, and Paul F. M. J. Verschure. Emotions and self-regulation. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199674923.003.0034.

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This chapter takes the view that emotions of living machines can be seen from the perspective of self-regulation and appraisal. We will first look at the pragmatic needs to endow machines with emotions and subsequently describe some of the historical background of the science of emotions and its different interpretations and links to affective neuroscience. Subsequently, we argue that emotions can be cast in terms of self-regulation where they provide for a descriptor of the state of the homeostatic processes that maintain the relationship between the agent and its internal and external environment. We augment the notion of homeostasis with that of allostasis which signifies a change from stability through a fixed equilibrium to stability through continuous change. The chapter shows how this view can be used to create complex living machines where emotions are anchored in the need fulfillment of the agent, in this case considering both utilitarian and epistemic needs.
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43

Fichte, Jannike. Resilienz und emotionale Stabilität von Managern: Überschneidung zweier Konstrukte. Springer, 2017.

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44

Siebenhüner, Selena. Berufserfolg und Gesundheit: Eine empirische Analyse der Einflussfaktoren Führungsverhalten und emotionale Stabilität. Springer, 2016.

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45

Simms, Leonard, Trevor F. Williams, and Ericka Nus Simms. Assessment of the Five Factor Model. Edited by Thomas A. Widiger. Oxford University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199352487.013.28.

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We review the current state of the science with respect to the assessment of the Five Factor Model (FFM), a robust structural model of personality that emerged from two distinct traditions: The lexical and questionnaire traditions. The lexical tradition is predicated on the hypothesis that important individual differences in personality are encoded as single words in language. This bottom-up tradition has suggested that five broad factors account for much of the personality variation observed among individuals: Extraversion (or Surgency), Agreeableness, Conscientiousness (or Dependability), Neuroticism (vs. Emotional Stability), and Openness to Experience (or Intellect/Culture). The questionnaire tradition emphasizes the measurement of similar constructs, largely through top-down development of measures. We examine the strengths and limitations associated with existing measures of the FFM and related models, focusing on measures rooted in the lexical and questionnaire traditions. We also consider maladaptive FFM measures and conclude by analyzing important issues in the FFM assessment literature.
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46

Lewis, Marc D. The Development of Emotion Regulation. Edited by Philip David Zelazo. Oxford University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199958474.013.0004.

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This chapter examines the relation between normative advances and emerging individual differences in emotion regulation (ER), using principles from developmental cognitive neuroscience to integrate these seemingly disparate processes. Like several other theorists, I view corticolimbic development as a self-organizing stream of synaptic alterations, driven by experience rather than biologically prespecified. This conceptualization helps resolve ambiguities that appear when we try, but consistently fail, to neatly parse individual differences and developmental differences. At the neural level, increasingly specific patterns of synaptic activation converge in response to (or in anticipation of) recurrent emotions, creating synaptic networks that link multiple regions. These networks regulate emotions (in real time). But they also stabilize and consolidate with repetition, thus giving rise tohabitsthat are the hallmark of individual development. These configurations are progressively sculpted through individual learning experiences, but they also become increasingly effective with use, thereby expressing both individual trajectories and normative advances as they develop. In sum, experience-driven synaptic changes create a repertoire of individual solutions to universal challenges, shared among members of a culture or society. This description casts individual differences and age-related advances as dual facets of a unitary developmental process.
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47

adam, sareena. Halten Sie Ihre Emotionen: Finden Sie Gleichgewicht, Stabilität, Ruhe, Freiheit Von Stress, Angst und Negativität. Independently Published, 2022.

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48

Llewellyn, Sue. What Do Dreams Do? Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198818953.001.0001.

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What is a dream? It’s a complex, non-obvious pattern derived from your experience. But you haven’t actually experienced it. Strange. Revealing complex, hidden patterns makes dreams odd. Dreams associate elements of different experiences to make something new: a pattern you didn’t know was there until you dreamt it. Patterns are discernible forms in the way something happens or is done. Some patterns are easy to spot, being certain and obvious: night follows day. Patterns in human/animal experiences are less obvious because, first, the patterned elements appear at different times or places and, second, the pattern exhibits tendencies not certainties. Spotting such patterns depends on non-obvious associations. If prompted with ‘sea’, while awake, your logical brain makes obvious associations, ‘beach’ or ‘boat’, with a seaside pattern i.e. beach-boat-seaside. But after awakening from dreaming, when your brain is still tuned to non-obvious associations, ‘sick’ may come to mind. A less obvious element of sea experiences. You tend to seasickness when it’s rough. But you also get sick if you eat shellfish, have a migraine, or travel in cars—but only if you read. Sea–rough–car–read–shellfish–migraine. Visualizing these non-obvious associations between elements of different experiences becomes dream-like. Dreaming brains evolved to identify non-obvious associations. Across evolutionary time, you didn’t want to get sick. Survival depended on being well enough to anticipate the non-obvious patterns of predators and human competitors, while securing access to food and water. Making associations drives many, if not all, brain functions. Dream associations support memory, emotional stability, creativity, unconscious decision-making, and prediction, while also contributing to mental illness. This book explains how.
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49

Wilburn, Josh. The Political Soul. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198861867.001.0001.

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The Political Soul examines the relationship between Plato’s views on psychology and his political philosophy over the course of his career, focusing on his account of the spirited part of the tripartite soul, or thumos, and spirited motivation. It argues that spirit is the distinctively social or political part of the human soul for Plato: it is the source of the desires, emotions, and sensitivities that make it possible for people to form cooperative relationships with one another, interact politically, influence and absorb one another’s values through cultural modes and social processes, and protect their communities. Such emotions prominently include not only the aggressive or competitive qualities for which thumos is well-known, but also the feelings of attachment, love, friendship, and civic fellowship that bind families and communities together and make cities possible in the first place. Because spirit is the political part of the soul in this sense, moreover, two social and political challenges that occupy Plato throughout his career—namely, how to educate citizens properly in virtue and how to maintain unity and stability in political communities—cannot be addressed and resolved, on his view, without proper attention to the spirited aspects of human psychology.
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50

Ma-Kellams, Christine, Julie Spencer-Rodgers, and Kaiping Peng. The Yin and Yang of Attitudes and Related Constructs. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199348541.003.0013.

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Much of the literature has examined how dialectical thinking influences the self, emotions, and well-being. How does dialectical thinking affect valenced evaluations of objects outside of the self? This chapter argues that naive dialecticism shapes the internal consistency, cross-situational consistency, and temporal stability of attitudes and related constructs. It begins with a discussion of how dialecticism leads to greater attitudinal ambivalence or “both-valenced” (positive/negative) evaluations of a wide variety of phenomena. It then examines how dialecticism can explain the cultural variation in ingroup favoring versus ingroup derogating tendencies. The difference between cognitive versus affective components and implicit versus explicit levels emerge as important distinctions in elucidating cultural variation in group-based attitudes. The chapter continues with a discussion of how dialecticism can account for cultural differences in cognitive dissonance, intergroup attitudes and relations, and attitude flexibility and change, and topics for future research are proposed.
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