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Characteristics of SelfActualizing People

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Fully experience life in the present. Make growth choices, not fear choices ... Meaningful life activities. I REALLY appreciate it when you do not talk while I ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Characteristics of SelfActualizing People


1
Characteristics of Self-Actualizing People
  • Efficient perception of reality
  • Sincere acceptance of self and others
  • Spontaneity, simplicity, naturalness
  • Task oriented
  • High need for privacy
  • General independence of culture

2
Characteristics continued
  • Freshness of appreciation
  • Capacity for peak experiences
  • Sincere interest in humanity
  • Deep personal relationships
  • Democratic character structure
  • Non-hostile sense of humor
  • Creative

3
Characteristics continued
  • Fully experience life in the present
  • Make growth choices, not fear choices
  • Strive toward honesty
  • Meaningful life activities

4
  • I REALLY appreciate it when you do not talk
    while I am lecturing. I do not want to ask you
    to leave, but I am ready to do so today. My
    students are complaining that they cannot hear me
    so I must respect their rights in this classroom.
    I will give you time to talk today!

5
  • 1- extra credit and grades are on the website
  • 2- all essays and debate preps are in the boxes
    today, if you got another re-do, see website for
    Re-do directions. I did not finish Haskels,
    Howry, Ibanez, Kennedy, Lemus, Lobao, Mora,
    Mendoza, Wood, or Evans. These will be in the
    box on the wall near my office by 500 today. I
    will also put feedback on the website for these
    11 students in the re-do document on the
    website.
  • 3- debate Do religiously committed people enjoy
    greater mental health?
  • 4- move the debate on prozac to Thursday next
    week, enjoy Tuesday off!
  • 5- be sure you are doing six debate preps. and
    responses and one presenter paper by Nov. 25\

6
Emotional Quotient (E.Q.)
  • I am aware of subtle feelings when I have them.
  • I find myself using my feelings to help make
    decisions.
  • Bad moods do not overwhelm me.
  • I express my anger effectively.
  • I can delay my gratification.

7
E.Q.
  • I prepare well and accomplish public speaking or
    testing with success.
  • I stay hopeful and optimistic in the face of
    challenges and setbacks.
  • I can sense what people feel.
  • I am compassionate about others situations.

8
E.Q.
  • I can handle emotional upset in others.
  • I can sense the pulse of a group or relationship
    and state unspoken feelings.
  • I can soothe or contain distressing feelings so
    they dont keep me from doing things I need to do.

9
Emotional Intelligence
  • Self-awareness knowing what you feel and using
    your gut sense to make decisions you can live
    with happily, having a strategy for understanding
    your emotions, making good sense of them, and
    good decisions based on feelings combined with
    reality.

10
Emotional Intelligence
  • Motivation
  • zeal, persistence and optimism in the face of
    lifes setbacks
  • finding purpose and meaning in what you do so you
    face obstacles and handle them because your goals
    are worth it!

11
Emotional Intelligence
  • Management of Feelings controlling impulses
  • soothing your anxiety
  • having anger that is appropriate
  • being assertive with yourself about your beliefs
    so they are self-enhancing
  • not ruminating or obsessing with self-defeating
    thoughts that are irrational and persistent

12
Emotional Intelligence
  • Empathy
  • reading and responding to unspoken feelings
  • having the courage to bring them up
  • being brave enough to deal with emotions rather
    than try to make them go away.

13
Emotional Intelligence
  • Social Skill
  • handing emotional reactions in others
  • interacting smoothly
  • managing relationships effectively
  • using face to face resolutions
  • dealing with things in a timely manner
  • telling the truth
  • not being attached to the outcome when you know
    you did the right thing
  • examine your motives!

14
Techniques of Suffering
  • 1. Delaying gratification
  • 2. Accepting responsibility
  • 3. Dedication to the truth
  • 4. Balancing all aspects of life

15
In the area of emotion and stress I focus on
communication
  • Think of the person in your life you would go to
    to share a triumph or sorrow.
  • Why is that person the one you want to share with
    the most?

16
Your special need and gift
  • Need to be understood
  • Gift understanding

17
How did you learn to communicate?
  • Where your parents great role models for
    effective, productive, respectful, intimate
    communication?
  • Grandparents?
  • Teachers?
  • Church leaders?
  • Media sources movies, T.V., radio?

18
Why is communication difficult?
  • What you mean to say.
  • What you actually say.
  • What the listener hears.
  • What the listener thinks they hear.
  • What the listener says back based on their
    interpretation of what you said.
  • What you think about what they say about what you
    say.

19
What is your style of communication?
  • Do you talk to a person?
  • Do you talk at a person?
  • Do you talk with a person?
  • We are either moving
  • Toward
  • Away or
  • Against
  • other people.

20
Louis Wyse
  • I suppose it was something you said
  • That caused me to tighten and pull away
  • And when you asked, What is it?
  • I, of course, said, Nothing.
  • You may be very certain there is something. The
    something is a cold, hard lump of nothing.

21
The Communication Feedback Loop
22
The Rules for Effective Communication
  • Sender
  • Use feeling words rather than fact words
  • Use I messages versus You messages
  • Keep point short
  • Make eye contact
  • Receiver
  • Tentative voice for feedback
  • Feedback feeling when possible
  • Let the sender have the floor until done
  • Make eye contact and look focused

23
Guidelines for the Sender
  • When _______
  • I feel ________
  • And I would prefer _______
  • Never
  • You make me feel ____
  • You always _________
  • You never___________

24
Guidelines for the Receiver or Listener
  • Content It sounds like youre saying ____
  • Feeling It sounds like you might be feeling __
  • Is that right?
  • Could you stop right there so I can see if I
    understand what you are saying (or feeling) right
    now?

25
Advice or Influence
  • Influence urging the speaker in a direction they
    have already mentioned as an alternative
  • Advice urging the speaker to accept a direction
    that you propose and he or she has not mentioned
  • The best prompt the speaker to offer several
    solutions and influence them in the direction of
    their OWN idea

26
The Communication Feedback Loop
27
Practice
  • It seems like I just dont care to do anything
    anymore. I just cant get interested in going out
    to do things. I dont understand why. Maybe I
    should talk with my parents or a counselor about
    it.
  • It sounds like you are saying .
  • It sounds like you might be feeling.

28
Practice
  • I am getting pretty darn tired of my boyfriend.
    He doesnt pay very much attention to me and I
    dont think I am number one in his life anymore.
    I dont know whether to stick it out or break
    up.
  • Content
  • Feeling
  • Open Question
  • Closed Question
  • Advice
  • Influence

29
Emotion
  • Emotion
  • a response of the whole organism
  • physiological arousal
  • expressive behaviors
  • conscious experience

30
Theories of Emotion
  • Does your heart pound because you are afraid...
    or are you afraid because you feel your heart
    pounding?

31
James-Lange Theory of Emotion
  • Experience of emotion is awareness of
    physiological responses to emotion-arousing
    stimuli

32
Cannon-BardTheory of Emotion
  • Emotion-arousing stimuli simultaneously trigger
  • physiological responses
  • subjective experience of emotion

33
Schachters Two-Factor Theory of Emotion
  • To experience emotion one must
  • be physically aroused
  • cognitively label the arousal

34
Cognition and Emotion
  • The brains shortcut for emotions

35
Two Routes to Emotion
36
Emotion and Physiology
37
Arousal and Performance
  • Performance peaks at lower levels of arousal for
    difficult tasks, and at higher levels for easy or
    well-learned tasks

38
Emotion - Lie Detectors
  • Polygraph
  • machine commonly used in attempts to detect lies
  • measures several of the physiological responses
    accompanying emotion
  • perspiration
  • cardiovascular
  • breathing changes

39
Emotion - A Polygraph Examination
40
Emotion - Lie Detectors
  • Control Question
  • Example- Up to age 18, did you ever physically
    harm anyone?
  • Relevant Question
  • Example- Did the deceased threaten to harm you
    in any way?
  • Relevant gt Control --gt Lie

41
Emotion - Lie Detectors
  • 50 Innocents
  • 50 Thieves
  • 1/3 of innocent declared guilty
  • 1/4 of guilty declared innocent (from Kleinmuntz
    Szucko, 1984)

42
Expressed Emotion
  • People more speedily detect an angry face than a
    happy one (Ohman, 2001a)

43
Expressed Emotion
  • Gender and expressiveness

44
Expressed Emotion
  • Culturally universal expressions

45
Experienced Emotion
  • Infants naturally occurring emotions

46
Experienced Emotion
  • Catharsis
  • emotional release
  • catharsis hypothesis
  • releasing aggressive energy (through action or
    fantasy) relieves aggressive urges
  • Feel-good, do-good phenomenon
  • peoples tendency to be helpful when already in a
    good mood

47
Experienced Emotion
  • Subjective Well-Being
  • self-perceived happiness or satisfaction with
    life
  • used along with measures of objective well-being
  • physical and economic indicators to evaluate
    peoples quality of life

48
Experienced Emotion
  • Moods across the day

49
Experienced Emotion
  • Changing materialism

50
Experienced Emotion
  • Does money buy happiness?

51
Experienced Emotion
  • Values and life satisfaction

52
Experienced Emotion
  • Adaptation-Level Phenomenon
  • tendency to form judgments relative to a
    neutral level
  • brightness of lights
  • volume of sound
  • level of income
  • defined by our prior experience
  • Relative Deprivation
  • perception that one is worse off relative to
    those with whom one compares oneself

53
Happiness is...
54
Stress and Illness
  • Stress
  • the process by which we perceive and respond to
    certain events, called stressors, that we
    appraise as threatening or challenging

55
Stress Appraisal
56
Stress and Illness
  • General Adaptation Syndrome
  • Selyes concept of the bodys adaptive response
    to stress in three stages

57
Stress and Health
  • Health Psychology
  • subfield of psychology that provides psychologys
    contribution to behavioral medicine

58
Perceived Control
  • Equality and Longevity

59
Stress and the Heart
60
Stress and the Heart
  • Coronary Heart Disease
  • clogging of the vessels that nourish the heart
    muscle
  • leading cause of death in many developed countries

61
Stress and the Heart
  • Type A
  • Friedman and Rosenmans term for competitive,
    hard-driving, impatient, verbally aggressive, and
    anger-prone people
  • Type B
  • Friedman and Rosenmans term for easygoing,
    relaxed people

62
Stress and Disease
  • Psychophysiological Illness
  • mind-body illness
  • any stress-related physical illness
  • some forms of hypertension
  • some headaches
  • distinct from hypochondria misinterpreting
    normal physical sensations as symptoms of a
    disease

63
Stress and Disease
  • Lymphocytes
  • two types of white blood cells that are part of
    the bodys immune system
  • B lymphocytes form in the bone marrow and release
    antibodies that fight bacterial infections
  • T lymphocytes form in the thymus and, among other
    duties, attack cancer cells, viruses, and foreign
    substances

64
Stress and Disease
  • Conditioning of immune suppression

65
Stress and Disease
  • Negative emotions and health-related consequences

66
Promoting Health
  • Aerobic Exercise
  • sustained exercise that increases heart and lung
    fitness

67
Promoting Health
  • Biofeedback
  • system for electronically recording, amplifying,
    and feeding back information regarding a subtle
    physiological state
  • blood pressure
  • muscle tension

68
Promoting Health
  • Modifying Type A life-style can reduce recurrence
    of heart attacks

69
Promoting Health
  • Social support across the life span

70
Promoting Health
71
Alternative Medicine
72
Promoting Health
  • Predictors of mortality

1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0
73
Promoting Health
  • Religious Attendance

74
Promoting Health
  • The religion factor is multidimensional
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