Fear

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    Social Anxiety Disorder (SAD) refers to extraordinarily intensive fear and anxiety about one or more social situations, which cause clinically significant distress and lead individuals to persistently avoid from essential social interactions such as meeting unfamiliar people, eating among people, performing in front of people (DSM-5, 2013). SAD’s lifetime prevalence is 12.1% and twelve-month prevalence is 6.8%, which is the third most common mental health disorders in the US (http://www.nimh.nih…

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    Lamanda Psychology

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    sadness and loss of interest in daily activities. Since people that experience depression also experienced psychological disorders, a National Survey for social fears gives results that show 38.6% of people today experience any kind of social fear in their lifetime. Social anxiety disorder is when an individual experiences intense fear of public humiliation or rejection and therefore tends to avoid social situations. Depression and anxiety disorders can be incredibly difficult to deal with…

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    Angela's Struggle

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    succeed? What motivated her to succeed is that if she tries her best and doesn’t give up, she can complete the task. Angela also repeated “You’ll be fine” in her head to help motivate her to success. How has he/she responded? Angela responded to her fear of speaking by being resilient when hard times came such as rehearsals, and when its was the real deal, she motivated herself with words of success. How has he/she helped others? Angela has helped other by proving that just because you are…

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    Parents become infected with fear, “a kind of parenting fungus: invisible, insidious, perfectly designed to decompose the peace of mind” (Gibbs 5). Fear fogs a parent’s thoughts, actions, and judgment. Getting rid of fear can broaden a parent’s view on life and give the child greater opportunities. Having the fear of letting your child go to the park alone because he could get abducted is normal. But in today’s society…

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    Origin Of Torture

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    causes the emotions of surprise and fear, and extinguishes any sense of escape, resistance, and relief. Torture targets the victim as a whole: emotionally, physically,…

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    so happened to play video games like millions of people do every day and don’t go out killing people. This misinformation is shoved down our throats on a daily basis is the cause of “technological” fear and at the momentum new technology is produced it’s easy to point the finger at what all humans fear; the…

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    studying the virtue and learning more about being virtuous, I have found that it is the virtue of deciding between the two vices of cowardice and recklessness. Courage is more than simply deciding to act carelessly, it is the ability to respond to fear. It means being able to do what is right and virtuous, even if it is difficult to do. Courage can be present in many different forms. Some examples of courage in everyday life include the courage to always do what is right, courage to accept that…

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    Lost: Monologue

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    The use of Intonation helps to convey the fear in the character’s voice by showing instability caused by her fear. My Intonation fell on the word ‘forget’ (line 13) and expressed wavering of the character’s voice as she is fearful of her situation. In addition to intonation I also used the feature of raised pitch. This fell naturally…

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    The Red Room Analysis

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    as 'remote,' from the heart of the house, and 'chill', as there was 'seldom a fire,' we begin to fear for 10 year old Jane who is left alone in a cold, dark and eerie room, alone with the dead. The reader is then informed about the 'strange little figure,' which Jane personifies, by writing that it starred at her and had 'glittering eyes of fear moving where all else was still'. Moving eyes of fear suggest that though death is present in the room, there is still an mysterious life lurking…

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    overdrive and provide acute specifications of what the author intends top convey. The figurative language in this poem develops the relationship between the speaker and the swamp by describing more in-depth the fear and respect that the character has for this environment. Rather than simple fear and respect, the reader begins to understand the appreciation along with the calamity that the speaker holds for the swamp and the swamp brings to the speaker. This figurative language feeds off of the…

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