I believe being socially rejected can cause an emotional break down, anxiety attacts or psychological faults.
Social life of our generation is needy.
As we all should have friends, it depends on how we address ourselves first.
Emotionally, we are stable to a certain point. Who notices, who doesn't.
Mentally we can do anything our minds put us towards. Psychologically we can be whatever we put ourselves to do.
(If social rejection aches like physical pain, can it be treated like physical pain?"
Recovering from disasters.
Though it's not all about whats done on the outside (physically) it's also the abnormality of the overwhelmed feelings, emotional tolls and getting to know yourself more within such situations. Overwhelmed people can feel delusional, depressed or fatigue. Emotional tolls cause some anxiety, like being stressed to a point were you look for a hope of happyness in anything, a social network perhaps. But finding yourself in it all is what matters most. A positive outcome is the reason we go through trauma.
Weir, Kristen. (2012, April). The Pain Of Social Rejection : American Psychological Association. Vol 43. Page 50. Print.
American Psychological Association (2011, August). Retrieved from http://www.apa.org/helpcenter/recovering-disasters.aspx
I see you have two sources here, and I think I can tell the second one, but the first one in the paragraphs itself is confusing. What's its title? Also, the text here reads confusingly because do you see the parenthesis in the first paragraph, but then the closing quotes? One of those pieces of punctuation is incorrect...it's either a quote with both, or a parenthesis with both.
ReplyDeleteThe first paragraph really is throwing the reading off. Maybe it's the choppy phrasing? I think a specific example of the issue of social rejection might put this into a clearer perspective.