Showing posts with label psychology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label psychology. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 3, 2018

Segi University’s Forum (Careers In Psychology) - Guest Speaker





Guest speaker for the Segi University’s Forum (Careers In Psychology).
I am glad to share my story as a Clinical Hypnotherapist along with other mental health experts (Clinical Psychologist & Registered Counselor) today



😇Feeling blessed to inspire more people to join our field.

Sunday, January 24, 2016

What is Attachment Theory and what does it mean in my relationships ?

What is Attachment?
Attachment is a special emotional relationship that involves an exchange of comfort, care, and pleasure. The roots of research on attachment began with Freud's theories about love, but another researcher is usually credited as the father of attachment theory. Bowlby shared the psychoanalytic view that early experiences in childhood have an important influence on development and behavior later in life. Our early attachment styles are established in childhood through the infant/caregiver relationship. In addition to this, Bowlby believed that attachment had an evolutionary component; it aids in survival. "The propensity to make strong emotional bonds to particular individuals [is] a basic component of human nature" (Bowlby, 1988, 3).
Attachment refers the particular way in which you relate to other people. Your style of attachment was formed at the very beginning of your life, during your first two years.  Once established, it is a style that stays with you and plays out today in how you relate in intimate relationships and in how you parent your children. Understanding your style of attachment is helpful because it offers you insight into how you felt and developed in your childhood. It also clarifies ways that you are emotionally limited as an adult and what you need to change to improve your close relationships and your relationship with your own children.
Early Attachment Patterns
Young children need to develop a relationship with at least one primary caregiver in order for their social and emotional development to occur normally. Without this attachment, they will suffer serious psychological and social impairment. During the first two years, how the parents or caregivers respond to their infants establishes the types of patterns of attachment their children form.  These patterns will go on to guide the child’s feelings, thoughts and expectations as an adult in future relationships.
Characteristics of Attachment
Bowlby believed that there are four distinguishing characteristics of attachment:
1) Proximity Maintenance - The desire to be near the people we are attached to.
 2) Safe Haven - Returning to the attachment figure for comfort and safety in the face of a fear or threat.
3) Secure Base - The attachment figure acts as a base of security from which the child can explore the surrounding environment.
 4) Separation Distress - Anxiety that occurs in the absence of the attachment figure.
During the 1970's, psychologist Mary Ainsworth further expanded upon Bowlby's groundbreaking work in her now-famous "Strange Situation" study. The study involved observing children between the ages of 12 to 18 months responding to a situation in which they were briefly left alone and then reunited with their mother (Ainsworth, 1978).

Based on these observations, Ainsworth concluded that there were three major styles of attachment:
1) secure attachment,
 2) ambivalent-insecure attachment
 3) avoidant-insecure attachment.
Researchers Main and Solomon (1986) added a fourth attachment style known as disorganized-insecure attachment. Numerous studies have supported Ainsworth's conclusions and additional research has revealed that these early attachment styles can help predict behaviors later in life.

Secure Attachment:

Ideally, from the time infants are six months to two years of age, they form an emotional attachment to an adult who is attuned to them, that is, who is sensitive and responsive in their interactions with them. It is vital that this attachment figure remain a consistent caregiver throughout this period in a child’s life. During the second year, children begin to use the adult as a secure base from which to explore the world and become more independent. A child in this type of relationship is securely attached.

Avoidant Attachment:

There are adults who are emotionally unavailable and, as a result, they are insensitive to and unaware of the needs of their children. They have little or no response when a child is hurting or distressed. These parents discourage crying and encourage independence. Often their children quickly develop into “little adults” who take care of themselves. These children pull away from needing anything from anyone else and are self-contained. They have formed an avoidant attachment with a misattuned parent.

Ambivalent/Anxious Attachment:

Some adults are inconsistently attuned to their children. At times their responses are appropriate and nurturing but at other times they are intrusive and insensitive. Children with this kind of parenting are confused and insecure, not knowing what type of treatment to expect. They often feel suspicious and distrustful of their parent but at the same time they act clingy and desperate. These children have anambivalent/anxious attachment with their unpredictable parent.

Disorganized Attachment:

When a parent or caregiver is abusive to a child, the child experiences the physical and emotional cruelty and frightening behavior as being life-threatening. This child is caught in a terrible dilemma: her survival instincts are telling her to flee to safety but safety is the very person who is terrifying her.  The attachment figure is the source of the child’s distress. In these situations, children typically disassociate from their selves. They detach from what is happening to them and what they are experiencing is blocked from their consciousness. Children in this conflicted state have disorganized attachments with their fearsome parental figures.

 

Adult Attachment Patterns


Secure Personality:

People who formed secure attachments in childhood have secure attachment patterns in adulthood. They have a strong sense of themselves and they desire close associations with others. They basically have a positive view of themselves, their partners and their relationships. Their lives are balanced: they are both secure in their independence and in their close relationships.

Dismissive Personality:

Those who had avoidant attachments in childhood most likely have dismissive attachment patterns as adults. These people tend to be loners; they regard relationships and emotions as being relatively unimportant. They are cerebral and suppress their feelings. Their typical response to conflict and stressful situations is to avoid them by distancing themselves. These people’s lives are not balanced: they are inward and isolated, and emotionally removed from themselves and others.

Preoccupied Personality:

Children who have an ambivalent/anxious attachment often grow up to have preoccupied attachment patterns. As adults, they are self-critical and insecure. They seek approval and reassurance from others, yet this never relieves their self-doubt. In their relationships, deep-seated feelings that they are going to be rejected make them worried and not trusting. This drives them to act clingy and overly dependent with their partner. These people’s lives are not balanced: their insecurity leaves them turned against themselves and emotionally desperate in their relationships.

Fearful-Avoidant Personality:

People who grew up with disorganized attachments often develop fearful-avoidant patterns of attachment. Since, as children, they detached from their feelings during times of trauma, as adults, they continue to be somewhat detached from themselves. They desire relationships and are comfortable in them until they develop emotionally close. At this point, the feelings that were repressed in childhood begin to resurface and, with no awareness of them being from the past, they are experienced in the present. The person is no longer in life today but rather, is suddenly re-living an old trauma. These people’s lives are not balanced: they do not have a coherent sense of themselves nor do they have a clear connection with others.



Source:
http://www.lifechangehealthinstitute.ie/what-is-attachment-theory/

Thursday, July 17, 2014

[TALK] Sharing session for applied psychology students at UTAR


I have been invited by UTAR lecturer to give a talk about clinical hypnotherapy and biofeedback. I really enjoy my work and I hope that I can make a difference in the world. Yes, you can change the world by helping one person at a time. I hope to inspire more students to enter the helping professions.

In searching out a professional Clinical Hypnotherapist I recommend you follow these:
1. Check that the Hypnotherapist is registered with a professional body and has undergone a structured programme of training that has included practical experience using the tools of hypnosis.
2. When you arrive at the Hypnotherapists consulting room check out that it feels professional.
3. Always check the Hypnotherapist has professional indemnity insurance.
There can be no doubt that Clinical Hypnotherapy is one of the fastest and safest treatments helping people who are desperate to overcome a debilitating condition. But you are well advised to tread carefully.

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/stevemiller/clinical-hypnotherapy_b_4452184.html
 

 Thanks for the hamper!
I hope it was an engaging and fruitful sharing session for all who attended.

Monday, June 23, 2014

催眠有什么用途?

生活中很多人不知道心理学,或者不怎么了解心理学,而却知道催眠。对催眠十分感兴趣,但是却也不知道催眠到底有什么用途?只是感觉催眠是一种类似魔术一样的表演。
催眠治疗咨询范围: 
1、神经症:抑郁症,酒瘾症,烟瘾症,强迫症,焦虑症,紧张症,恐惧症,口吃症,怯场症,自卑症,厌食症,固执症,恐病症,厌学症,疑病症,网瘾症,神经 官能症,妄自菲薄症,自我完美症,自毁自贱症,神经衰弱症,脾气暴躁症,过度压力症,惶恐不安症,自信缺乏症,书写痉挛症,过度食欲症,食欲缺乏症,情感 挫折症,失恋痛苦症,亲子代沟症,择业茫然症,精神紧张症,离休综合症,抑郁自闭症,社交恐怖症,产后忧郁症 

2、生理障碍:过度自慰症,阳痿早泄症,异常性心理,性心理障碍,急慢性胃炎,洁癖,胃痛,神经性哮喘,神经性尿频,遗尿,性欲缺乏症,性功能障碍,阳痿,早泄,梦精遗精,麻痹性癔病,舞蹈症,癫痫,面神经麻痹,神经性心脏病,月经闭止,痛经,经血过多。 

3、儿童行为障碍:包括咬指甲,拔头发,遗尿,口吃等儿童不良行为,儿童退缩行为,儿童多动症。 

4、神经系统某些疾患:包括面神经麻痹,偏头痛,神经病,失眠,先天性神经衰弱,神经性头痛,更年期综合症神经衰弱。 

5、其他用途:增强自信心,增强行动力,提升销售业绩不良习惯的改变,提高记忆力,提高学习能力,克服恐惧,如戒酒,戒烟,减肥,减轻压力,术后镇痛,疼 痛控制,无痛分娩,减轻癌和关节疼痛,改善肌体抵抗力,破坏或消除由于病毒引起的湿疣和其他疾病等等,年龄回溯,前世回溯。

催眠可以用来: 
(1) 催眠可以建立信心,肯定自我价值:改善你的自我观感,导正负面行为。增进自信与自许,强化自尊,善处逆境心情。 
(2) 催眠可以增加心灵财富:心灵财富丰富的人,是对自己满足的,金钱无处不在,当你需要时,它自然能出现,让我们时时刻刻丰富自己的心灵。 
(3) 催眠可以控制体重与饮食问题:更新饮食习惯,促成体重增减,维持适当目标体重,增强体能与运动动机。 
(4) 催眠可以消除睡眠困扰:脱离事务、职业烦恼。自我催眠带来欲睡前奏,醒来有如充电饱满。 
(5) 催眠可以处理生活各式压力:学习减压或消除压力技巧,改善特殊行为模式,降低血压,放松身心。 
(6) 催眠可以掌握演说能力:不再害臊,终止羞怯。获得谈话信心,消除面谈紧张,降低演出、 演讲或讲课的恐惧。 
(7) 催眠可以终止焦虑、恐慌、恐惧与恐怖症:消除对事务的恐惧,如登高、航空旅行、人群、蜘蛛、疾病等。学习面对事务之不同反应,以新的正确的态度克服恐惧。 
(8) 催眠可以改善生活品质:以积极的动机,目标的设定及达成,实现个人的满足。以成功般的满足舒适心灵。 
(9) 催眠可以克服学习困难:增强教学技巧,改善学习习惯,提升记忆力与集中力,导正学习态度,增强应试技巧。 
(10) 催眠可以增强运动表现:强化运动成效,集中重点,启发成功感、胜利感、成就感。增强毅力与协调性。增强全方位的意向态度。 
(11) 催眠可以提升个人创造力:开启写作、绘画、表演艺术潜能。启动创作动机。增强洞察力,问题解决能力。 
(12) 催眠可以促进健康身体:缓解及减低慢性病症状,如结肠炎、肌肉痉挛和溃疡。控制气喘、偏头痛等。缓解皮肤疾病。改善免疫系统与促进自然痊愈。 
(13) 催眠可以疼痛控制:安全、自然的方法以替代麻醉,如外科手术止痛、烧伤止痛,牙医止痛等。控制慢性病的病痛,如关节炎或背痛。 
(14) 催眠可以革除坏习惯建立新习惯:增强积极动力,提升正面行为。消除负向思考,解脱忿怒、忧郁、挫折。 
(15) 催眠可以协助自然生产:减低疼痛,轻松分娩,恢复迅速,建立亲子亲密关系。 
(16) 催眠可以解除感情与肉体创伤:重现并去除人生创伤或悲剧事件。搜寻记忆,年龄回溯,时间回溯。 

心理学是一门跟生活息息相关的科学,为人为人的生活服务的学科。里面有很多既神奇好玩又有效的心理技术,能够帮助人解决各种心理上的疑难杂症,所以,作为21世纪的我们不可不了解心理学,了解心理学中技术,比如催眠。(文章来自:关明宇博客)

Monday, March 10, 2014

Your biography becomes your biology

It is not pain that hurts us most. Emotional traumas play a very large role in creating chronic illnesses. I feel good to help my clients feel better, regain their health and fitness!


Our language is filled with expressions of how emotion affects the body: tension and stress gives me a knot in my stomach, overwhelming sadness makes me feel all choked up, a difficult person is a pain in the neck.
More seriously, a recent study showed that sudden emotional shock can cause heart attacks even in healthy people. Called “broken heart syndrome,” these heart attacks were related to the loss of a loved one, fear of an event or activity, or sudden accidents. Notably, most of the sufferers were women.
How does a fleeting feeling have lasting health effects? Research on this is still in its infancy, but there are at least four paths we already know about.

First is the general effect of stress, which triggers the adrenals to produce cortisol and adrenaline. Cortisol is very helpful in small doses (as part of the fight or flight response) but sustained high cortisol levels (the result of unremitting stress) have very destructive effects on the body, including weight gain, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, suppression of immune function and acceleration of aging. For more on cortisol, read our articles on adrenal fatigue.

Second is the effect of unresolved emotional issues on systemic inflammation. Medical research has recently implicated inflammation as a contributing factor in a host of diseases, including cancer, heart disease and Alzheimer’s. For more on systemic inflammation, read our informative articles.

Third is the effect of emotions on particular organs. Many alternative practitioners attribute illness in a specific organ to a specific cause. While this is controversial in Western medicine, it has been well documented in medical literature that “Type A” personalities have much higher rates of heart disease, and that women who suffered childhood sexual abuse have higher rates of dysmenorrhea and pelvic pain. The mechanism of action may be peptide chains formed as part of the biochemistry of emotion that bind to receptor sites in specific organs, a concept pioneered by the renowned biochemist Dr. Candace Pert. We believe many more links will be discovered as research in this area continues.

Fourth is the effect of emotions on behavior. The ACE Study revealed a cause and effect link between adverse childhood experience and negative health habits like drinking, smoking, overeating, and sexual promiscuity. The authors recognized these negative habits as self-medication for unresolved emotional pain. But over time the suppression of all that pain through these self-destructive habits has terrible consequences.


All retrieved from http://www.womentowomen.com/emotions-anxiety-mood/how-emotional-experience-determines-your-health/


上述文章阐述了情绪压力如何影响生理疾病。
事实的确如此,情绪压力是许多流行病的导因。
心脏病,胃病,忧郁症等等都和情绪压力有很大的关系。
我所工作的保健中心能检测顾客的生理状况。
我发现许多拥有情绪问题的顾客,肠胃心脏等都有一些状况。
有者甚至因为情绪问题,导致生理出了许多严重情况。
然而当情绪压力得到舒缓和改善时,他们的气色和生理状况也真的跟着好转起来。
所以你说生理和心理两者有关联不?

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

18 Ways to be more positive at work

Beating-the-blues Monday:

Did you know that positivity is heavily contagious? It is a proven fact that if you are more positive, people around you will become positive as well. However, sometimes it can be hard to keep the positivity close at hand and ready when you need it.

Positivity does not grow on trees it is something that will have to come from within you and from your own experiences. With a little bit more positivity in your life, half the battles are already won. Find out how being more positive can increase work hapiness in just 18 ways!

Source: bitrebels.com

Thursday, June 27, 2013

Becoming Assertive


You want to be assertive!
An assertive person evaluates a situation, decides how to act, and responds without undue anxiety or guilt. They respect themselves and other people and take responsibility for their actions and decisions. They are aware of what they want and ask for it in an open and direct manner. If refused, they feel appropriately disappointed but they do not suffer a blow to their self-esteem. Assertive behaviour is based on the belief that the person has the same rights, responsibilities and personal self-worth as other people. 

Assertive rights are those rights and expectations that any human being has by virtue of their existence. 
The important thing to remember is that everybody has these rights. As human beings we have:

1) The right to ask for what we want (realising that the other person has the right to say 'No').
2) The right to express our feelings, opinions and beliefs.
3) The right to make our own decisions and to cope with the consequences.
4) The right to say 'yes' and 'no' for ourselves.
5) The right to change our minds.
6) The right to say "I don't understand"
7) The right to choose whether or not to get involved in the problems of someone else.
8) The right to make mistakes.
9) The right to be alone and to be independent.
10) The right to privacy.
11) The right to be successful and to acknowledge it.
12) The right to change ourselves and be assertive people.

It’s all too easy for us to forget that we have these rights and that makes it even more difficult to stand up and fight for them. The more aware we are of the rights we have, the more confident we will be about working towards them. 
Read through the list of rights on a regular basis to remind yourself of them. If you have difficulty accepting any of them, then mark these on the list and spend some time thinking about how abusing these rights is stopping you from getting the most of our life. You might find it helpful to discuss them with someone who doesn't lack assertiveness.


Sunday, May 12, 2013

Hierarchy of needs

              People are motivated to take care of lower order needs before higher order needs.
If you are not sure what level you are now, kindly take a look here:


There are five different levels in Maslow’s hierarchy of needs:

    Physiological Needs
    These include the most basic needs that are vital to survival, such as the need for water, air, food, and sleep. Maslow believed that these needs are the most basic and instinctive needs in the hierarchy because all needs become secondary until these physiological needs are met.

    Security Needs
    These include needs for safety and security. Security needs are important for survival, but they are not as demanding as the physiological needs. Examples of security needs include a desire for steady employment, health care, safe neighborhoods, and shelter from the environment.

    Social Needs
    These include needs for belonging, love, and affection. Maslow described these needs as less basic than physiological and security needs. Relationships such as friendships, romantic attachments, and families help fulfill this need for companionship and acceptance, as does involvement in social, community, or religious groups.

    Esteem Needs
    After the first three needs have been satisfied, esteem needs becomes increasingly important. These include the need for things that reflect on self-esteem, personal worth, social recognition, and accomplishment.

    Self-actualizing Needs
    This is the highest level of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. Self-actualizing people are self-aware, concerned with personal growth, less concerned with the opinions of others, and interested fulfilling their potential.




'Hierarchy of needs' is retrieved from http://psychology.about.com/od/theoriesofpersonality/a/hierarchyneeds.htm