Optimism as a the best defense from the recession effect (part I)
May 29th, 2011 by Stand Team
When it became clear that we were entering a recession, the responses ranging from denial to despair and some people refused to accept it, arguing that everything had been exaggerated by the media.
The problem is that the economic uncertainty is intensified by the uncertainty psychological, and when asked to people about their expectations, the responses are likely to reflect your mood as well as its finances: some take a cheerful, arguing that the recession’s end more quickly than we thought and other welcome the delicious perspective of the opportunity.
The fact is that nobody has any idea of when things are going to improve and as a result is experiencing the feeling of having lost control of our own destiny.
The feel threatened leads to the adoption of the same responses in the physical appearance, the reactions of paralysis, fight or flight (stress).
Of them, the stoppage is the most common, not wanting to act too hastily and therefore expect to that things will improve mysteriously, and the people take a position of “wait and see.”
This choice not to act leads to the anxiety by uncertainty about the family, work or the future also is more likely to experience “anxiety free floating” that is concerned, without being able to end the problem that afflicts us.
It is also possible that the experience leads to the feeling that the world is unreal, almost to dream and that only a matter of time before that wake up and back things to normalcy. Continue
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