Chủ Nhật, 3 tháng 9, 2017

Waching daily Sep 4 2017

7 Underlying Truths A Psychologist Wants You To Know About Narcissistic Behavior

When you hear the word narcissist, your mind probably associates behaviors like arrogance, cockiness, and entitlement.

While these are certainly characteristics of someone with narcissism,

there is quite a bit going on that is much deeper than the superficial exaggerated self-opinion.

Here are seven fundamental truths you might not have known about narcissists that can explain why they behave the way

they do.

1.

Narcissists have conditional self-worth.

While narcissists seem confident, their self-worth is, in fact, conditional, whether they're aware of it or not.

It is based on certain experiences, specifically external events.

A narcissist thinks "I feel good about myself if" as in:

"I feel good about myself if I feel superior to you."

"I feel good about myself if you agree with me."

"I feel good about myself if you tell me that you admire me."

Of course, a desire to feel good about yourself is a universal human longing, and to some extent,

fundamental psychological hunger propels our interactions with the world.

For a narcissist, this is demonstrated in comparing himself to others and craving (almost needing) to feel exceptional.

This is why narcissists often bully others.

They try to put people down so they feel better about themselves.

It is also why they personalize when someone disagrees with them.

Rather than acknowledging a difference in opinions, the narcissist will interpret it as a personal attack,

which cuts at his or her ego.

2.

A narcissist constantly needs more validation.

With the aforementioned conditional self-worth comes a constant "need" to be validated.

This is why one compliment isn't enough; one "victory" of being right and the other person being wrong doesn't satiate

a narcissist's need for validation.

Once they achieve a win, they move on for more.

And more.

3.

A narcissist is motivated by intense fear.

Yep, it is actually an intense and deeply rooted fear that propels a narcissist's reactions—both internal (how they

interpret what you do) and external (how they react).

The fear?

That they are not good enough, not lovable, not worthy.

This fear, however, is so ingrained that the narcissist is often not overtly aware of it.

4.

A narcissist uses anger to avoid feeling deeper emotions.

It is "safer" for a narcissist to be angry than it is to feel the sadness and fear associated with his or her

conditional self-worth.

This coping mechanism of anger is so deep-rooted for narcissists as a means to protect themselves from their own

vulnerability that it has become an automatic reaction.

5.

A narcissist operates from an all-or-nothing perfectionistic viewpoint.

For a narcissist, something is either right OR wrong; a person's behavior is either nice OR mean;

he or she is either revered or ridiculed.

There is no gray area with a narcissist.

6.

A narcissist has his or her own set of rules.

We all have our own sets of rules regarding how others should act.

A narcissist's rules are written in stone in their minds, and they get extremely upset when people do not abide by them.

Why?

Because they view a deviation from their rules as a slight against them because they think you think less of them.

7.

A narcissist's behavior has little to do with you.

Ever noticed how you can say the same thing to a narcissist and one time they laugh but another time they blow up?

That is because it is a narcissist's fragile ego that propels their interactions.

And that ego can become more delicate with stress, which can manifest in the form of excessive work obligations,

sensing they are being taken advantage of, fatigue, or any other of the other countless sources of stress in our

society.

Can you help a narcissist?

There is nothing you personally can do to make a narcissist feel truly at peace.

What they need is to cultivate their self-worth so that it is unconditional—based on their values and strengths instead

of how others react to them.

Sadly, the typical narcissist's ego is so fragile that even hearing this could send them into a downward spiral.

That's the bad news.

Empathy: the antidote to narcissism

The good news, though, is that research demonstrates that some narcissists can actually get better with treatment,

including developing greater empathy.

What's more, now that you have a better understanding of the narcissist's subconscious,

hopefully you can take a step back, re-evaluate your relationship, and give yourself permission to take some space and

cultivate empathy on your own terms.

For more infomation >> 7 Underlying Truths A Psychologist Wants You To Know About Narcissistic Behavior - Duration: 6:11.

-------------------------------------------

Cott Sports Physio - We treat Olympians - Duration: 0:31.

Don't let pain hold you back from achieving your best.

Find someone with knowledge and experience to help.

So we can work through it - together.

And get you back to doing what you really love.

Cottesloe Sports Physiotherapy

Stronger, Fitter, Better.

For more infomation >> Cott Sports Physio - We treat Olympians - Duration: 0:31.

-------------------------------------------

What does diversity mean to you? - Duration: 1:07.

So diversity for me means many things but more importantly it means the

variety of life. It brings colour, it's vibrant, it brings differences and it

also shares with those similarity. I think diversity is not a new phenomenon

in New Zealand, diversity has been here for a long time. We have seen

Chinese people since the 1800s. We've got Polish, Dutch and Hungary - people from

those countries with us since World War II. I think in New Zealand you'll see

from the latest Census 2013, over two hundred and thirteen ethnicities are

identified here and almost one in four of us are disabled people.

Over 20 percent of our young children aged 0 to 14 years identify with more than one

ethnicity. This makes New Zealand quite a colourful nation and I believe brings as

well, people say challenges, but I see opportunities.

For more infomation >> What does diversity mean to you? - Duration: 1:07.

-------------------------------------------

Child wellbeing at Westport Primary - Duration: 1:44.

For more infomation >> Child wellbeing at Westport Primary - Duration: 1:44.

-------------------------------------------

Cott Sports Physio - Stronger. Fitter. Better. - Duration: 1:01.

Oh No!

Don't let pain hold you back from doing something you love.

Find a team who use targeted exercise programs,

and a 'hands on' approach.

So that we can work through it…

Together.

And get you back to pushing the limits,

Feeling your best,

Or chasing that dream.

Cottesloe Sports Physiotherapy

Stronger, Fitter, Better.

For more infomation >> Cott Sports Physio - Stronger. Fitter. Better. - Duration: 1:01.

-------------------------------------------

Shapovalov: An idol in the making - US Open 2017 - Duration: 7:22.

Shapovalov: An idol in the making - US Open 2017

Think back to your childhood. You'd wake up, and there would almost always be a poster of your idol taped to the wall. In an ideal but usually unrealistic world, you'd enjoy the same fame as that idol one day.

A few weeks ago, while crashing in compatriot and 2016 US Open boys' singles champion Felix Auger-Aliassime's basement during the Masters 1000 event in Montreal, 18-year-old Denis Shapovalov woke up every day and saw a poster of No.

The thing is, Shapovalov would actually beat Nadal that week en route to the semifinals, launching himself into the Top 70 in the world.

Just a few weeks later, the young Canadian is a young rock star in the tennis world, beating the likes of No. 8 Jo-Wilfried Tsonga on his way to the fourth round in New York.

Leaving the practice court Saturday, fans screamed, "Denis!" and pressed against the barricades just as strongly as they did minutes earlier when Maria Sharapova walked by.

And with a wide-open bottom half of the men's singles draw, who knows what lies in the world No. It's as if Shapovalov didn't have to save four match points in the opening round of that tournament in Montreal.

Yet he did in a second-set tiebreak, eventually beating the 64th-ranked player in the world, Rogerio Dutra Silva, in three sets.

What if two shots that Dutra Silva hit that day did not float a couple of inches long? What if Shapovalov did not hit an ace on the final match point he faced? What if the inexperienced teenager did not hit an immaculate backhand drop volley from below his knees all the way back at the service line to fend off a dipping forehand passing shot coming from his opponent?.

Would we really be here today, watching a full-fledged superstar standing as arguably the favorite ahead of his fourth-round match against No. 12 Pablo Carreno Busta if he lost any one of those match points?.

"Actually it's unbelievable," Dutra Silva said on the grounds of the USTA Billie Jean King National Tennis Center Saturday. "At that moment, I could not imagine him playing this level. He plays so good. But not this level.".

Nobody knows a match better than your opponent. And when Shapovalov scooped Dutra Silva's dipping passing shot on the Brazilian's second match point, he knew that the Canadian was special.

"For me the difference was in the volley," Dutra Silva said. "Low ball, and then he make it like it was just natural and walked for the changeover [in the tiebreak] like nothing happened. I was like, 'Whoa, this guy.

Shapovalov is only 18. Playing on center court in Montreal in front of anxious home fans waiting to see just how talented their prospect is comes with pressure. Yet the Canadian owned the moment. Like Roger Federer would.

Like Rafael Nadal would. Like you'd expect someone on your childhood poster to. Not like an 18-year-old crashing in his friend's basement.

"When I had an opportunity to come in, I came in," Shapovalov said after the match. "Im not going to change my game style and change the way I play just because its match point.".

Top-seeded Karolina Pliskova saved a match point herself in her third-round match against No. 27 Shuai Zhang Saturday. She could very well leave New York with her first major trophy, while maintaining the No.

"If youre match point down, you dont really think, like, about what to play or if to hold it in the rally, so I didnt have any other choice," Pliskova said.

"I just went through it and prayed that its going to be in, and it was in.". Pliskova went for it, and played her game.

Just six men have saved at least one match point before eventually winning the US Open during the Open era. Stan Wawrinka did it last year at the US Open.

Novak Djokovic slapped a blazing forehand return past Roger Federer in the 2011 semifinals in Flushing Meadows.

Boris Becker won his only title in New York after smacking a forehand off the net, which fortunately for him bounced away from Derrick Rostagno and into the court.

Who knows how the course of tennis history would have changed if those match points would have gone the other way?.

Shapovalov saved four of them against Dutra Silva. Then he got to play and beat his idol, Juan Martin del Potro, creating an atmosphere in which he said, "my ears almost popped.

They [the fans] were cheering so loud, it was insane." Then he beat Nadal. And here the Canadian teenager is, a long way from waking up to a poster of the Spaniard.

Companies somewhere are probably printing posters with his picture on them right now. "My whole life has changed in the past five days. Its crazy how it is," Shapovalov said.

"I go from being not known to, you know, being so known in the tennis world – in Canada, in general. Its going to be a little bit of a change to me. Im going to have to adapt.".

Well, Shapovalov better keep adapting because his run in New York is not done yet. And it's quite apparent that while Shapovalov may not end up winning the tournament this year, his stardom is here to stay.

And to think, one point could have changed it all.

Không có nhận xét nào:

Đăng nhận xét