* Dependency (on others)
* possible dependency on stimuli like drugs, drink, sex etc
* more helplessness
* overwhelming powerlessness
* loss of confidence
* loss of interest of life
* depression
* anxiety
* possible panic attacks
* fear (of life, of people, of problems, of solutions, anything to everything)
* fear related problems (phobias, etc)
* resentment (especially towards other people who are not seemingly *helpless)
* even maybe resentment towards other helpless people
* need to express how you feel constantly ie always talking about the *problems they have (possible control mechanism or attention needs)
* anger, resentment and hatred towards self
* feeling of pointlessness in everything
f4
Many things can be the cause of depression. Questioning your own sexuality or the sexuality of someone close to you can cause depression also.
AnswerIt is a hanging rope or cord, occasionally used because it expresses the extreme helplessness and hopelessness a depressed person feels.Dark clouds....... Or rain Drops
Yes, losing a friend can cause depression. Especially if you were close to that person.
The main cause to the start of the great depression was the Wall Street Crash in 1929.
Installment buying helps cause depression, because, it encourages one to do impulse buying, which can become a burden in repaying , causing depression.
Learned helplessness is a significant risk factor for the development of depression in humans (as well as in other mammals). This was first described and elucidated by Seligman.
The correct answer is Social-Cognitive
Seligman expanded his theory of learned helplessness to explain how people develop depression and anxiety when they perceive a lack of control over their environment. He suggested that individuals who experience repeated instances of helplessness develop a pessimistic explanatory style, which can contribute to the development of these mental health issues.
A person can experience learned helplessness when they learn to see things as they are - and not to imagine them to be even worse than they are. When they are fully aware of the situation they find themselves in and accept it, they are experiencing learned helplessness.
A. M. Alborz has written: 'The relationship of the learned helplessness model of depression to deficits in the psychological well being of the unemployed'
The three components of learned helplessness are cognitive (believing one has no control over a situation), motivational (feeling unable to change the outcome), and emotional (experiencing feelings of helplessness and resignation).
Seligman
Mario Mikulincer has written: 'Human learned helplessness' -- subject(s): Helplessness (Psychology)
learned helplessness
i think its innate behavior but depending on the context, it could also be learned helplessness,too
Christa Klava Helgoe has written: 'The relationship among depression, helplessness, and locus of control' -- subject(s): Depression, Mental, Mental Depression
Bipolar-clinicaly depressed