Glossary E

Deutsch: Emotionale Überlastung / Español: Sobrecarga emocional / Português: Sobrecarga emocional / Français: Surcharge émotionnelle / Italiano: Sovraccarico emotivo

Emotional overload in the psychology context refers to a state in which an individual experiences an overwhelming amount of emotions to the point where it becomes difficult to manage and cope with daily life. This condition can result from acute stress, traumatic events, or the accumulation of stressors over time, leading to feelings of exhaustion, confusion, and inability to function effectively.

Emotional Reasoning refers to the belief of something because it "feels" true, ignoring contradictory evidence. Example: "I just know that we lost our basketball game and it was all my fault, and no one among my team can convince me otherwise. It doesn't matter how many other players failed or how short I played".

Emotional regulation refer to strategies for coping with intense emotions, both positive and negative. Caregiver Behavior and observation are important factors in the Development of E

Deutsch: Emotionale Resilienz / Español: Resiliencia emocional / Português: Resiliência emocional / Français: Résilience émotionnelle / Italiano: Resilienza emotiva

Emotional resilience in the psychology context refers to an individual's ability to adapt to stress and adversity, bouncing back from difficult experiences with a sense of personal growth and improved coping strategies. It involves not just surviving challenges, but also thriving and finding meaning in them, thereby enhancing overall well-being and stability.

Emotional self -regulation refers to the process of adjusting one"s emotions to appropriate levels of intensity in Order to accomplish one"s goals

Emotional self-regulations are str

Emotional stability refers to the tendency to be relaxed and at peace with oneself.

Emotional state refers to the part of the mental status examination that assesses the client’s affect and mood. Affect is the client’s current, prevailing feeling state, as in happy, sad, joyful, angry, depressed, etc., and may also be reported as constricted or full, appropriate or inappropriate to content, labile, flat, blunted, exaggerated, and so forth. Mood represents the long-term, underlying emotional well-being of the client.

Emotional support refer to indications from other people that one is loved, valued, and cared for which is believed to be an important aspect of social support during times of stress.