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» How Re-Writing Your Story Can Change Your LifeSo what's your story? We all have one, you know -- a story about ourselves, where we come from, who we are, and what our place is in this world.Tags: control, decision making, motivation» Computational tool identifies 800 risk factors for PTSDResearchers have developed a computational tool that can establish the risk of post-traumatic stress disorder developing in individuals within ten days of a traumatic event.» Could Loneliness Shorten a Life?Title: Could Loneliness Shorten a Life?Category: Health NewsCreated: 3/17/2015 12:00:00 AMLast Editorial Review: 3/18/2015 12:00:00 AM» Paying for the Listening EarIf you're paying someone in a therapeutic relationship, how can you know whether they really care? Is it all about the money? And how do questions like these touch on concerns that might come up in other relationships?Tags: in practice, relationships, therapy
» How Re-Writing Your Story Can Change Your LifeSo what's your story? We all have one, you know -- a story about ourselves, where we come from, who we are, and what our place is in this world.Tags: control, decision making, motivation
So what's your story? We all have one, you know -- a story about ourselves, where we come from, who we are, and what our place is in this world.
Tags: control, decision making, motivation
» Computational tool identifies 800 risk factors for PTSDResearchers have developed a computational tool that can establish the risk of post-traumatic stress disorder developing in individuals within ten days of a traumatic event.
» Could Loneliness Shorten a Life?Title: Could Loneliness Shorten a Life?Category: Health NewsCreated: 3/17/2015 12:00:00 AMLast Editorial Review: 3/18/2015 12:00:00 AM
» Paying for the Listening EarIf you're paying someone in a therapeutic relationship, how can you know whether they really care? Is it all about the money? And how do questions like these touch on concerns that might come up in other relationships?Tags: in practice, relationships, therapy
If you're paying someone in a therapeutic relationship, how can you know whether they really care? Is it all about the money? And how do questions like these touch on concerns that might come up in other relationships?
Tags: in practice, relationships, therapy