On this day… 7th of October
seen from Bulgaria
seen from Germany
seen from Canada
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
seen from France
seen from India

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Germany

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Macao SAR China
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Singapore
seen from South Africa
On this day… 7th of October
肖战DAYTOY 2015-10-07 01:59 iPhone 5s
有些话就让它烂在心里💫
2015.10.07 ELF JAPAN Update
The only way to win against someone who wants to beat me is not to play the game.
20151007 Blonote
20151007
Emotional Stability: Emotional stability is crucial at the clinic. Upon hearing cases of other people’s lives it gets really easy for someone to become emotionally invested, not that it is a bad thing. Actually it’s crucial to not only become emotionally invested but also realize and try to figure out why and where these feelings are coming from. They are the most accurate tools in this field in understanding other people and even professionals have a hard time being grounded this way. Therefore it is common for the clinicians to learn grounding techniques or consult others in order to look at their emotions objectively which can only happen if one is emotionally stable. Extraversion: This is a bit of a weird concept when applied to a psychology clinic. Amongst other therapists or the clinical director, sometimes it is good to be friendly and positive. However with a patient I’d imagine that you are trying to see into the other person rather than establish your own persona. Openness: This is another weird thing in a clinic. Since patient information is important, being too open in expressing this sort of information is something to be wary of. However in a therapeutic setting, it might be the most important to really see who the patient is and what he/she/they are feeling. Agreeableness: This goes without saying it is important in any case of trying to help someone. Not only are you trying to understand them but also make them understand themselves. This requires the other person to listen to you, open up to you, feel comfortable with you. It is almost basic.
Conscientiousness: Now this is one I find to be most significant (although emotional stability is fairly close behind) because it is what you have to be all the time. Being with patients, it is easy to get lost and just interact like you normally do but you have to be deliberate. Every single question, word, action, treatment, idea, must be towards a certain purpose in the overall goal or for the goal itself. Letting something slip can be a dangerous thing especially if it was without thought and therefore no measures to fix it.