Hi! Respect the blog`s work, I think that the blog idea is good and innovative; I didn’t know it before this activity, so, the first times I thought that it would be more hard.
Sometimes is complicated because you don’t find thinks to say, but think about the topic previously is easier and the ideas just flow.
Other times, I didn’t like the requirement of a particular number of words, because … sometimes you don’t have any more to say, like now…=P`, but I understand it, because it is the best way for get a good text …
Well I need to go for a wppsi test, in 10 minutes more, and I will go to the English class in two hours more too.
Sigh …bye!
Thursday, October 25, 2007
Sunday, October 14, 2007
Country´s Holidays
Hello, I’m going to talk about how the Country’s holidays were for me ... the truth, is that they were very entertaining because I celebrated my birthday number 21 with my boyfriend, who was birthdates in this date too, we go out, and we had a nice time together.
I didn’t go to any “fonda” but ate very much roasted with my family and with Rodrigo’s family too, well I was dancing cueca with his cousin, she teacher me and it was funny.
Here, I show you a photography of my cousin’s daughter who is one adorable baby, she has just eight months old and she is wearing a little dress of little “huasa” =D
Bye!
I didn’t go to any “fonda” but ate very much roasted with my family and with Rodrigo’s family too, well I was dancing cueca with his cousin, she teacher me and it was funny.
Here, I show you a photography of my cousin’s daughter who is one adorable baby, she has just eight months old and she is wearing a little dress of little “huasa” =D
Bye!
Monet´s art
Monet´s paint since 1890 to 1826.
These four impressionistic paintings of Monet of the Japanese Bridge, they’re so odd because in them, the illness of the author is reflected, Monet suffered of cataracts since 1899 and he painted even so. To get in his painting, we can say that Claude Monet (Paris, 1840 - Giverny, 1926), is one of the painters who create and define to the impressionism, movement to which loyalty will guard all his life and which was consisting of practising basically a sensitive, vague and luminous painting, centring on the appearance that the colour and the light give to the things. The painter, very long-lived, suffered his last years a visual deficit for cataracts of which they are an illustrative testimony these paintings of the Japanese bridge constructed in his garden of Giverny's town, on the reservoir replete with euphrasy that is going to be one of his principal motives of inspiration.
For Therapy, a New Guide with a Touch of Personality
The New York Times Book Review
A great new was published at begin of the last year, is truth, is old, but it is an important new for the psychologists too. Because more of them has been practiced the psychology under, for a lot of them calls, a superficial paradigm based on just symtomatology.
The encyclopedia of mental disorders known as the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual is built on a principle that many therapists find simplistic: that people's symptoms are the most reliable way to classify their mental troubles.
The manual, called the D.S.M., does not speculate about internal thoughts or
unconscious assumptions, which researchers say are all but impossible to scientifically
standardize.
The result, many psychotherapists believe, is a document that is comprehensive but shallow, ultimately too superficial to capture the complexity of human motivation, the depth of emotional pain
Now, in an effort to provide more of this context, a coalition of organizations representing psychoanalytically oriented therapists has produced a diagnostic manual of its own. Unlike most psychiatrists, psychoanalysts focus their efforts on understanding the meaning and the psychological roots of mental suffering, rather than on diagnosing mental disorders and treating them with drugs or less intensive methods of talk therapy.
The new guidebook, unveiled Saturday at the annual meeting of the American
Psychoanalytic Association is modeled on the standard diagnostic manual in its format and its title, the Psychodynamic Diagnostic Manual. But it emphasizes the importance of individual personality patterns, like masochistic, dependent or depressive types, which are found in many people but which qualify as full-blown disorders only at the extremes.
bye!
A great new was published at begin of the last year, is truth, is old, but it is an important new for the psychologists too. Because more of them has been practiced the psychology under, for a lot of them calls, a superficial paradigm based on just symtomatology.
The encyclopedia of mental disorders known as the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual is built on a principle that many therapists find simplistic: that people's symptoms are the most reliable way to classify their mental troubles.
The manual, called the D.S.M., does not speculate about internal thoughts or
unconscious assumptions, which researchers say are all but impossible to scientifically
standardize.
The result, many psychotherapists believe, is a document that is comprehensive but shallow, ultimately too superficial to capture the complexity of human motivation, the depth of emotional pain
Now, in an effort to provide more of this context, a coalition of organizations representing psychoanalytically oriented therapists has produced a diagnostic manual of its own. Unlike most psychiatrists, psychoanalysts focus their efforts on understanding the meaning and the psychological roots of mental suffering, rather than on diagnosing mental disorders and treating them with drugs or less intensive methods of talk therapy.
The new guidebook, unveiled Saturday at the annual meeting of the American
Psychoanalytic Association is modeled on the standard diagnostic manual in its format and its title, the Psychodynamic Diagnostic Manual. But it emphasizes the importance of individual personality patterns, like masochistic, dependent or depressive types, which are found in many people but which qualify as full-blown disorders only at the extremes.
bye!
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