19 resultados para Negative coping behaviours
Resumo:
The present investigation looks into the attitudes toward death in Paul’s authentic letters, and puts them in relation to modern theories of psychological coping. Drawing on psychologically-oriented hermeneutic theory, and theories about psychological coping in particular, I argue that each case of psychological coping must be understood in its historical situation as strategies emanating from a specific person’s subjective appraisal (cf. Pargament, Lazarus and Folkman). Paul’s letters frequently refer to persecution and violent death. To aid in psychological coping is often integral to the purpose of the letters, which makes the perspective of psychological coping akin to their genre. In the course of a tentatively assumed chronological order of 1 Thessalonians, Galatians, 1 Corinthians, 2 Corinthians, Romans, Philippians, and Philemon, Paul moves from the perception of Jesus dying for the faithful to the understanding of dying with Jesus. His coping strategies concerning death are gradually transformed from conservative and deferring coping styles, to a more self-directing coping style, to collaborative and transformative coping styles, and finally to a new sense of deferring coping style in prison. The last case of deferring coping carries the traits of generosity and flexibility even in the face of death, which is in contrast to his previous letters. Through his correspondence, we see Paul’s attitude toward death transformed from denial to reaction, to processing, to acceptance (cf. Lindemann, Kübler-Ross, Bowlby, Parkes, among others). His strategies also shift in accordance with these understandings. Denial is accompanied by diversion, threat by aggression, processing by rumination, and acceptance by joy. The study shows the hermeneutic benefits of reading Paul’s letters as the rhetorically framed expressions of a person in a particular historical situation. The letters open small windows through which we can glimpse the coping process of a person of antiquity. In adopting the method of psychological exegesis, the study shows that the variety of attitudes toward death in Paul’s letters makes sense from the perspective of psychological coping. The psychological aspect of these letters is an underexamined richness that can extend into areas of contemporary individual and group identity, and from there to public policy and ethics.
Resumo:
Tämän pro gradu -tutkielman tavoitteena oli ymmärtää ja kuvata korkeasti koulutettujen henkilöiden selviytymistä työn menetyksestä ja pitkittyneestä työttömyydestä. Tutkimuksessa tarkasteltiin pakotettua uramuutosta ja työttömyyttä sekä siitä selviytymistä yksilön kokemuksen näkökulmasta. Lisäksi tutkittiin työttömyyden tukipalveluiden hyödyllisyyttä. Tutkimus toteutettiin kvalitatiivisena kuvailevana tapaustutkimuksena. Tutkimuksen empiirinen aineisto kerättiin haastattelemalla 13 korkeasti koulutettua uusimaalaista työtöntä henkilöä. Haastattelut toteutettiin puolistrukturoitua teemahaastattelumenetelmää käyttäen. Tutkimuksen tulosten perusteella voidaan havaita, että työn menetyksellä koettiin olevan sekä negatiivisia että positiivisia vaikutuksia. Työn menetys koettiin osittain helpotuksena ja hengähdystaukona. Henkilöt selviytyivät itse työn menetyksen tilanteesta jokseenkin hyvin, etenkin jos muutokseen oli voinut varautua ja irtisanomisperusteet olivat selkeät. Korkeasti koulutetut henkilöt käyttivät monipuolisesti sekä tunne- että ongelmakeskeisiä selviytymisstrategioita selviytyäkseen työttömyydestä. Näistä aktiivinen työnhaku sekä opiskelu korostuivat selviytymiskeinoina. Työttömyyden pitkittyminen heikensi selvästi yksilön hyvinvointia ja vertaistuen merkitys korostui työttömyyden pitkittyessä. Tutkimuksesta ilmeni, että julkiset työvoimapalvelut eivät tue riittävästi korkeasti koulutettuja työttömiä. Tukipalveluja tulisi kehittää vastaamaan paremmin muuttuneiden työmarkkinoiden vaateita, sillä työmarkkinoiden muutokset haastavat urien uudenlaiseen tarkasteluun.
Resumo:
The goal of this study was to explore how do customers’ life-related negative emotions affect real estate business. This was divided into two research questions: 1. What life-related negative emotions can be recognised in real estate customer encounters? 2. How do the recognised emotions affect customer encounters and the realtor’s work? 3. How can the realtor take the emotions into account in customer service? The theoretical background consists of two main lines of study: emotions and customer encounters. A wide literary review on emotions research was conducted from a cognitive psychology point of view, focusing on negative emotions. Emotions research was then combined into the field of customer encounters. Qualitative study was chosen as the methodological basis of the study. Empirical material of this study was collected through in-depth interviews with 13 successful Finnish real estate agents. Narrative research was used as a method for the study. Four life-related emotion categories were recognized in real estate customer encounters: sadness, anger, anxiety and shame. These emotions rose from issues varying from death of a close one to divorce and from major changes in life stages to deep emotional attachment to an old home. The study also found that these incidental negative emotions do affect customer encounters and realtors’ work. The emotions affected the decision making of customers and sometimes overshadowed reason. Some emotions made the customer passive and slow to make any decisions, while others made their decision making fast and hasty. Even though the incidental emotions might not have had anything to do with the real estate deal, they could affect the outcome of the customer encounter and the whole real estate deal. Interestingly enough, the study found that not all successful real estate agents knowingly serve customers in an emotional level. The study does, however, suggest that in fact it may be an ethical decision of the customer server to take into account the emotional state of the customer. Attending to the emotional side of customers does not only increase pleasantness of the customer encounter, but may improve and balance customer decision making and prevent hasty decisions possibly leading to improved customer satisfaction. This study also gave practical managerial implications to customer service providers on how negative incidental emotions can be attended to in a customer encounter. This study could be useful not only to real estate agents, but also in other types of customer service, especially with vulnerable populations or other types of home-related business.