any character in fact there is no dialogue present and character stories are not known in the opening scene where the soldiers descent to the beach. According to her analysis of this scene, characters express emotions such as fear, anticipation, anxiety and some depressed resignation. Most of the audiences do in fact end up experiencing similar feelings to those of the characters. “This Kind of mimicry is a result of emotional contagion, an automatic and involuntary affective process that can occur
gloomy criticism would certainly be missing her point. This is perhaps best illustrated in the opening piece concerning Rankine’s father and his recently deceased mother. It’s interesting how Rankine describes her father as being totally disturbed with pain at receiving the news of his mother’s death. As distraught as her father may be is simply an occurrence to Rankine who is an adolescent at the time. She is no more connected to her father’s emotions following his loss than she would be trying to empathize
EFFECTS MDMA produces the following effects: Mild euphoria: although the patient is not in ecstasy, the MDMA does create a more positive mind space, allowing patients to process their trauma more easily. Decreases anxiety and fear: this allows the patient to think and talk about their traumatic memories without becoming overly frightened by them, meaning that the sessions can be as efficient as possible. Enhances perception of feelings and intensifies them: by having intensified feelings and responses
Story tellers • It should not be an “imaginary story”, these type of stories will hold good when you have an idea and want to build a scenario. • Story on a product or Service that you have in front of you are REAL!!! They are an outcome of a real “pain point” and they implemented / deployed. This should be a story that really happened in the corporate or at a Client Location or Account / Project Unit or Consumer side. • Bring out the real story and those real hero’s, then those stories will have
From a prescriptive point of view, the personal aspect of conflict deals with minimizing “the destructive effects of social conflict and to maximize its potential for growth in the person as an individual human being” (p. 24). Alex Lopez was at the heart of this conflict that changed the lives
Woman: God’s second mistake? Friedrich Nietzsche, a German philosopher, who regarded ‘thirst for power’ as the sole driving force of all human actions, has many a one-liners to his credit. ‘Woman was God’s second mistake’, he declared. Unmindful of the reactionary scathing criticism and shrill abuses he invited for himself, especially from the ever-irritable feminist brigade. The fact and belief that God never ever commits a mistake, brings Nietzsche’s proclamation dashingly down into the dust bin