Letting it out may be bad for your
emotional health. Many people assume that sharing feelings openly and often is a
positive ideal that promotes mental health. But some social critics and
psychologists now conclude that repressing one’s feelings may do more good than
venting emotions. "A small number of researchers are taking an empirical look at the general assumption that speaking out and declaring one’s feelings is better than holding them in," writes Christina Sommers, a resident fellow at the American Enterprise Institute. At Suffilk University, psychologist Jane Bybee classified high-school students on the basis of their self-awareness: "sensitizers" were extremely aware of their internal states, "repressors" focused little on themselves, and "intermediates" occupied the middle range. Bybee then collected student eval A. researchers do not agree on how to deal with bad emotions B. expressing one’s private feelings is better than repressing them C. the tendency to repress one’s feelings may arise from social values D. the author does not agree with the researchers [填空题]
I believe he will do a good job. [单项选择]
Letting it out may be bad for your emotional health. Many people assume that sharing feelings openly and often is a positive ideal that promotes mental health. But some social critics and psychologists now conclude that repressing one’s feelings may do more good than venting emotions. 我来回答: 提交
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