ambivalence in psychology is the state of feeling as though you have no inclination in either direction about an issue involving emotions. you are unaffected by the issue due to this stalled state. in my life it has applied itself like this: i have always had a gut feeling that life isn't worth the effort it takes to make it in this world. (at root a copout but a feeling nonetheless) therefore i fail to make many of the choices which would lead me in any particular direction. i fail to fall apart completely, but i fail to truly thrive as well.
on a more psychoanalytic note, ambivalence can be interpreted as a sort of defense mechanism, in that denying having a deeply-rooted feeling about something lessens the pain of making choices. this is similar to a failure to commit: some do it for fear of success, some do it for fear of failure.
I believe Rollo May had some insightful things to say on this subject.
It is called ambivalence. Ambivalence is the experience of having contradictory emotions or feelings about a particular person, object, or situation at the same time.
There are ten branches of Psychology not two. Abnormal Psychology; Behavioral Psychology; Clinical Psychology; Cognitive Psychology; Community Psychology; Developmental Psychology; Educational Psychology; Evolutionary Psychology; Legal Psychology; and Personality Psychology.
there are very many subfields in psychology. some examples are experimental psychology, developmental psychology, consumer psychology, media psychology, educational psychology, exercise and sport psychology, behavioral psychology, social psychology, foreinsic psychology, clinical psychology, and geriatric psychology.
Pure psychology have 6 branches. 1.Experimental Psychology 2.Abnormal Psychology 3.Social Psychology 4.Developmental Psychology 5.Comparative Psychology 6.Physiological Psychology
Some branches of psychology include clinical psychology, developmental psychology, cognitive psychology, and social psychology. Related fields include neuroscience, counseling psychology, industrial-organizational psychology, and educational psychology.
Ambivalence Avenue was created on 2009-06-22.
The word "ambivalence" is a noun. It refers to the state of having mixed feelings or contradictory emotions about someone or something.
The origin of ambivalence is from the Latin ambi- 'on both sides' and valere 'be worth'.
Lisa Lewis has written: 'Ambivalence' -- subject(s): Ambivalence
He was not sure whether he wanted to go, and his ambivalence was obvious as he pondered his decision.
No it's a noun
am-biv-a-lence
he demonstrated his ambivalence toward the decision by refusing to speak either for or against.
Ambivalence is a feeling of not caring about anything in one certain way. It can cause procrastination. It can also be called the "cold feet "syndrome.
Be honest. Face the pain.
Ambivalence is the experience of having conflicting feelings or attitudes towards a person, thing, or situation. It involves holding two contrasting emotions or viewpoints simultaneously, which can lead to uncertainty or indecision.
Catherine A. Civello has written: 'Patterns of ambivalence' -- subject(s): Ambivalence in literature, Criticism and interpretation, Women and literature, History