Now this Advertiser used Google’s DoubleClick ad serving/targeting platform to determine that you that said, this ad may was matched to your interests or previous visits to websites, or it may was selected based solely on the website you are visiting. Thus, optimizing our mental health. Generally, we should like to think that we have built our environments in this way that they minimize the factors that could result to psychological and behavioral disturbances among individuals. Usually, for many children, symptoms of psychological disorders are linked to the negative stressors in the environment. This is the case. Additionally, psychosocial structures in cities where many of us know that there is poor housing expose children to violence that could detriment their mental health. Then, in the United States alone, one in almost any five children suffers severe physical abuse and one in every group of five lives below the poverty line. It is these mental illnesses root from the child’s effort to deny the violence, abuse, or trauma they experience as coping mechanism so as to protect his mental wellness.
Repetitive exposure to violence or to the activities of a dysfunctional environment could also contribute to the development of severe dissociative disorders.
The rate of victimization within intimate relationships only reinforces the dissociative response.
Children who repeatedly experienced sexual trauma or sexual abuse are most probably to develop dissociative disorders just like multiple personality disorder. With that said, traumatic interpersonal relationship between a parent or a parentfigure and a child is viewed as a negative environment for the child’s growth and development.
Just think for a moment. With that said, this relationship only means that their relationship is structured in the manner that it damages a child’s psychological ‘well being’.
These give stress to certain beliefs that are psychologically unfavorable to the child like irrational beliefs on ‘selfblame’, irrational explanations on traumatic experiences, maladaptive behaviors, unconscious guilt, shame and doubt about oneself.