How does it work when a person has to deal with something.
Answer by J.
I guess so - in that extended extreme states of mind are usually bad for you, although they are occasionally prompted by the circumstances.
Most behavoirs, mind and body, are conciously controlled by the frontal or prefrontal cortex. Maybe this is the control for complex mental health issues, i.e. cognitive sets
But alternatively it could a physiological process - we know the brain releases certain hormones to "clean up" neurotransmitters regularly (which is what some drugs attempt to prevent i.e. SSRIs for depression - Selective Serotonin Re-uptake Inhibitors) - so that would be artifically bringing homeostatis back. Once the neurotransmitters have reduced and the activity in that area of the brain dies down, so does that particular mind set.
Answer by cwoodlief
There can be, and I think the way you achieve that is by fully understanding our emotions as humans. There are gonna be times when we will be depressed, happy, sad, hurt, apathetic because its the way we've been wired. When you go through times like that you have to see the big picture, and that will help you stay balanced through whatever you face.
Hi,I did the following:
When Bad Things Happen to Good Librarians
For more info www.librarian411.org This library training has been developed to help front-line library workers better serve patrons with mental illness and developmental disabilities. The training was created using input from focus groups consisting of public library staff members, mental health consumers and mental health professionals. The content of the program reflects many hours of collaboration and interaction between Department of Mental Health (DMH) librarians and the "in-the-trenches" front-line workers of many Missouri libraries.
Orignal From: Is there a "homeostasis" to maintaining good mental health?
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