
Silence is often understood as the absence of expression—a gap where words, gestures, or overt reactions might otherwise appear. Yet within psychosomatic and clinical psychological frameworks, silence is rarely empty....

Silence is often understood as the absence of expression—a gap where words, gestures, or overt reactions might otherwise appear. Yet within psychosomatic and clinical psychological frameworks, silence is rarely empty....

A recurring feature of psychosomatic experience is the transformation of neutral or minor internal sensations into experiences perceived as significant, alarming, or even dangerous. Individuals may report discomfort, pressure, fluttering,...
Persistent tension is one of the most common yet least precisely understood psychosomatic phenomena. Individuals frequently report ongoing tightness, pressure, or discomfort that does not correspond to acute injury or...

Anticipation is often regarded as a cognitive act—a projection of possible future events based on prior experience and current inference. Yet within psychosomatic frameworks, anticipation is not merely mental; it...

Within psychosomatic theory, one of the most intricate and least intuitively understood processes concerns the role of meaning in shaping physiological states. Meaning, in this context, does not refer merely...

Repetition is one of the most striking features of psychosomatic phenomena. Individuals often report that certain symptoms recur in similar contexts, follow recognizable patterns, or persist even when initial triggers...
Chronic somatic distress refers to the persistent experience of physical discomfort, dysfunction, or pain that cannot be fully explained by identifiable structural pathology. While such conditions are often approached from...

Affective experience is often assumed to be synonymous with conscious feeling. When individuals report sadness, anxiety, or anger, these states are typically understood as subjective, accessible, and identifiable. Yet a...

Psychosomatic theory attempts to explain how subjective emotional experiences are translated into measurable physiological phenomena. At the core of this inquiry lies a central problem: emotional states are abstract, internally...

Stress is often described in psychological terms—as pressure, tension, or emotional strain arising from perceived demands. Yet its effects extend far beyond subjective experience. Stress is a whole-body phenomenon, involving...
Role conflict occurs when an individual faces incompatible demands attached to different social roles they occupy. Each person plays multiple roles—such as employee, parent, partner, student, friend—and these roles come with specific expectations and responsibilities. When these expectations clash, they create psychological tension and stress.
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