Emotional needs are a process that continues from childhood. The degree to which these needs are met varies in terms of individual characteristics. For example, the need for security
lasts throughout life, but the intensity and stability of this need varies from person to person.
. Mental health is possible with the ability to meet one's needs in an attitude
.
An adult whose needs were not met in his past life creates cognitive schemas for the lack of basic early needs, and these schemas are called early maladaptive schemas.
In later periods, the individual has difficulty in having the capacity to cope with his/her needs. Meeting these needs and forming compatible schemas depend on psychological satisfaction, security and secure attachment model. Schemes; It occurs at different stages of cognitive development during childhood and is the most important factor that helps learn new information and recall memories in the future. Within the scope of consciousness, we perceive ourselves as individuals, and at the same time, we realize that we are in an environment and in relationships. The way he experiences life is based on his core self-concept. Meeting our needs along with experiencing secure attachments and relationships during childhood ensures the formation of healthy and harmonious schemas. If the opposite of this situation is considered, different psychopathological processes occur. Relationships with people and life experiences are also shaped depending on these schemas. Social phobia is also one of the pathologies valid for this condition. Social anxiety, anxiety felt in the presence of unfamiliar people or when performing, and withdrawal from performance are characteristics of social anxiety. The most common situations are; Speaking in public or if this speech is made unprepared, intense anxiety occurs when faced with the situation of communicating with people who are superior to oneself in status or with whom one has not known before. In some cases, people experience anxiety in social interactions or operant situations. They constantly worry about making mistakes and feel that they are being observed by others, as well as the feeling that they will be criticized. They also feel intense anxiety. The pathological intensification of the shyness and timidity seen in the person's normal life and the negative impact on the person's quality of daily life are among the factors of social phobia. It has been determined that in cities where there are large families and crowded populations, people establish relationships with each other more easily
and the percentage of social phobia is lower.
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