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Examples

  • The Adventures of Melody Yellowvan: Stressors in my life this week

    Stressors in my life this week Becca 2009

  • Stressors differ for reservists, active-duty troops.

    A Rite of Passage 2009

  • Stressors are, in shorthand, whatever you're trying to avoid: an electric shock, if you're a lab rat; the sight of a predator, if you're a prey animal; a 500-point drop in the Dow, if you're a Yuppie.

    Stress 2008

  • Stressors may be more intense for those in the (National) Guard and (Army) Reserves, with many leaving families and jobs.

    War Wounds of The Mind Part IV: A Warning About Troops Returning from Iraq and Afghanistan 2007

  • In addition to giving you the chemical tools to beat the dickens out of your Stressors, stress hormones also work throughout various regions of the brain to influence everything from mood and fear to memory and appetite.

    You Staying Young MEHMET C. OZ 2007

  • In addition to giving you the chemical tools to beat the dickens out of your Stressors, stress hormones also work throughout various regions of the brain to influence everything from mood and fear to memory and appetite.

    You Staying Young MEHMET C. OZ 2007

  • In addition to giving you the chemical tools to beat the dickens out of your Stressors, stress hormones also work throughout various regions of the brain to influence everything from mood and fear to memory and appetite.

    You Staying Young MEHMET C. OZ 2007

  • Stressors differ for reservists, active-duty troops.

    OpEdNews - Quicklink: 65 Active duty troops ask congress to end Iraqi occupation 2006

  • The worker tried to establish an accepting and safe therapeutic environment and also problem-solved with the client about how she could reduce the immediate Stressors in her relationship and on the job in the short run in order to give herself some time and space to deal with her issues.

    Object Relations Theory and Self Psychology in Social Work Practice EDA G. GOLDSTEIN 2001

  • The worker tried to establish an accepting and safe therapeutic environment and also problem-solved with the client about how she could reduce the immediate Stressors in her relationship and on the job in the short run in order to give herself some time and space to deal with her issues.

    Object Relations Theory and Self Psychology in Social Work Practice EDA G. GOLDSTEIN 2001

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