Emotions
Healthy Relationships
Problem Solving
Self Compassion
Coping Skills and Self Care
100

This emotion is often associated with fear or threat.

Anxiety

100

This key element of a healthy relationship is built through honesty, reliability, and consistency over time.

Trust

100

This is the first step in solving a problem.

Identifying the problem

100

This is the practice of being kind to yourself during difficult moments instead of being critical.

Self-compassion

100

Practicing this type of self-care involves setting boundaries to protect your energy and well-being.

Emotional self-care

200

A primary emotion that hides beneath anger. 

Hurt, frustration, sadness, grief, fear, anxiety, betrayal, dissatisfaction, Pain, embarrassment, uncertainty.

Anger is a survival mechanism that was designed to protect our ancestors from physical harm. However, today, most threats are psychological, and anger can be confusing when experienced in these situations.

200

To maintain healthy relationships, we should identify and communicate these physical, psychological, and emotional limits to protect ourselves from being used, manipulated, or violated by others.

Boundaries

200

This type of thinking allows you to come up with many possible solutions.

Creative thinking

200

When practicing self-compassion, it’s important to treat yourself with the same care you would offer a friend.

Self-kindness

200

This technique helps individuals manage overwhelming feelings by breaking tasks into smaller, more manageable steps.

Task prioritization or breaking it down

300

Name the emotion that involves feeling wronged or mistreated by someone.

Resentment

300

In a healthy relationship, this practice ensures each person feels valued and understood by actively listening and responding with empathy.

Active listening

300

When solving a problem, it helps to look at it from this perspective.

Multiple viewpoints or an objective viewpoint

300

This concept in self-compassion involves recognizing that suffering is a shared human experience.

Common humanity

300

his form of self-care involves doing activities that engage your mind and creativity.

Mental self-care

400

This is the term for the ability to understand and share the feelings of another person.

Empathy

400

In a healthy relationship, this type of communication involves clearly expressing your thoughts and feelings while respecting the other person.

Assertive communication

400

This problem-solving technique involves generating potential solutions and testing them to see which works best in practice.

Trial and error

400

This practice involves taking a mindful pause to acknowledge difficult feelings without judgment.

Self-compassion break

400

Using this technique, you can identify negative thoughts and replace them with more positive or realistic ones.

Reframing

500

Name the term used when you experience multiple conflicting emotions at once.

Emotional ambivalence

500

This is the ability to resolve disagreements or conflicts in a way that respects both individuals' needs without hostility or avoidance.

Healthy conflict resolution

500

This strategy helps solve problems by listing the pros and cons of different solutions.

Decision-making matrix

500

Self-compassion can help you silence this internal voice that often criticizes and belittles.

The inner critic

500

This type of mindfulness focuses on bringing attention to the present moment without judgment.

Mindful awareness