Clinical Psychology
The stimuli we receive, our psyche and behavior all interact in a constant and dynamic manner with the biological processes of our body. This means that they are in continuous dynamic interaction with the production of enzymes and hormonal fluctuations. This perpetual biological process involves stimuli received from the present and stimuli / memories / experiences recalled from the past, which may also be projected to the future through our imagination and learning from past experience.
For example, if, in the past, stimulus A had either repeatedly caused or was repeatedly accompanied by something negative, whether a negative development or a negative emotion, then it is likely that the same stimulus A, or a stimulus similar to A, at present will cause a negative – pessimistic prediction for the future, a negative emotion a priori (before anything happens) or even a negative development due to rushed and aggressive behaviors and/or avoidance behavior, procrastination, catastrophizing, resignation etc. (depending on each person, i.e. the period in his or her life, the occasion, the circumstances etc.), while simultaneously causing the respective biological processes in the body.
This is how past, present and future-projected stimuli are constantly formed in our minds as we grow in our social environments. In other words, the stimuli we receive constantly interact with biochemical reactions and have a dynamic impact on them, due to the fact that they bring memories, thoughts, emotions and behaviors. The same is true for the opposite: the positivity-negativity impact of the stimuli we receive is at an extend a product of effects of our biological processes, as they transpire and take form in our bodies on a daily basis.
Regardless of whether a person suffers from certain symptoms of stress or anxiety at a subclinical level – which are nevertheless persistent – or a more intense set of symptoms, i.e. a fully-developed illness, medicines are capable of responding adequately in order to treat the symptomatology. Thus, the person suffering is given a chance to restore the biochemical functions and the biorhythms of its body to the desired levels. However, people can also benefit from psychotherapy in order to investigate, resolve, accept and manage cognitive patterns of past, the present or projected onto the future, along with emotions and behaviors relevant to the person’s self, the others around it and the world at large. Apostolia Alizioti, B.Sc. (Psychol), M.Sc. (Health Psychol), M.B.A., GBC member of the British Psychological Society.