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acceptance
final stages of death/dying
adolescence
12-18 years of age
affection
warm and tender feeling for another person
anger
a strong negative emotion
anorexia
refusing to eat
arteriosclerosis
thickening & hardening of the arterial walls
bargaining
making a deal
bulimarexia
bulimia but then provokes vomiting
bulimia
excessive eating then fasts or refuses to eat
chemical abuse
use of substances such as alcohol/drugs that ends in dependency
cognitive
having to do with an organism's thinking and understanding
compensation
substitute one goal for another
daydreaming
dreamlike thought process
defense mechanisms
unconscious acts that help a person deal with an unpleasant situation
denial
not accepting
depression
deep sadness
development
changes in intellectual, mental, emotion, social
early childhood
1 - 6 years of age
early adulthood
19-40 years of age
emotional
feelings
esteem
feeling important or worthy
growth
measurable, physical changes through a person's life
hospice
care for terminally ill patients
infancy
earliest childhood stage
late adulthood
65 years and older
late childhood
6 - 12 years old
life stages
certain stages of growth and development
mental
having to do with disorders of the mind
middle adulthood
40- 65 years of age
motivated
`stimulated to act
needs
lack of things or something that is required or desired
physiological needs
basic needs
projection
placing blame on another
puberty
developmental stage of sexual organs and sexual characteristics
rationalization
making sense of a certain situation
repression
unconsciously putting negative feelings to the back of our mind
right to die
the right to refuse measures to prolong life
safety
free from anxiety and fear
satisfaction
feeling of pleasure or success
self actualization
obtaining full potential
sexuality
person's feelings concerning female and male nature
suicide
taking your own life
suppression
being aware that we are putting feelings in the back of our minds
tension
frustration
terminal illness
disease that cannot be cured
withdrawal
cease to communicate or remove themselves physically