Psychology, asked by vridhibhatia8227, 9 months ago

a person's conflicts can be resolved if he receives unconditional positive regard from another person do you agree with the notion or not?Logical arguments

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Answered by aditya577
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Answer:

a person's conflicts can be resolved if he receives unconditional positive regard from another person do you agree with the notion or not?Logical arguments

Explanation:

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Answered by ashauthiras
1

Answer:

Unconditional positive regard, sometimes referred to as “UPR”, is a term attributed to Carl Rogers, the creator of person-centred counselling and one of the founders of humanistic therapy.

Unconditional positive regard refers to accepting and supporting another exactly as they are, without evaluating or judging them.

At the heart of the concept is the belief that every person has the personal resources within to help themselves, if they are only offered the environment of acceptance to foster their own recognition of this.

It can help to think of a parent/child relationship to understand UPR.

If you were lucky enough to have had a healthy childhood and good parenting, your parent or guardian loved and accepted you regardless of how you behaved or what you did. If you made mistakes, or had a temper tantrum, it was okay. When you were a teenager with wildly different opinions to your parent, that was entirely acceptable. You were trying out new things and discovering who you are, and you were offered unconditional positive regard.

If your childhood did not contain unconditional positive regard, you were shown disapproval if you did something that did not match what your parent wanted or if you disagreed with their idea of what was correct. You were only accepted if you fit into their wants and needs. Perhaps you were taught that some of your emotions were ‘bad’ and that you must learn to hide them and be more pleasing. You were shown conditional positive regard.

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