Friends please answer fast please please please please please don't waste the points
My sister has got a homework in which she has to write 10 lines for the situation she was brave and confident .
Answers
Answered by
1
Bravery can be simply defined as being brave or possessing & displaying courage. In heroic parlance, it’s being able to face & deal with danger or fear without flinching or batting an eyelid. Also known as Courage, fortitude, will, and intrepidity it’s been associated with various characters both in mythology & business parlance. But it’s not just their domain; the common man in his life time comes across various such situations & more often than not displays varying degrees of bravery & grit. It is this common man that I am interested in. Being brave doesn’t mean being fearless it rather means a person does what he should do, despite the literal Damocles sword on your head.
It is not much for human fancy but for the very fact that bravery is an attribute very necessary for the smooth functioning of the human world today, has heightened its importance for psychologists. You take the case of a policeman standing up to criminals, naxals, or the common man in an office refusing bribes or the case of a woman braving chauvinistic males to rise up the corporate ladder, in all these cases we find how the world survives because of a few individuals who find inherent courage to brave odds and emerge successful. It suffices to say that bravery as a behavioral trait is highly alluring, and people tend to look in awe at those who visibly possess it, but what we should realize is bravery is something which is inherent & comes in differing forms & origins; hence its study has to encompass all such factors. Bravery in its various forms after all keeps us going, keeps this world inhabitable.
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
Bravery is a quality of spirit that enables you to face danger or pain without showing fear, but one often misconceived notion of people is that being brave means being fearless. Being brave doesn’t me you don’t fear the adversity; it means you have the strength of will to overcome whatever fear you have.
Bravery as a concept can apply to a fairly large number of instances, therefore a quick classification of bravery will help us look at its various aspects in greater detail:
Physical bravery: It entails acting or doing something in spite of possible harm that can occur to one’s body. The heroic stories of the past or the instances where we act for our beliefs even in the face of physical danger are a typical example of this.
Moral bravery: It involves acting in a manner that will enhance or reinforce ones beliefs to be good and true. This basically is in face of social disapproval and other forms of backlash. In today’s world, it symbolizes standing up against the over jealous khaps or the moral police.
Psychological bravery: It deals with acting against one’s own natural urges & inclinations, facing our inner demons & overcoming them. This generally doesn’t have any societal moral implication. Examples of this can be overcoming one’s addictions like drugs, tobacco addictions etc.; getting over irrational anxieties & forms of parasitic relationships.
Basing on the above we reach at a working definition of bravery as:
“Bravery is a behavioral trait which allows us to overcome our inhibitions, our inner fears & gives us the strength to do what we feel is right, irrespective of any form of backlash. It is something which imbibes in us a sense of self-belief which can make us scale mountains & do things which we believed we never could.”
Review of Literature:
Instances of bravery have been documented in various books relating to wars & corporate moves. “Number the stars” which won the Newbery Medal in 1990, tells the story of two ten year old girls, whose homeland is occupied by Nazi Germany during the second world war, it documents the hardships they faced & the courage shown by their parents in shielding one of them(who was a jew) from the nazis. Broadly it describes the condition of the entire Danish countryside. It is a story of grit & determination shown in face of unfathomable risk. [1]
In the corporate world we have the
It is not much for human fancy but for the very fact that bravery is an attribute very necessary for the smooth functioning of the human world today, has heightened its importance for psychologists. You take the case of a policeman standing up to criminals, naxals, or the common man in an office refusing bribes or the case of a woman braving chauvinistic males to rise up the corporate ladder, in all these cases we find how the world survives because of a few individuals who find inherent courage to brave odds and emerge successful. It suffices to say that bravery as a behavioral trait is highly alluring, and people tend to look in awe at those who visibly possess it, but what we should realize is bravery is something which is inherent & comes in differing forms & origins; hence its study has to encompass all such factors. Bravery in its various forms after all keeps us going, keeps this world inhabitable.
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
Bravery is a quality of spirit that enables you to face danger or pain without showing fear, but one often misconceived notion of people is that being brave means being fearless. Being brave doesn’t me you don’t fear the adversity; it means you have the strength of will to overcome whatever fear you have.
Bravery as a concept can apply to a fairly large number of instances, therefore a quick classification of bravery will help us look at its various aspects in greater detail:
Physical bravery: It entails acting or doing something in spite of possible harm that can occur to one’s body. The heroic stories of the past or the instances where we act for our beliefs even in the face of physical danger are a typical example of this.
Moral bravery: It involves acting in a manner that will enhance or reinforce ones beliefs to be good and true. This basically is in face of social disapproval and other forms of backlash. In today’s world, it symbolizes standing up against the over jealous khaps or the moral police.
Psychological bravery: It deals with acting against one’s own natural urges & inclinations, facing our inner demons & overcoming them. This generally doesn’t have any societal moral implication. Examples of this can be overcoming one’s addictions like drugs, tobacco addictions etc.; getting over irrational anxieties & forms of parasitic relationships.
Basing on the above we reach at a working definition of bravery as:
“Bravery is a behavioral trait which allows us to overcome our inhibitions, our inner fears & gives us the strength to do what we feel is right, irrespective of any form of backlash. It is something which imbibes in us a sense of self-belief which can make us scale mountains & do things which we believed we never could.”
Review of Literature:
Instances of bravery have been documented in various books relating to wars & corporate moves. “Number the stars” which won the Newbery Medal in 1990, tells the story of two ten year old girls, whose homeland is occupied by Nazi Germany during the second world war, it documents the hardships they faced & the courage shown by their parents in shielding one of them(who was a jew) from the nazis. Broadly it describes the condition of the entire Danish countryside. It is a story of grit & determination shown in face of unfathomable risk. [1]
In the corporate world we have the
Mayankrajpoot:
You are the biggest stupid ever
Answered by
1
1.One day I went to a Reserve Sanctuary for watching animals.
2.There I saw a tiger sitting on a tree. 3.I was in a bus and suddenly the tiger jumped on the bus.
4.I was a really scared but I saw some children who were panicked by seeing this.
5.So I went to them and stopped them from crying.
6.I told them to stop.
7.That time I behaved as I was an elder person.
8.Then after some time the tiger went away.
9.We all got off the bus.
10.And then we got relieved.
Similar questions