Economy, asked by hyunaxxji, 4 months ago

give any two difference between Passive behaviour and active behaviour​

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Answered by shrutinemane1
1

Answer:

In my last post, I wrote about the difference between aggressive, passive and assertive behavior styles. In short, aggressive people tend to walk all over others (or try to), passive people (often) get walked all over, and assertive people set clear boundaries by stating their needs clearly and respectfully.

In my last post, I wrote about the difference between aggressive, passive and assertive behavior styles. In short, aggressive people tend to walk all over others (or try to), passive people (often) get walked all over, and assertive people set clear boundaries by stating their needs clearly and respectfully.An outright passive person does not have a lot of  “to-do” going on internally when it comes to resentment and anger. If these feelings exist, they are usually buried, so the person is more likely to be confused, rather than “secretly angry,” because he is not in touch with his own feelings.

In my last post, I wrote about the difference between aggressive, passive and assertive behavior styles. In short, aggressive people tend to walk all over others (or try to), passive people (often) get walked all over, and assertive people set clear boundaries by stating their needs clearly and respectfully.An outright passive person does not have a lot of  “to-do” going on internally when it comes to resentment and anger. If these feelings exist, they are usually buried, so the person is more likely to be confused, rather than “secretly angry,” because he is not in touch with his own feelings.What if someone IS in touch with anger and resentment, though not displaying this outwardly? This behavioral pattern, and one of the most complex and difficult to address, is passive aggression. A passive aggressive individual will appear outwardly passive, while their anger manifests in subtle, indirect, or deceptive ways. These people tend to be incapable of dealing with the root of their resentment, and often have misplaced anger due to feelings of powerlessness in any number of situations. This particular style of communication, or the lack thereof, has become a little bit overused and controversial in psychology to describe almost any type of difficult characters. The American Psychiatric Association dropped the behavior pattern from the DSM IV in 2004, citing that it was “too narrow to be a full blown diagnosis, and not well enough supported by scientific evidence to meet increasingly rigorous standards of definition [NYT, 04].”

In my last post, I wrote about the difference between aggressive, passive and assertive behavior styles. In short, aggressive people tend to walk all over others (or try to), passive people (often) get walked all over, and assertive people set clear boundaries by stating their needs clearly and respectfully.An outright passive person does not have a lot of  “to-do” going on internally when it comes to resentment and anger. If these feelings exist, they are usually buried, so the person is more likely to be confused, rather than “secretly angry,” because he is not in touch with his own feelings.What if someone IS in touch with anger and resentment, though not displaying this outwardly? This behavioral pattern, and one of the most complex and difficult to address, is passive aggression. A passive aggressive individual will appear outwardly passive, while their anger manifests in subtle, indirect, or deceptive ways. These people tend to be incapable of dealing with the root of their resentment, and often have misplaced anger due to feelings of powerlessness in any number of situations. This particular style of communication, or the lack thereof, has become a little bit overused and controversial in psychology to describe almost any type of difficult characters. The American Psychiatric Association dropped the behavior pattern from the DSM IV in 2004, citing that it was “too narrow to be a full blown diagnosis, and not well enough supported by scientific evidence to meet increasingly rigorous standards of definition [NYT, 04].”Experts in both psychology and psychiatry argue that there needs to be a distinction between passive-aggressive behavior, which is present in most people at times, and passive-aggressive personality, which is habitual and ingrained.

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