Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
communication patterns in relationships (affinity (the degree to which…
communication patterns in relationships
affinity
the degree to which people like or appreciate one another. as with all relational messages, affinity is usually expressed nonverbally
the degree to which people like or appreciate others is called affinity.
I've had a history teacher in high school which is very nice and affinity
altruistic lies
deception intended to be unmalicious, or even helpful, to the person to whom it is told
altruistic lies are defined, at least by the people who tell them, as being harmless, or even helpful, to the person to whom they are told
we all learn to tell altruistic lies to bring less harm to others
breadth
the range of topics about which an individual discloses
their social penetration model proposes that communication occurs within two dimensions: breadth, which represents the range of subjects being discussed.
i've always expend the breadth when i was talking to others
phubbing
a mixture of the words phone and snubbing, used to describe episodes in which people pay more attention to their devices than they do to the people around them
when I'm using electronic device, i become phubbing and pay less attention on things around.
a mixture of the words phone and snubbing, used to describe episodes in which people pay more attention to their devices than they do to the people around them
intimacy
a state of closeness between two (or sometimes more)people. intimacy can be manifested in several ways: physically, intellectually, emotionally, and via shared activities.
a state of closeness between two (or sometimes more)people. intimacy can be manifested in several ways: physically, intellectually, emotionally, and via shared activities.
I've very few friends but we have a intimacy between each other
dialectical model
the perspective that people in virtually all interpersonal relationships must deal with equally important, simultaneous, and opposing forces such as connection and autonomy, predictability and novelty, and openness versus privacy
the dialectical model suggests that relational partners continually must negotiate to satisfy opposing or incompatible forces, both within themselves and with one another.
sometimes dialectical model takes too long to make a decision.