Friday, September 3, 2010

WHAT DO YOU NEED?


Have you ever ask yourself these questions, “Needs and Wants”? Many people ask themselves frequently what do I need and want today. It has different meanings and interpretations to everyone.




I hope every selection from my blog will help you decide of what you dream to become and have in the future. I'm sharing this wonderful video I got from Agnelloe. Thanks for sharing :)



Thank you and God bless us all.

Sincerely yours,
Rochelle Harder

Thursday, September 2, 2010

NEEDS AND WANTS?

Everyone been asking, what do we need to survive? I did a thorough research and found the following answers.

According to Maslow's Theory

Self-Actualization
This level of need pertains to what a person's full potential is and realizing that potential. Maslow describes this desire as the desire to become more and more what one is, to become everything that one is capable of becoming. ““What a man can be, he must be.”

Esteem
All humans have a need to be respected and to have self-esteem and self-respect. Also known as the belonging need, esteem presents the normal human desire to be accepted and valued by others. People need to engage themselves to gain recognition and have an activity or activities that give the person a sense of contribution, to feel accepted and self-valued, be it in a profession or hobby.

Most people have a need for a stable self-respect and self-esteem. Maslow noted two versions of esteem needs, a lower one and a higher one. The lower one is the need for the respect of others, the need for status, recognition, fame, prestige, and attention. The higher one is the need for self-respect, the need for strength, competence, mastery, self-confidence, independence and freedom. The latter one ranks higher because it rests more on inner competence won through experience. Deprivation of these needs can lead to an inferiority complex, weakness and helplessness

Love and Belonging
After physiological and safety needs are fulfilled, the third layer of human needs are social and involve feelings of belongingness. This aspect of Maslow's hierarchy involves emotionally based relationships in general, such as:
• Friendship
• Intimacy
• Family
Humans need to feel a sense of belonging and acceptance, whether it comes from a large social group or small social connections. They need to love and be loved (sexually and non-sexually) by others. In the absence of these elements, many people become susceptible to loneliness, social anxiety, and clinical depression. This need for belonging can often overcome the physiological and security needs, depending on the strength of the peer pressure; an anorexic, for example, may ignore the need to eat and the security of health for a feeling of control and belonging

Safety Needs
With their physical needs relatively satisfied, the individual's safety needs take precedence and dominate behavior. These needs have to do with people's yearning for a predictable orderly world in which perceived unfairness and inconsistency are under control, the familiar frequent and the unfamiliar rare. In the world of work, these safety needs manifest themselves in such things as a preference for job security, grievance procedures for protecting the individual from unilateral authority, savings accounts, insurance policies, reasonable disability accommodations, and the like.
Safety and Security needs include:• Personal security
• Financial security
• Health and well-being
• Safety net against accidents/illness and their adverse impacts

Physioliogical Needs
For the most part, physiological needs are obvious—they are the literal requirements for human survival. If these requirements are not met (with the exception of clothing, shelter, and sexual activity), the human body simply cannot continue to function.
Physiological needs include:• Breathing
• Food
• Homeostasis
• Sex
Air, water, and food are metabolic requirements for survival in all animals, including humans. Clothing and shelter provide necessary protection from the elements. The intensity of the human sexual instinct is shaped more by sexual competition than maintaining a birth rate

NINE BASIC HUMAN NEEDS
 SECURITY
 ADVENTURE
 FREEDOM
 EXCHANGE
 POWER
 EXPANSION
 ACCEPTANCE
 COMMUNITY
 EXPRESSIONwwew

Knowledge

Knowledge

Food

Food

Shelter

Shelter

Understanding

Understanding

Care

Care