Society

Prescription For Stress – Take Time to Smell the Dollars

A Statistics Canada study on job stress, reported last week in the journal Canadian Social Trends, ought to rivet the attention of Canadian economic and political leaders.Work-related stress takes a high toll on the emotional well-being of millions of employees, undermines the health of many and incurs a forbidding financial penalty. Stress-induced absences have been […]

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Are You Too Liberal Or Conservative With Your Anger?

Now that the winds of acrimony blowing from Ottawa have abated, we can reflect upon the differing emotional displays of our political leaders. They have much to teach us about how dysfunctional anger may afflict our personal lives. We saw, on the one hand, the quietly poisonous anger of Stephen Harper. Even before Belinda Stronach’s

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In Treating Depression, Drugs Are Not Enough

Nine-year-old Naomi stood in front of the mirror, an expression of rage on her face, her left hand pulling at her hair while with her right she wielded the scissors. Shiny black locks fell to the floor. When her mother, shocked at this act of self-mutilation, tried to intervene, the child pointed the scissors at

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On The Completion Of The Human Genome Project

Expressions of near-religious awe and prophesies of dramatic medical advances greeted last week’s announcement that scientists are close to deciphering the human genome, the genetic blueprint for the human body.  “Today we are learning the language in which God created life,” President Bill Clinton said at the White House ceremony marking the truce between two

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On [BC Premier] Gordon Campbell’s Drunk Driving Arrest

Gordon Campbell’s drunken driving arrest is more than a painful episode in the life of an individual and more than a “severe misjudgment,” as the B.C. premier’s said, in the career of a politician.  It highlights the dysfunction that characterizes the lives of many adults whose childhoods were blighted by the alcoholism of their parents.

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There Is A Cure For Bullying

The trial of two British Columbia teenagers, awaiting judgment, has again highlighted the problem of school bullying. The girls were charged with uttering threats in the wake of the suicide of 14-year-old Dawn-Marie Wesley. In November, 2000, Dawn-Marie killed herself shortly after she was accused of spreading false rumours. She was allegedly threatened with a

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