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MODULE 5: EMOTIONAL SELF
Emotions
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Serve as a driving force in how one acts and
behaves
Lower-level responses occurring in the
brain, which create biochemical reactions in
the body, and consequently cause changes
in one’s physical state.
Emotion
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-
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propose that activity within the brain leads to
emotional responses.
COGNITIVE THEORIES
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argue that thoughts and other mental activities
play an essential role in forming emotions.
SOCIAL THEORIES
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posit that emotions occur within the course of
social interactions and within social settings.
Is a biological experience and response
Feelings
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NEUROLOGICAL THEORIES
FUNCTIONS OF EMOTION
1. Adaptive
- one of the most important functions of
emotions is preparing the body for
action.
Mental portrayal of what is going on in your
body when you have an emotion and are
the by-product of your brain perceiving and
assigning meaning to the emotion
Subjective experiences that frame the
interpretation of emotion
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Mood
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Is an affective state
Less specific, less intense, and less likely to
be provoked or instantiated by a particular
stimulus or event
Typically described as having either a
positive or negative valence
2. Social
- emotions communicate our emotional
state of mind and express what is going
on inside.
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THE EMOTIONAL COMPONENTS
Motor Component
- The communicative function of how we express
what we are experiencing
- Ex. facial expressions, hand gestures, body
movements
Appraisal Component
- Cognitively analyzing the emotion, the
individual is able to pick up on the situations,
actions, environments, or individuals that are
causing the emotion
Action Tendency Component
- Once the emotion is identified, the body moves
into action
Subjective Feeling Component
- This is where an individual simply experiences
the feelings
Physiological Component
- This component supports all others and is the
chemical reaction our body experiences
THEORIES OF EMOTION
PHYSIOLOGICAL THEORIES
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suggest that responses within the body are
responsible for emotions.
In this sense, each emotion, regardless
of any positive or negative
connotations, is useful in its own way.
In addition, they also facilitate social
interaction.
3. Motivational
- The relationship
between motivation and emotions is
bidirectional.
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There is constant feedback between
emotions and motivation and vice
versa.
Emotional intelligence
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refers to the ability to identify and manage
one’s own emotions, as well as the emotions
of others. Emotional intelligence is generally
said to include at least three skills:
1. Emotional awareness, or the ability to
identify and name one’s own emotions.
2. The ability to harness those emotions and
apply them to tasks like thinking and
problem solving; and
3. Ability to manage emotions, which includes
both regulating one’s own emotions when
necessary and helping others to do the
same
Emotion Regulation
- is a term generally used to describe a person’s
ability to effectively manage and respond to an
emotional experience. People unconsciously
use emotion regulation strategies to cope with
difficult situations many times throughout
each day.
How to effectively manage your emotions
1.
2.
3.
4.
Awareness
Discovering the “why” of emotions
“What Is the Solution?”
Choose How You Want to React
3 PRECEPTS OF SPIRITUALITY
1. Meaning and purpose that go beyond the
physical realities of life.
2. Connections to different aspects of his/her
existence
3. Being sacred and transcendent.
THE PATH PROCESS
Step 1: Pause
Step 2: Acknowledge
Step 3: Think
Step 4: Help
MODULE 6: SPIRITUAL SELF
An aspect of self that is associated with an
individual’s process of seeking and expressing
meaning and how he or she is connected to the self,
to others, to the moment, and to everything else
that composes his or her environment, including
the sacred and significant (Puchalski, 2014).
The spiritual self is an ongoing, personal life
journey, contextualized by the belief in a higher
being, culture, relationships, nature, and the
discovery of meaning in one’s life.
SPIRITUALITY
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Talks about MEANING AND PURPOSE that go
beyond the physical realities of life.
Is focused on a person’s connections to
different aspects of his or her existence
The concept of the “whole person” is usually
associated with the idea of human beings as
having physical and psychological. However, there
is a third aspect of being human that is as
important as the 2 precedents: the spiritual aspect.
Highlighting the mind-body-spirit connection,
the spiritual self is an ongoing, personal life journey,
contextualizes by the belief in a higher being,
culture, relationships, nature, and the discovery of
meaning in one’s life.
CHARACTERISTICS OF SPIRITUALITY

Individual
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Spiritual attributes include the need for a
spiritual quest, ecumenical world views,
compassion, service, and inner peace.
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It is not anchored on any religious
orientation.
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it is a personal, subjective experience that
varies from person to person.
“SPIRITUAL ME”
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one's inner thinking and feeling

"The true, the intimate, the ultimate, the
permanent me that “a person seeks”

the "core" and "sanctuary of our life “, the
highest level of self-organization, more
advanced than the "material me" and the
"social me."
Psychodynamic Theories
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An implication of psychodynamic theories
for spiritual identity development is
that individuals may develop a sense of
their spiritual selves in connection and
continuity with God.

It includes specific practices, proscriptions
and participation in a specific community
that shares the same beliefs and practices

Religiosity can be starting point for
spirituality
BENEFITS OF SPIRITUALITY
According to Erikson (1996),
the objects that shape the spiritual selfinclude one's parents and one's God.
Erikson purported that the parent-child
relationship is "transferred" to a Godspiritual child relationship.
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Cognitive Theories
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Cognitive theorists conceptualize identity
development as a meaning-making process.
From his research with children, Elkind
(1997) posited that developing individuals
have a "cognitive need capacity" to know
that life has permanence, specifically that
their lives have permanence (i.e., that they
have eternal identities).
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HOW IS SPIRITUALITY ENHANCED?
He further proposed that religion provides
answers to the question of permanence as
well as fills subsequent "need capacities":
needs to symbolize, to relate to, and to
understand God.
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Narrative Theories
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Narrative theorists proposed that
individuals achieve spiritual identities by
linking their life stories to the narratives of
a religious community system and to their
ongoing stories of personal revelation from
God.
These spiritual narratives may give
individuals a sense of life continuity through
eternal life stories and of connection to God
through spiritual self-to-God story themes.
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the religious orientation

personality characteristics

previous spiritual experiences of the person
Parents should foster quality parent-child
relationships to have a significant positive
influence on one’s spiritual orientation.
Schools should introduce programs and
interventions which include retreats,
recollections, seminars, and worship.
Teachers should utilize teaching strategies
that foster contemplation, reflection, and
self-evaluation can strengthen one’s
spiritual well-being
The best way of enhancing spirituality lies
within the SELF.
MODULE 7: DIGITAL SELF
It refers to a mask people put on when engaging in
the technological world.
DIGITAL IDENTITY
-
Individual Differences in Spiritual Identity:
The search for sacredness and
transcendence can bring positive
consequences to life.
A spiritual person finds contentment and
serenity in his or her life circumstances.
Spiritual well-being entails wisdom, selftranscendence, acceptance of life and
meaningful existence.
Through spirituality, questions such as “am I
a good person?” and “how can I live my life
to the fullest?” are answered.
Spirituality allows one to become resilient
amidst challenges and roadblocks that
occur in daily life.
People generally have “ROLE IDENTITIES”.
These are the characters and roles an individual
creates as a member of a particular social
group. In an online environment, one role
identity is vitally important in order for him or
her to project himself or herself in the said
environment.
Religiosity
WHAT MAKES UP A PERSON’S DIGITAL IDENTITY?
The adherence to a belief system and practices
associated with a tradition in which there is
agreement about what is believed and practiced.
The posts one makes on social media
platforms, the online names one creates, the
internet friends one acquires, and things one “likes,
comments on, and shares” become part of the
digital identity an individual creates. For some
people, their digital identities are an extension of
who they are. Personalities, interests, values and
activities are often manifested in people’s online

It is formal attachment to the set of beliefs
values and practices of a particular religious
sect.
activities especially on social media platforms,
where they relate themselves to other in online
environments. Our digital possessions such as
photos, videos, statuses, texts and emails are
important in shaping our digital self.
Baby Boomers (1946-1964)
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SOCIAL MEDIA
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The websites and applications that make it
easier to create and share information, ideas,
and interests.
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Allows people to create other forms of selfexpression via virtual communities and
networks.
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Has features that allow people to communicate
to specific groups sharing common interests
(through chat, video call or posting of status
and photos) and become members of virtual
communities, be it locally or globally. These
features make way for more efficient ways of
socializing and communicating with other
people as well as enable these communities to
impact thoughts and behavior.
GENERATION NAMES
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Generation X (1964-1980’s)
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The Greatest Generation (Born between 1901
and 1924)
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Experienced The Great Depression and
World II.
Models of teamwork for overcoming and
depression.
Did not experience Advance Technology like
Refrigerator, electricity, TV, airplane and
radio.
Silent Generation "Builders/ the Matures" (19241945)
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They are born and experience the post war
happiness.
The generation of Jazz, Swing, Frank Sinatra,
and Micky Mouse.
The generation of pre-feminism, stay at
home moms and loyal men in their life time
job.
Known to be hard working and keeping in
silent, children were expected to be seen
but not to be heard.
Upbringing in the 1950s and early 1960s grounded
them in non-individualistic attitudes, which is
perhaps why they took the ironic step of
exploring the self in groups (such as est,
consciousness raising groups,
and protest meetings)
Occupy a majority of executive
positions today and are accustomed to being the
center of attention.
They expect to live in a world that accommodates
them, primarily because it always has
They were raised to question authority, stand up
for themselves, and voice their opinions; and
they certainly do so.
They have unending quest to succeed, they
put tremendous pressure on themselves,
work extremely long hours, and
consider working hard to be a
badge of honor.
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Born in a much busier world that had
very little time for them.
Children of this generation spent less time in
social settings and more time watching television,
where they learned to add,
spell, and tie their shoes. (Sesame Street)
Although previous
generations had come home from school to
parents who fetched them milk and cookies and
helped them with homework, Gen
X students grew up in homes
that required them to be much more independe
nt and self-reliant.
As the first latchkey generation, children of
dual-income parents, divorced
parents, and hardworking single parents,
got their own afterschool snacks and did homework all by the
mselves.
In the classroom they are selfmotivated, provided they see
the learning as relevant, and place greater v
alue on work-life balance and fun
than did their workaholic parents
Internet, Video games and
MTV generation – Technologically adept
Generation Y/Millenials (1980’s – 1994)
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This generation was born primarily to Baby
Boomer parents who delayed
childrearing untilthey were financially secur
e.
Millennials were born toparents who wanted,
planned for, cherished, and protected them.
Many parents of Millennials
put their careers on
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hold, worked alternative schedules,
or worked from home in order to be with
their children.
Homeschooling (parents
educating their own children)
grew exponentially for this generation. They
are the most educated
generation in history.
Extremely achievement oriented
They are the first generation to have used
technology their entire lives, so they expect
to use it everywhere they go, including the
classroom.
Irreligious
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more iGen’ers are being raised in nonreligious
households more iGen’ers have decided not to
belong to a religion
Inclusive
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Embracing equality is not just an
expectation but a requirement
iGen (1995 or later)
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Grew up with cellphones, Instagram page
before starting High School
They are also called as Generation Z
Do not remember a time before the
internet
Other Characteristics of iGen or Gen Z are:
In No Hurry
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They tend to relax and nit in hurry to grow up
Internet
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Most of the teenagers would wake up and sleep
with their phones at their hands. Everything can
be search or done through online
In Person no More
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More interaction on social media and much
more friends in their Social Media App than in
personal
Insecure
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many teens post onlytheir successes online, s
o many teens don’t realize that their friends
fail at things, too.
“I felt like I was the only one not there…I
was thinking, they’re having a
good them without time.”
Insulated but not Intrinsic
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iGen’erslong childhood: more carefully protect
ed by parents and wants to be protected. And
they have a general
attitude of avoiding risk and danger
Indefinite
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“Pornography, especially on the internet,
has desensitize teens into not enjoying or
wanting sex and intimacy”, iGens has an easy
access to every pornographic materials.
Participation in virtual environments may entail
changes that may affect a person’s sense of self.
In fact, in cyberspace, people are capable of
creating multiple digital identities. People are likely
to behave differently when they are engaged in
interactions on social media since physical presence
is not required of them. Social media enables
individual to adopt identities independent of one’s
physical image. According to Turkle (1995), people
can redefine themselves on the internet.
Assumptions made on the virtual world are
different from those real life.
There is a “TRUE SELF” that is the instinctive core
of our personality and must be nurtured and
realized and there is also a “FALSE SELF” or
“CURATED SELF” that is created to protect the “true
self” from insult and danger.
photos (through teeth whitening, skin
smoothing and body shape editing)
helps consumers to express as their
‘ideal’ self online and inevitably feel
better about themselves.
ONLINE DISEMBODIMENT
ONLINE DISINHIBITION EFFECT (Suler, 2004)
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People adopt fake identities, they are likely to
engage in behaviors that they would not do in real
life interactions.
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Social media also enables people to create fake
identities. An individual can create different
social media accounts to hide his or her real
self.
With this, people are less likely to display
their “real selves” to others, especially
strangers. In an attempt to share that self with
the world, we engage our decoy selves to
manage the day-to day anxieties and challenge
that come before us.
In an attempt to share that self with the world, we
engage our decoy selves to manage the day-to day
anxieties and challenge that come before us.
There are two kinds of this disinhibition:

BENIGN DISINHIBITION occurs when people
tend to self-disclose more on the internet
than they would in real life or go out of
their way to help someone or show
kindness.

TOXIC DISINHIBITION happens when they
use rude language, bully or threaten others
on online platforms, and go to websites
with contents of violence, crime and
pornography.
Russel Belk (1988)
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Believed that our major possessions are a major
contributor to and reflection of our identities.
WHY DO PEOPLE ENGAGE IN SUCH BEHAVIOR?

People engage in online disinhibition due to a
number of factors. Somehow, these factors
contribute to bridging social gaps and
expressing oneself in a way that one will not
do in face-to-face interactions.
WHY WOULD WE WANT TO EVEN DO THIS?

Anonymity - we can hide our true identity.
First of course we want to meet the expectation
of others, Research shows over 50% of women
would edit their social media photos to look better
and meet the expectations that the media and
magazines have set. Through these, they might feel
that they are also liked by others. We want to boost
our self-esteem, people upload photos and statuses
online that they feel will receive ‘likes’ and positive
feedback in which ultimately helps their egos and
gain their confidence.

Virtual invisibility - we can make fake
identity and could not be physically seen
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Asynchronous communication - where
there is no need to deal with another
person’s reaction or feedback immediately

Personal introjection - people tend to assign
an identity to the other person that is also a
reflection of their own self
Stone (1996) and Hemetsburger (2005)
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Claim that the digital web allows us to try out
different personas that differ from our
real life identities.

To feel a sense of belonging
- Some of us want to fit in with the crowd
and upload things that are ‘down with
the trend’ - for instance, who notices
the amount of people posting pictures
of their food increasing? It didn’t come
from nowhere.

To have bigger sense of freedom
- unlike real life, digital platforms allow
us to express ourselves in any way we
want to without anyone there to
physically judge us and of course

To strive to be our ideal selves
- Digital Apps, such as Facetune, that
allow us to improve our appearances on
Access to the Internet is PERVASIVE all the time and access / use has become private may be socially
adept online, but may hinder real social skills and
other significant life skills and competencies.
These are some of the effects of pervasive access to
the internet:
1. Fear of Missing Out or Fear of being left out
by the group about what is happening and
the latest trends
2. Social media envy, being envious with what
others have or possess that is being posted
online
3. Being alone even if you are in a group/no
face to face interaction, and technology
gives us an illusion of companionship
Party identification
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Can increase or even shift by motivating events
or conditions in the country.
Political affiliation
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Is based on political organization whose
members have similar aims and beliefs as
yourself.
SELF AND PUBLIC IDENTITY
What is the happy medium? The goal?
2 hours/weekday; 4 hours/weekend before
negative associations with well-being are evident
One's public identity, or social face, is a strategic
presentation of self. It is designed to secure desired
responses from those with whom one interacts—
responses which form an integral part of one's
behavioral program.
SELF AND POLITICAL POSITION
DIFFERENT APPROACHES
Digital Limiters
 Minimize use of technology/internet
 Inflexible conflict
 Subscribe to “alarmist” beliefs
Digital Enablers
 Allow youth to use as much internet/tech as
they want
 Allow youth to set the agenda for tech use
 “they know more than I do”
Digital Mentors

Play an ACTIVE tole in guiding the youth’s
use if technology and the internet
Political position is influenced by ‘‘political
ideology,’’ by which we mean people’s selfplacement on a dimension on which persons can be
arrayed from left to right. This is our sense of how
we stand by others which includes beliefs, attitudes,
and values in an implicit social formation whose
meaning is totally relational.
Understanding Filipinos in the Political Arena
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Politics in the Philippines has traditionally
been dominated by clans and political
bosses and patronage.
Lawmakers make decisions based on fiscal
incentives rather than beliefs.
Voters make choices based on personality
rather than reasoned policies.
UTANG NA LOOB AS A POLITICAL SELF DESCRIPTOR
MODULE 8: PHYSICAL SELF
POLITICAL SELF explores our social and economic
contexts that affect our well-being as it shapes our
realities.
POLITICAL SELF PRESENTATION such as political
interest, political self-efficacy, and perceived
participation may lead individuals to perceive
themselves as politically active, interested,
efficacious, and knowledgeable.
AREAS OF Political SELF
1. Self-representation (political affiliation)
2. Self-constructs (public identity)
3. Self-interest (political position)
SELF AND POLITICAL AFFILIATION
Party identification is affiliation with a political
party. Party identification is typically determined by
the political party that an individual most commonly
supports (by voting or other means).
The essence of utang na loob is an obligation to
appropriately repay a person who has done one a
favor.
Utang na loob is a Filipino cultural trait which, when
translated literally, means "a debt of one's inner
self." It is also often translated as a "debt of
gratitude.
Utang na loob system of patronage, or obligation
earned through favors, voters expect money or jobs
in return for their political support.
PALAKASAN/PADRINO SYSTEM
The padrino system, or patronage in Filipino
culture and politics, is the value system where one
gains favor, promotion, or political appointment
through family affiliation (nepotism) or friendship
(cronyism), as opposed to one's merit.
The padrino system in the Philippines has been the
source of many controversies and corruption.
Filipino Values Relating to the Political Self
TIME PERSPECTIVE THEORY
KARANGALAN: Loosely translated to dignity, this
actually refers to what other people see in a person
and how they use that information to make a stand
or judge about his/her worth.
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PURI: the external aspect of dignity. May refer to
how other people judge a person of his/her worth.
This compels a common Filipino to conform to
social norms, regardless how obsolete they are.
DANGAL: the internal aspect of dignity. May refer
to how a person judges his own worth.
Public Shaming: A Politically Accepted Behavior
To humiliate someone is to push them to the
ground, lower their self-esteem, or “put them
down.”
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Philip Zimbardo (1999) explains how people
envision their experiences.
It explains that people are likely to sort,
categorize, and analyze their human
experiences into past, present, and future
timeframes, influenced by PERSONAL, SOCIAL,
AND INSTITUTIONAL factors.
The theory also warns people against making
decisions dominated by only a one-time frame.
Thus, in planning and setting goals, it should be
based on something learned from the past and
contextualized by the present which can facilitate
future growth and development.
THE TIME PERSPECTIVES OF THE SELF
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PAST NEGATIVE individuals are always
anchored on the past but being on the
negative side, they tend to focus on the
wrong decisions they have made in the past
and constantly regret them.
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Humiliating someone is also a political act. After all,
such practices are inequitable: they are inculcated
through relations of domination—including racism,
sexism, snobbery, or class sneering.
PAST POSITIVE individuals are likely to
remain in their comfort zone, their actions
influenced by what has worked in the past.

PRESENT FATALISTIC individuals are those
who feel their lives are out of control and
that no matter what they do, things will not
turn out as they plan them to be.
MODULE 9: FUTURE SELF

PRESENT HEDONISTIC individuals tend to
be risk-takers, driven by sensory, concrete
factors, and driven by pleasurable
sensations. They often disregard the
negative consequences of their actions
since they are focused on the process
rather than the outcome, and are often
emotional and volatile.
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FUTURE-ORIENTED individuals base their
present choices and action on long-term
consequences. They are likely to manifest a
delay of gratification and endure negative
situations if they are likely to see the
benefits of doing such.
Humiliation is always at some level about other
people. Along with shame, it is fundamentally a
social emotion: to be effective, they require an
audience. Humiliation is something one person or
group inflicts on another person or group—and
usually, the victims are less powerful.
Understanding the self is not just about knowing
and recognizing oneself as a product of different life
factors. The self and its potentials and limits can be
more thoroughly understood by using a timeoriented lens that focuses on how the self evolves
from being the self of the past, of the present, and
the possible self in the future.
This time-oriented conceptualization of the self
importantly explains how individuals construe their
sense of self by using temporal perspectives in selfinterpretations, and the processes that individuals
use in conceptualizing what one can possibly
or potentially become.
Søren Kierkegaard
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“life can only be understood backwards, but it
must be lived forwards.”
What he meant in this quote is that an individual
has the capability to plan for his/her future if
he/she is able to understand and retrospectively
reflect on experiences, past choices and decisions,
past behaviors. Understanding the past and taking
control of the present can lead to an optimistic
future.
6 PHILOSOPHICAL PREMISES OF POSSIBLE SELVES
THEORY
(1) Possible selves are both a MOTIVATIONAL
RESOURCE and a BEHAVIORAL BLUEPRINT
of the self.
How one envisions himself/herself to be
fuels his/her drive to achieve his/her plans
for the future enables him or her to set
specific short-term and long-term goals.
Aside from having these concrete goals and
thoughts, people derive pleasure and
satisfaction in making those plans, this
further channeling behavior towards that
end.
(2) Not all future selves are positive. They
revolve around 3 ideas: what one might
become (OUGHT-TO SELVES), what one
wants to become (IDEAL/HOPED-FOR
SELVES), and what one is afraid to become
(FEARED SELVES).
(3) The future self is INTERTWINED with one’s
past and present selves. Present situations
enable one to think clearly of his/her
options and the decisions he/she needs to
take, which would bring him/her closer to
his/her future goals. On the other hand,
experiences also shape how one perceives
the future because of enduring concerns or
unfinished businesses that are brought to
the present, and thus, may be a driving
force to one’s future plans.
GOAL SETTING
Goal setting has benefits and advantages. Setting
goals helps trigger new behaviors, helps guides your
focus and helps you sustain that momentum in life.
Goals also help align your focus and promote a
sense of self satisfaction. In the end, you can’t
manage what you don’t measure and you can’t
improve upon something that you don’t properly
manage. Setting goals can help you do all of that
and more.
GOAL
Is the object toward which the behavior is directed,
usually within a specified period of time.
It motivates people to develop strategies that will
enable them to perform better.
The idea of the future or desired result that a
person or group of people envision, plan and
commit to achieving.
(4) Future selves are a product of SOCIAL
INTERACTIONS. How one’s future is
foreseen is a product of social contexts:
family, peers and colleagues, schools and
other institutions, the society, and the
digital world. The technological landscape
the millenials are exposed to (via social
media, web applications, technology-driven
resources) has shaped their future
ambitions in determining the digital legacy
they want to leave behind.
TWO CATEGORIES OF GOAL
(5) This premise lies in life transitions that have
an enabling influence on one’s future
selves. When there are changes in one’s
present life circumstances (e.g., entering a
new grade level, transferring to a new
school, shifting to a new course,
experiencing changes in family situations,
etc.), there will also be changes to how
future life perspectives are viewed.
However, people are not passive recipients
of these changes with human agency, an
individual is able to effect those changes for
his/her future.
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(6) The last premise is based on the concepts of
PROXIMAL and DISTAL GOALS. People are
more motivated to work on goals that are
more immediate than those which are not.
Thus, some students lay down simple steps
and concrete plans in ensuring their goals
are achieved. Setting short-term (by term,
semester, year) and long-term goals (by 5
years, 10 years) is one way of ensuring that
their future self is fulfilled.
GOALS VERSUS DREAMS
Short term goals
-
they can be achieved in a day, week, or year
Long term goals
-
usually achieved over a year or more.
FACTORS THAT MAY INFLUENCE GOALS
Values
consider to be personally important and
worthy. Basis for what is desirable, correct, and
good.
They act according to the ways that will allow them
to express their important value and attain goals
underlying them and it gives direction to behavior.
Needs
-
motivates a person to act on something and
satisfy that certain need.
Needs activate and direct behavior; categorize into
physical and psychological behavior.
A DREAM is simply a fantasy, something you
daydream about, but never actively pursue.
A GOAL is a concrete thing in which you set into
motion the steps in which to obtain it.
RULES OF GOAL SETTING
 Set goals that are important to you.
 It should be personally important to you.
 Set Specific Measurable Attainable Realistic Time
bound- SMART GOALS
 Write your life goals
 Write a list of ALL the goals you wanted to
achieve and PRIORITZE the important goals,
discard the unimportant and make space for
important and urgent activities
 Develop action plan for your future
 Write the steps toward achieving your goal.
Guide Questions for setting up Long term goals:
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WHAT IS YOUR GOAL?
How would you know if you have achieve
your GOAL?
What are the resources needed to achieve
your GOAL?
What are the specific steps in achieving
your goal
What is the importance of the GOAL in your
life?
When will you achieve your GOAL?
What are the possible threats that may
hinder you to achieve your GOAL?
How will you overcome them?
GOAL SETTING THEORY: Edwin Locke
First described that the approach of goal setting
theory is based on what Aristotle called final
causality; that is, action caused by a purpose.
It accepts the axiomatic status of consciousness and
volition.
It also assumes that introspective reports provide
useful and valid data for formulating psychological
concepts and measuring psychological phenomena
(e.g., purpose, goal commitment, self-efficacy).
He then discussed the attributes of goals and his 14
research findings:
1.The more difficult the goal, the greater the
achievement.
b.the individual is convinced that the goal is
attainable (or that, at least, progress can be made
toward it).
6.In addition to having a direct effect on
performance, self-efficacy influences:
a.the difficulty level of the goal chosen or accepted;
b.commitment to goals;
c.the response to negative feedback or failure; and
d.the choice of task strategies.
Goal setting is most effective when there is
feedback that shows progress in relation to
the goal.
Goal setting (along with self-efficacy) mediates the
effect of knowledge of past performance on
subsequent performance.
Goals affect performance by affecting the direction
of action, the degree of effort exerted, and the
persistence of action over time.
Goals stimulate planning in general.
When people strive for goals on complex tasks, they
are least effective in discovering suitable task
strategies if:
a. they have no prior experience or training on the
task;
b. there is high pressure to perform well; and
c. there is high time pressure (to perform well
immediately).
Goals (including goal commitment), in combination
with self-efficacy, mediate or partially mediate the
effects of several personality traits and incentives
on performance.
Goal-setting and goal-related mechanisms can be
trained and/or adopted in the absence of training
for the purpose of self-regulation.
Goals serve as standards of self-satisfaction.
SELF-EFFICACY THEORY: ALBERT E. BANDURA
outcome expectancy
2.The more specific or explicit the goal, the more
precisely performance is regulated.
“a person’s estimate that a given behavior will lead
to certain outcomes.”
3.Goals that are both specific and difficult lead to
the highest performance.
efficacy expectation
4.Commitment to goals is most critical when goals
are specific and difficult.
5.High commitment to goals is attained when:
a.the individual is convinced that the goal is
important;
“the conviction that one can successfully execute
the behavior required to produce the outcomes.”
ACTS OF PEOPLE WITH “HIGH ASSURANCE IN
THEIR CAPABILITIES”

approach difficult tasks as challenges to be
mastered;

set challenging goals and maintain strong
commitment to them;

heighten or sustain efforts in the face of
failures or setbacks;

attribute failure to insufficient effort or
deficient knowledge and skills which are
acquirable; and

approach threatening situation with
assurance that they can exercise control
over them
ACTS OF PEOPLE WITH “DOUBT THEIR
CAPABILITIES”

shy away from tasks they view as personal
threats;

have low aspirations and weak commitment
to goals they choose to pursue;

dwell on personal deficiencies, obstacles
they will encounter, and all kinds of adverse
outcomes, rather than concentrating on
how to perform successfully;

slacken their efforts and give up quickly in
the face of difficulties;

are slow to recover their sense of efficacy
following failure or setbacks; and

fall easy victim to stress and depression.
FOUR MAIN SOURCES OF INFLUENCE BY WHICH A
PERSON’S SELF-EFFICACY IS DEVELOPED AND
MAINTAINED
1. performance accomplishments or mastery
experiences;
2. vicarious experiences;
3. verbal or social persuasion; and
4. physiological (somatic and emotional)
states.
MINDSET
It refers to implicit theories that individuals hold
regarding the nature of intelligent behavior; to the
that individual attribute intelligence to fixed trait
and to the degree that they attribute intelligence to
learning, effort, training and practice.
FIXED MINDSET
-
People who believe that success is based on
their innate abilities have a “fixed” theory of
intelligence
-
Fixed-mindset individuals dread failure because
it is a negative statement on their basic abilities
GROWTH MINDSET
-
-
People who believe that success is based on
hard work, learning, training, and
perseverance have growth theory of
intelligence
Individuals do not mind or fear failure as
much because they realize their
performance can be improved and learning
comes from failure.
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