The paper talks about post-traumatic disorder bitterness (PTED). Adjustment disorders play an important role in clinical practice. Nevertheless, they are a rather imprecise, defined group of mental disorders, which are also difficult to treat and often lead to chronicity and disability. Everyone has a level of vulnerability that defines our ability to sustain a certain psychological balance: regarding charges accumulate (a demanding job, a broken love, a death, an accident ...) will require more resources. There is what might be called a "boiling level"-a very traumatic experience, an accumulation of small traumas or temporarily defenseless situation that upsets us. This paper proposes a Self-Rating Scale, through which physicians can rate the severity of the disorder, and diagnose the patient accordingly.
Post-Traumatic Embitterment Disorder
Introduction
The purpose of this paper is to critically analyze, assess and share information pertaining to the disorder “The Post-Traumatic Embitterment Disorder Self-Rating Scale (PTED Scale). This will be done by reviewing the article titled “The Post-Traumatic Embitterment Disorder Self-Rating Scale (PTED Scale)” by “Michael Linden, Kai Baumann, Barbara Lieberei and Max Rotter”. Each of us has to face, with their cognitive and emotional resources, their own experience. Obviously there are certain experiences that disrupt; they can sink into despair or helplessness. Moreover, experience has shown repeatedly that at the same event some people suffer a lingering bitterness while others, sooner or later surpass the experience or even consider it a source of growth. What seems clear is that the bitterness or joy depends on experience and personal values ??rather than the event itself. Our freedom is based on primal way we "see" the world: if we accept the inevitable calmly and constantly working hard to constantly strive to make the world better be able to understand and feel that the world has conspired to embitter life.