Verified Document

Personal Portrait First, This Is Creative Writing

Death anxiety was given a broad definition and seemed to point to how one dealt with the death of others also. I found that I did not deal with death very well. Mainly because I was not able to know my real father, and I felt betrayed by the man who was my actual father when I had to experience the abuse that my family went through. It was an ordeal because my father died, but it was a bigger ordeal because of the revelations that came afterwards. I found that one can regress from a level of maturity when a major negative event occurs. I look back at my life through the prism of these two theories and there is not much that I regret, even though there were some significant bumps along the way. I agree with the precepts because I can see a lot of what both men were talking about. I am a caring individual now because of the moral code I have developed. The death of the man I thought of as my father actually made me more caring and understanding of other people. Although I can also see that my maturation was stunted in several areas because of the domestic abuse, I can also...

(2005). Erik Erikson. Retrieved from http://www.psychology.sunysb.edu/ewaters/345/2007_erikson/erikson.pdf
Bruess, B.J., & Pearson, F.C. (2002). Are there gender differences in moral

reasoning as defined by Kohlberg? College Student Affairs Journal, 21(2),

38-49.

Caffarella, R.C., & Barnett, B.G. (1997). Psychosocial development of women:

Linking this literature to the study of leadership. Journal of Adult

Education, 25(1), 2-15.

Linn, R. (2001). The heart has its reasons and the reason has its heart: The

insight of Kohlberg and Gilligan in moral development and counseling.

Social Behavior and Personality, 29(6), 593-598.

Rasmussen, C.A., & Brems, C. (1996). The relationship of death anxiety with age and psychosocial maturity. The Journal of Psychology, 130(2), 141-

Sources used in this document:
References

Boeree, G.C. (2005). Erik Erikson. Retrieved from http://www.psychology.sunysb.edu/ewaters/345/2007_erikson/erikson.pdf

Bruess, B.J., & Pearson, F.C. (2002). Are there gender differences in moral

reasoning as defined by Kohlberg? College Student Affairs Journal, 21(2),

38-49.
Cite this Document:
Copy Bibliography Citation

Sign Up for Unlimited Study Help

Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.

Get Started Now