<li style="font-weight: bold;">Psychosocial dimensions of dhairya : <br/><span style="font-weight: normal;">The increase in technological advancements has exponentially expanded social reachability. Still, social connectedness in the real sense has dramatically decreased, with more people falling trap to loneliness and social discontentment. Episodes of anxiety have risen significantly, especially among young people. A famous research finding substantiating this is the meta-analyses of the American population (1952-1993), which observed that an average American child in 1980's had more anxiety than child psychiatric patients of 1950s.[5] The solution to such psychological dishevel is atmajnana (self realization) as described by acharya Charak. </span></li> | <li style="font-weight: bold;">Psychosocial dimensions of dhairya : <br/><span style="font-weight: normal;">The increase in technological advancements has exponentially expanded social reachability. Still, social connectedness in the real sense has dramatically decreased, with more people falling trap to loneliness and social discontentment. Episodes of anxiety have risen significantly, especially among young people. A famous research finding substantiating this is the meta-analyses of the American population (1952-1993), which observed that an average American child in 1980's had more anxiety than child psychiatric patients of 1950s.[5] The solution to such psychological dishevel is atmajnana (self realization) as described by acharya Charak. </span></li> |