I have been busy reworking my inquiry for a while now but I believe I have got a solid question now that can be hit all over the place without breaking apart. So I will answer the next few questions in a precise manner that this upcoming essay will dictate.
1. The people I will be writing to will be people dealing with stress. Whether they already know how to cope with it or still trying to figure out how.
2. I believe my topic is timeless. Since the dawn of time people have had stress. Over time there has been studies for it but till this day we are still figuring out ways to use or get rid of our stress.
3. I care about this topic because I deal with stress a lot as well. I like to believe most people do. It's something people can really get behind regardless of optimistic or pessimistic point of view. And I believe why high school teachers didn't want you to be objective in high school was to see if you even had the basic intelligence to make the cut. But in college it's more about differentiating yourself from everyone else. College teachers want to ask the question. What can you offer the world that others haven't?
4. While the negative views of stress outweigh the positive ones. The positive ones seem to asses the aspects of stress better. For instance a negative viewpoint lists how stress doesn't help us get work done proficiently but the positive view says that without stress we wouldn't be doing that work in the first place.
5. I have learned that researching is difficult for the aspect of shifting through all different view points which can be sometimes very similar yet different viewing outcome. As a researcher I need to zoom in on those aspects and look at how they are important diverging view points from the rest.
6. While I didn't reply to her blog. I did read over Samantha Vineyard's research on optimism vs pessimism and realized that we share a correlation in looking into how one's view can affect themselves.
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