Succinct phrase for “work well under pressure”?





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4















So I was working on my resume, but it literally took me two hours to come up with a succinct phrase for "work well under pressure".



So far I could think of phrases like " pressure performer " or "multi-tasker" or something like these.



But they are not that satisfying right? Does anyone have any suggestions?










share|improve this question




















  • 6





    As someone who has read lots of resumes, "works well under pressure" works for me. It is succinct enough. Don't make me puzzle out what you mean. I would have no idea what "pressure performer" meant and multi-tasker is not what you mean.

    – ab2
    Feb 4 '16 at 4:02






  • 1





    @ab2 - I know I do it too sometimes, but please avoid answering in comments. You'd have +20 already!

    – Mazura
    Feb 4 '16 at 6:03











  • cool, calm, and collected.

    – CDM
    Feb 4 '16 at 10:30




















4















So I was working on my resume, but it literally took me two hours to come up with a succinct phrase for "work well under pressure".



So far I could think of phrases like " pressure performer " or "multi-tasker" or something like these.



But they are not that satisfying right? Does anyone have any suggestions?










share|improve this question




















  • 6





    As someone who has read lots of resumes, "works well under pressure" works for me. It is succinct enough. Don't make me puzzle out what you mean. I would have no idea what "pressure performer" meant and multi-tasker is not what you mean.

    – ab2
    Feb 4 '16 at 4:02






  • 1





    @ab2 - I know I do it too sometimes, but please avoid answering in comments. You'd have +20 already!

    – Mazura
    Feb 4 '16 at 6:03











  • cool, calm, and collected.

    – CDM
    Feb 4 '16 at 10:30
















4












4








4


2






So I was working on my resume, but it literally took me two hours to come up with a succinct phrase for "work well under pressure".



So far I could think of phrases like " pressure performer " or "multi-tasker" or something like these.



But they are not that satisfying right? Does anyone have any suggestions?










share|improve this question
















So I was working on my resume, but it literally took me two hours to come up with a succinct phrase for "work well under pressure".



So far I could think of phrases like " pressure performer " or "multi-tasker" or something like these.



But they are not that satisfying right? Does anyone have any suggestions?







word-choice phrases phrase-requests synonyms






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share|improve this question













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edited Feb 4 '16 at 3:37







Kior

















asked Feb 4 '16 at 2:59









KiorKior

121114




121114








  • 6





    As someone who has read lots of resumes, "works well under pressure" works for me. It is succinct enough. Don't make me puzzle out what you mean. I would have no idea what "pressure performer" meant and multi-tasker is not what you mean.

    – ab2
    Feb 4 '16 at 4:02






  • 1





    @ab2 - I know I do it too sometimes, but please avoid answering in comments. You'd have +20 already!

    – Mazura
    Feb 4 '16 at 6:03











  • cool, calm, and collected.

    – CDM
    Feb 4 '16 at 10:30
















  • 6





    As someone who has read lots of resumes, "works well under pressure" works for me. It is succinct enough. Don't make me puzzle out what you mean. I would have no idea what "pressure performer" meant and multi-tasker is not what you mean.

    – ab2
    Feb 4 '16 at 4:02






  • 1





    @ab2 - I know I do it too sometimes, but please avoid answering in comments. You'd have +20 already!

    – Mazura
    Feb 4 '16 at 6:03











  • cool, calm, and collected.

    – CDM
    Feb 4 '16 at 10:30










6




6





As someone who has read lots of resumes, "works well under pressure" works for me. It is succinct enough. Don't make me puzzle out what you mean. I would have no idea what "pressure performer" meant and multi-tasker is not what you mean.

– ab2
Feb 4 '16 at 4:02





As someone who has read lots of resumes, "works well under pressure" works for me. It is succinct enough. Don't make me puzzle out what you mean. I would have no idea what "pressure performer" meant and multi-tasker is not what you mean.

– ab2
Feb 4 '16 at 4:02




1




1





@ab2 - I know I do it too sometimes, but please avoid answering in comments. You'd have +20 already!

– Mazura
Feb 4 '16 at 6:03





@ab2 - I know I do it too sometimes, but please avoid answering in comments. You'd have +20 already!

– Mazura
Feb 4 '16 at 6:03













cool, calm, and collected.

– CDM
Feb 4 '16 at 10:30







cool, calm, and collected.

– CDM
Feb 4 '16 at 10:30












7 Answers
7






active

oldest

votes


















6














As someone who has read a lot of resumes, works well under pressure works for me.



It is succinct and clear.



I would not know what you meant by "Pressure performer"; I would find that term in a resume irritating. My immediate picture when I first saw it in your question was of a dancer in a hyperbaric chamber.



A multitasker may or may not be able to work well under pressure; the ability to do several things at the same time is no guarantee that the person will not fall apart under pressure.



If you want to add something to the "works well under pressure", say "meets deadlines".



(You are right to agonize over your resume.)






share|improve this answer
























  • Actually, I think you're right - "works well under pressure" is the best answer.

    – David Blomstrom
    Feb 5 '16 at 3:37



















3














collected, level-headed, established, persevering, tenacious, unflinching, unshakable; you could also explore some synonyms of these words.



Personally, I think "pressure performer" doesn't sound right, while multi-tasking means something else entirely - the ability to focus on several tasks at once, with no reference to pressure.






share|improve this answer





















  • 3





    Hi, David. If you don't mind...Some of the words in your post are not broadly used in resume. English Language and Usage is not a Yahoo-Answer type of forum. It wants to differentiate it from other English forums. I don't think it is appropriate to copy an answer from Yahoo. It might be frowned upon by some existing users. Please select a few words which you think fit the bill and explain why they are what the Original Poster is looking for with dictionary definitions.

    – user140086
    Feb 4 '16 at 4:17





















3














According to vocabulary.com, aplomb is defined as composure under pressure/stress. They give the following definition




Aplomb is the ultimate test for cool: grace under pressure. Use aplomb
to show great restraint under even the most trying circumstances. In
retail, it's always a good idea to handle the angry customers with
aplomb.




Also, according to WordNet 3.1, aplomb means




Assuredness, cool, poise, sang-froid (great coolness and composure
under strain) "keep your cool"




I'm not sure it's the best choice for your CV (it's not very common), but it's a nice word, notwithstanding.






share|improve this answer

































    3














    This is the most overlooked word you’re describing: “equanimity,” which means steadiness of mind under stress.






    share|improve this answer





















    • 1





      We prefer answers that quote and link to authoritative sources, like dictionaries.

      – Scott
      Apr 10 '18 at 20:19











    • Just my opinion, but, in business, rather than forum, technical or legal jargon, or informal discussions, I believe it is best to stick to simple, easy, words that would be understood by people that potentially have English as a second language. works well under pressure is reasonably clear, but equanimity is not an everyday word that everyone would be expected to know. In fact, I'd have had to look it up myself. +1 in general use then, but not for business/resume use.

      – Italian Philosopher
      Aug 10 '18 at 21:31





















    1














    An idiomatic expression would be to keep a cool head




    To maintain a calm demeanor and think clearly in a difficult, stressful, or troubling situation




    [The Free Dictionary]



    Personal Point of View



    If you are wondering if using idioms in resumes is informal, I have used idioms and phrases while creating my own resume and being in IT, I do review quite a few resumes. I prefer people who can include figurative sense in their write-ups. The ability to use idiomatic expressions shows your fluency and command of the language.






    share|improve this answer































      1














      imperturbable TFD




      Unshakably calm and collected







      share|improve this answer































        0














        how about "can handle stressful situations"






        share|improve this answer








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        jayden is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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          7 Answers
          7






          active

          oldest

          votes








          7 Answers
          7






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          6














          As someone who has read a lot of resumes, works well under pressure works for me.



          It is succinct and clear.



          I would not know what you meant by "Pressure performer"; I would find that term in a resume irritating. My immediate picture when I first saw it in your question was of a dancer in a hyperbaric chamber.



          A multitasker may or may not be able to work well under pressure; the ability to do several things at the same time is no guarantee that the person will not fall apart under pressure.



          If you want to add something to the "works well under pressure", say "meets deadlines".



          (You are right to agonize over your resume.)






          share|improve this answer
























          • Actually, I think you're right - "works well under pressure" is the best answer.

            – David Blomstrom
            Feb 5 '16 at 3:37
















          6














          As someone who has read a lot of resumes, works well under pressure works for me.



          It is succinct and clear.



          I would not know what you meant by "Pressure performer"; I would find that term in a resume irritating. My immediate picture when I first saw it in your question was of a dancer in a hyperbaric chamber.



          A multitasker may or may not be able to work well under pressure; the ability to do several things at the same time is no guarantee that the person will not fall apart under pressure.



          If you want to add something to the "works well under pressure", say "meets deadlines".



          (You are right to agonize over your resume.)






          share|improve this answer
























          • Actually, I think you're right - "works well under pressure" is the best answer.

            – David Blomstrom
            Feb 5 '16 at 3:37














          6












          6








          6







          As someone who has read a lot of resumes, works well under pressure works for me.



          It is succinct and clear.



          I would not know what you meant by "Pressure performer"; I would find that term in a resume irritating. My immediate picture when I first saw it in your question was of a dancer in a hyperbaric chamber.



          A multitasker may or may not be able to work well under pressure; the ability to do several things at the same time is no guarantee that the person will not fall apart under pressure.



          If you want to add something to the "works well under pressure", say "meets deadlines".



          (You are right to agonize over your resume.)






          share|improve this answer













          As someone who has read a lot of resumes, works well under pressure works for me.



          It is succinct and clear.



          I would not know what you meant by "Pressure performer"; I would find that term in a resume irritating. My immediate picture when I first saw it in your question was of a dancer in a hyperbaric chamber.



          A multitasker may or may not be able to work well under pressure; the ability to do several things at the same time is no guarantee that the person will not fall apart under pressure.



          If you want to add something to the "works well under pressure", say "meets deadlines".



          (You are right to agonize over your resume.)







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Feb 5 '16 at 2:50









          ab2ab2

          24.1k105995




          24.1k105995













          • Actually, I think you're right - "works well under pressure" is the best answer.

            – David Blomstrom
            Feb 5 '16 at 3:37



















          • Actually, I think you're right - "works well under pressure" is the best answer.

            – David Blomstrom
            Feb 5 '16 at 3:37

















          Actually, I think you're right - "works well under pressure" is the best answer.

          – David Blomstrom
          Feb 5 '16 at 3:37





          Actually, I think you're right - "works well under pressure" is the best answer.

          – David Blomstrom
          Feb 5 '16 at 3:37













          3














          collected, level-headed, established, persevering, tenacious, unflinching, unshakable; you could also explore some synonyms of these words.



          Personally, I think "pressure performer" doesn't sound right, while multi-tasking means something else entirely - the ability to focus on several tasks at once, with no reference to pressure.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 3





            Hi, David. If you don't mind...Some of the words in your post are not broadly used in resume. English Language and Usage is not a Yahoo-Answer type of forum. It wants to differentiate it from other English forums. I don't think it is appropriate to copy an answer from Yahoo. It might be frowned upon by some existing users. Please select a few words which you think fit the bill and explain why they are what the Original Poster is looking for with dictionary definitions.

            – user140086
            Feb 4 '16 at 4:17


















          3














          collected, level-headed, established, persevering, tenacious, unflinching, unshakable; you could also explore some synonyms of these words.



          Personally, I think "pressure performer" doesn't sound right, while multi-tasking means something else entirely - the ability to focus on several tasks at once, with no reference to pressure.






          share|improve this answer





















          • 3





            Hi, David. If you don't mind...Some of the words in your post are not broadly used in resume. English Language and Usage is not a Yahoo-Answer type of forum. It wants to differentiate it from other English forums. I don't think it is appropriate to copy an answer from Yahoo. It might be frowned upon by some existing users. Please select a few words which you think fit the bill and explain why they are what the Original Poster is looking for with dictionary definitions.

            – user140086
            Feb 4 '16 at 4:17
















          3












          3








          3







          collected, level-headed, established, persevering, tenacious, unflinching, unshakable; you could also explore some synonyms of these words.



          Personally, I think "pressure performer" doesn't sound right, while multi-tasking means something else entirely - the ability to focus on several tasks at once, with no reference to pressure.






          share|improve this answer















          collected, level-headed, established, persevering, tenacious, unflinching, unshakable; you could also explore some synonyms of these words.



          Personally, I think "pressure performer" doesn't sound right, while multi-tasking means something else entirely - the ability to focus on several tasks at once, with no reference to pressure.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Feb 5 '16 at 1:43

























          answered Feb 4 '16 at 3:08









          David BlomstromDavid Blomstrom

          6,57321732




          6,57321732








          • 3





            Hi, David. If you don't mind...Some of the words in your post are not broadly used in resume. English Language and Usage is not a Yahoo-Answer type of forum. It wants to differentiate it from other English forums. I don't think it is appropriate to copy an answer from Yahoo. It might be frowned upon by some existing users. Please select a few words which you think fit the bill and explain why they are what the Original Poster is looking for with dictionary definitions.

            – user140086
            Feb 4 '16 at 4:17
















          • 3





            Hi, David. If you don't mind...Some of the words in your post are not broadly used in resume. English Language and Usage is not a Yahoo-Answer type of forum. It wants to differentiate it from other English forums. I don't think it is appropriate to copy an answer from Yahoo. It might be frowned upon by some existing users. Please select a few words which you think fit the bill and explain why they are what the Original Poster is looking for with dictionary definitions.

            – user140086
            Feb 4 '16 at 4:17










          3




          3





          Hi, David. If you don't mind...Some of the words in your post are not broadly used in resume. English Language and Usage is not a Yahoo-Answer type of forum. It wants to differentiate it from other English forums. I don't think it is appropriate to copy an answer from Yahoo. It might be frowned upon by some existing users. Please select a few words which you think fit the bill and explain why they are what the Original Poster is looking for with dictionary definitions.

          – user140086
          Feb 4 '16 at 4:17







          Hi, David. If you don't mind...Some of the words in your post are not broadly used in resume. English Language and Usage is not a Yahoo-Answer type of forum. It wants to differentiate it from other English forums. I don't think it is appropriate to copy an answer from Yahoo. It might be frowned upon by some existing users. Please select a few words which you think fit the bill and explain why they are what the Original Poster is looking for with dictionary definitions.

          – user140086
          Feb 4 '16 at 4:17













          3














          According to vocabulary.com, aplomb is defined as composure under pressure/stress. They give the following definition




          Aplomb is the ultimate test for cool: grace under pressure. Use aplomb
          to show great restraint under even the most trying circumstances. In
          retail, it's always a good idea to handle the angry customers with
          aplomb.




          Also, according to WordNet 3.1, aplomb means




          Assuredness, cool, poise, sang-froid (great coolness and composure
          under strain) "keep your cool"




          I'm not sure it's the best choice for your CV (it's not very common), but it's a nice word, notwithstanding.






          share|improve this answer






























            3














            According to vocabulary.com, aplomb is defined as composure under pressure/stress. They give the following definition




            Aplomb is the ultimate test for cool: grace under pressure. Use aplomb
            to show great restraint under even the most trying circumstances. In
            retail, it's always a good idea to handle the angry customers with
            aplomb.




            Also, according to WordNet 3.1, aplomb means




            Assuredness, cool, poise, sang-froid (great coolness and composure
            under strain) "keep your cool"




            I'm not sure it's the best choice for your CV (it's not very common), but it's a nice word, notwithstanding.






            share|improve this answer




























              3












              3








              3







              According to vocabulary.com, aplomb is defined as composure under pressure/stress. They give the following definition




              Aplomb is the ultimate test for cool: grace under pressure. Use aplomb
              to show great restraint under even the most trying circumstances. In
              retail, it's always a good idea to handle the angry customers with
              aplomb.




              Also, according to WordNet 3.1, aplomb means




              Assuredness, cool, poise, sang-froid (great coolness and composure
              under strain) "keep your cool"




              I'm not sure it's the best choice for your CV (it's not very common), but it's a nice word, notwithstanding.






              share|improve this answer















              According to vocabulary.com, aplomb is defined as composure under pressure/stress. They give the following definition




              Aplomb is the ultimate test for cool: grace under pressure. Use aplomb
              to show great restraint under even the most trying circumstances. In
              retail, it's always a good idea to handle the angry customers with
              aplomb.




              Also, according to WordNet 3.1, aplomb means




              Assuredness, cool, poise, sang-froid (great coolness and composure
              under strain) "keep your cool"




              I'm not sure it's the best choice for your CV (it's not very common), but it's a nice word, notwithstanding.







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited Apr 5 '16 at 3:41

























              answered Apr 4 '16 at 23:24









              Pantelis SopasakisPantelis Sopasakis

              1,14721220




              1,14721220























                  3














                  This is the most overlooked word you’re describing: “equanimity,” which means steadiness of mind under stress.






                  share|improve this answer





















                  • 1





                    We prefer answers that quote and link to authoritative sources, like dictionaries.

                    – Scott
                    Apr 10 '18 at 20:19











                  • Just my opinion, but, in business, rather than forum, technical or legal jargon, or informal discussions, I believe it is best to stick to simple, easy, words that would be understood by people that potentially have English as a second language. works well under pressure is reasonably clear, but equanimity is not an everyday word that everyone would be expected to know. In fact, I'd have had to look it up myself. +1 in general use then, but not for business/resume use.

                    – Italian Philosopher
                    Aug 10 '18 at 21:31


















                  3














                  This is the most overlooked word you’re describing: “equanimity,” which means steadiness of mind under stress.






                  share|improve this answer





















                  • 1





                    We prefer answers that quote and link to authoritative sources, like dictionaries.

                    – Scott
                    Apr 10 '18 at 20:19











                  • Just my opinion, but, in business, rather than forum, technical or legal jargon, or informal discussions, I believe it is best to stick to simple, easy, words that would be understood by people that potentially have English as a second language. works well under pressure is reasonably clear, but equanimity is not an everyday word that everyone would be expected to know. In fact, I'd have had to look it up myself. +1 in general use then, but not for business/resume use.

                    – Italian Philosopher
                    Aug 10 '18 at 21:31
















                  3












                  3








                  3







                  This is the most overlooked word you’re describing: “equanimity,” which means steadiness of mind under stress.






                  share|improve this answer















                  This is the most overlooked word you’re describing: “equanimity,” which means steadiness of mind under stress.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Aug 9 '18 at 4:46







                  user305707

















                  answered Apr 10 '18 at 16:57









                  MichaelMichael

                  311




                  311








                  • 1





                    We prefer answers that quote and link to authoritative sources, like dictionaries.

                    – Scott
                    Apr 10 '18 at 20:19











                  • Just my opinion, but, in business, rather than forum, technical or legal jargon, or informal discussions, I believe it is best to stick to simple, easy, words that would be understood by people that potentially have English as a second language. works well under pressure is reasonably clear, but equanimity is not an everyday word that everyone would be expected to know. In fact, I'd have had to look it up myself. +1 in general use then, but not for business/resume use.

                    – Italian Philosopher
                    Aug 10 '18 at 21:31
















                  • 1





                    We prefer answers that quote and link to authoritative sources, like dictionaries.

                    – Scott
                    Apr 10 '18 at 20:19











                  • Just my opinion, but, in business, rather than forum, technical or legal jargon, or informal discussions, I believe it is best to stick to simple, easy, words that would be understood by people that potentially have English as a second language. works well under pressure is reasonably clear, but equanimity is not an everyday word that everyone would be expected to know. In fact, I'd have had to look it up myself. +1 in general use then, but not for business/resume use.

                    – Italian Philosopher
                    Aug 10 '18 at 21:31










                  1




                  1





                  We prefer answers that quote and link to authoritative sources, like dictionaries.

                  – Scott
                  Apr 10 '18 at 20:19





                  We prefer answers that quote and link to authoritative sources, like dictionaries.

                  – Scott
                  Apr 10 '18 at 20:19













                  Just my opinion, but, in business, rather than forum, technical or legal jargon, or informal discussions, I believe it is best to stick to simple, easy, words that would be understood by people that potentially have English as a second language. works well under pressure is reasonably clear, but equanimity is not an everyday word that everyone would be expected to know. In fact, I'd have had to look it up myself. +1 in general use then, but not for business/resume use.

                  – Italian Philosopher
                  Aug 10 '18 at 21:31







                  Just my opinion, but, in business, rather than forum, technical or legal jargon, or informal discussions, I believe it is best to stick to simple, easy, words that would be understood by people that potentially have English as a second language. works well under pressure is reasonably clear, but equanimity is not an everyday word that everyone would be expected to know. In fact, I'd have had to look it up myself. +1 in general use then, but not for business/resume use.

                  – Italian Philosopher
                  Aug 10 '18 at 21:31













                  1














                  An idiomatic expression would be to keep a cool head




                  To maintain a calm demeanor and think clearly in a difficult, stressful, or troubling situation




                  [The Free Dictionary]



                  Personal Point of View



                  If you are wondering if using idioms in resumes is informal, I have used idioms and phrases while creating my own resume and being in IT, I do review quite a few resumes. I prefer people who can include figurative sense in their write-ups. The ability to use idiomatic expressions shows your fluency and command of the language.






                  share|improve this answer




























                    1














                    An idiomatic expression would be to keep a cool head




                    To maintain a calm demeanor and think clearly in a difficult, stressful, or troubling situation




                    [The Free Dictionary]



                    Personal Point of View



                    If you are wondering if using idioms in resumes is informal, I have used idioms and phrases while creating my own resume and being in IT, I do review quite a few resumes. I prefer people who can include figurative sense in their write-ups. The ability to use idiomatic expressions shows your fluency and command of the language.






                    share|improve this answer


























                      1












                      1








                      1







                      An idiomatic expression would be to keep a cool head




                      To maintain a calm demeanor and think clearly in a difficult, stressful, or troubling situation




                      [The Free Dictionary]



                      Personal Point of View



                      If you are wondering if using idioms in resumes is informal, I have used idioms and phrases while creating my own resume and being in IT, I do review quite a few resumes. I prefer people who can include figurative sense in their write-ups. The ability to use idiomatic expressions shows your fluency and command of the language.






                      share|improve this answer













                      An idiomatic expression would be to keep a cool head




                      To maintain a calm demeanor and think clearly in a difficult, stressful, or troubling situation




                      [The Free Dictionary]



                      Personal Point of View



                      If you are wondering if using idioms in resumes is informal, I have used idioms and phrases while creating my own resume and being in IT, I do review quite a few resumes. I prefer people who can include figurative sense in their write-ups. The ability to use idiomatic expressions shows your fluency and command of the language.







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                      answered Feb 4 '16 at 5:11









                      BiscuitBoyBiscuitBoy

                      11.8k859101




                      11.8k859101























                          1














                          imperturbable TFD




                          Unshakably calm and collected







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                            1














                            imperturbable TFD




                            Unshakably calm and collected







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                              1












                              1








                              1







                              imperturbable TFD




                              Unshakably calm and collected







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                              imperturbable TFD




                              Unshakably calm and collected








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                              answered Apr 10 '18 at 17:46









                              lbflbf

                              22.2k22575




                              22.2k22575























                                  0














                                  how about "can handle stressful situations"






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                                    how about "can handle stressful situations"






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                                      0







                                      how about "can handle stressful situations"






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                                      how about "can handle stressful situations"







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                                      answered 26 mins ago









                                      jaydenjayden

                                      1




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