Mental health

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Mental health
fromPsychology Today
17 minutes ago

Climate Change Isn't Just Affecting the Weather

Climate change and extreme weather significantly harm mental health, disproportionately affecting vulnerable groups such as farmers, young people, and those with limited services.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 hour ago

I'm Not Good at Public Speaking

Perfectionistic compulsions combined with OCD and ADHD drive uncontrollable demands for flawless performance that impair spontaneous speech despite intellectual self-awareness.
fromFast Company
53 minutes ago

On-site workers get worse 'Sunday scaries' than remote workers

Like clockwork, 5 p.m. on a Sunday, flashes of unread emails and notifications for tomorrow's upcoming meetings start. Your shoulders tense, your stomach knots. You have a case of the Sunday scaries. This unsettling feeling is a form of anticipatory anxiety that creeps in as the weekend draws to a close and Monday looms with the responsibilities of the week ahead.
Mental health
Mental health
fromBusiness Insider
11 hours ago

Your next doctor visit may include a prescription for a book club

Social prescribing programs like the Art Pharmacy connect patients to arts and community activities, reducing isolation and improving depression and social engagement.
Mental health
fromwww.independent.co.uk
4 hours ago

Scientists' striking' discovery about what mental health conditions do to your brain

Young people with anxiety, depression, ADHD and conduct disorder show reduced cortical surface area in emotion, threat-response and bodily-awareness regions, indicating shared neurobiology.
fromPsychology Today
5 hours ago

7 Parenting Strategies When Parenting Feels Too Hard

In my last post, we explored why you may be too tired to parent the way you want-to the knowledge-capacity gap that leaves even well-informed parents unable to use the tools they know when they're depleted. We talked about how chronic stress limits access to the parts of your brain responsible for self-control and empathy. Today, I'm sharing seven practical steps that actually help when you're too exhausted to parent the way you want.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 hours ago

How the 'Magnifying Glass' Can Help Us Find Well-Being and Joy

The brain selectively filters vast sensory input into a tiny conscious stream and prioritizes negative information, causing many positive or neutral experiences to be overlooked.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 hours ago

When and How to Share Your Mental Health History in Dating

Disclosing a history of serious mental illness while dating creates acute anxiety about understanding, judgment, safety, and public exposure, complicating intimacy and self-presentation.
Mental health
fromTiny Buddha
3 hours ago

How to Calm Anxiety That's Rooted in Childhood Wounds - Tiny Buddha

Anxiety develops from early emotional wounds, teaching the nervous system to protect via performance-driven fear and chronic shame rather than being a moral failing.
#gratitude
fromPsychology Today
2 hours ago

Positive Effects of the 'Goodnight, Bro' Trend

The trend involves men calling their male friends to wish them goodnight, often capturing their surprised, confused, or awkward reactions. These interactions break traditional masculine communication norms, which typically discourage emotional expression between male friends. The humor often masks a deeper psychological need for connection that has been suppressed by conventional masculine ideals. Here is some context as the trend emerges within a broader acknowledgment of increasing male social isolation.
Mental health
#social-media
fromwww.nytimes.com
10 hours ago

Video: Opinion | Am I the Skinniest Person You've Ever Seen?

My sister and I went on a joint diet. She stopped and I didn't. I'm 18. And I'm dragged from school to the hospital. And I'm made to look at myself. [MUSIC PLAYING] I weigh 56 pounds. Do you find you're too skinny? Yes, I am too skinny. But what does it matter? I had turned my body into a project, a revolt against nature Mother nature, my mother. A revolt against womanhood, adulthood. My biggest enemy? Time.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
6 hours ago

Why My Mama Doesn't Eat at Thanksgiving

But you know what memory I don't have? My mother eating. She cooked. She served. She made sure everyone had seconds and thirds. She cleaned. She packed plates for folks to take home to their loved ones. She stood in that kitchen for hours (sometimes, days), making magic happen for anyone that she could. But I cannot recall a single moment when she sat down with a full plate of her own, enjoying the meal she had poured herself into.
Mental health
Mental health
fromIndependent
14 hours ago

One thing I've learned is that grief is not a straight line. Grief is hugely personal and individual to every person

Talking to someone about grief is vital for healing; grief is messy, personal, and non-linear.
fromKqed
1 day ago

Program For Veterans Faces Major Funding Cuts | KQED

When Charlie Service came home from Vietnam, he tried to leave the war behind. "In Vietnam, it was definitely combat," he said. "And there was a lot of things in there that we did that we shouldn't do, or things that I don't even talk about today." The retired Army veteran earned three Purple Hearts for his service. But medals didn't ease the invisible wounds he carried - flashbacks, anger and sleepless nights that would last decades.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Compassion for People Living in Hoarding or Squalid Conditions

Hoarding and squalor are distinct yet overlapping conditions that pose serious safety risks and require different clinical and practical interventions.
Mental health
fromFast Company
1 day ago

Want to foster psychological safety? Start by looking in the mirror

Psychological safety — a shared belief that a team is safe for interpersonal risk-taking — is the strongest predictor of team performance and requires leaders' internal cultivation.
#seasonal-affective-disorder
Mental health
fromBusiness Matters
1 day ago

Tobinworld: Building Hope Through Compassion and Mental Health Care

Judith Weber founded Tobinworld to provide compassionate, creative education and community mental-health support for children with autism and developmental challenges.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

How Caregiving Can Spark Health Anxiety

Caregivers commonly develop heightened anxiety about their own health due to constant proximity to illness and chronic exposure to stressful, traumatic stimuli.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
23 hours ago

Why Smart Kids Keep Scrolling

Children adapt to algorithmic exposure with coping strategies that reflect learned helplessness and acceptance of algorithmic control rather than true resilience.
#patient-safety
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

3 Ways Trauma Therapy May Lead to Family Estrangement

Trauma therapy strengthens survivors' ability to identify unsafe relationships, build self-worth, and choose relationships that prioritize safety and well-being, which can include estrangement.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

The ChatGPT Effect on Anxiety

Immediate access to technological answers increases anxiety by preventing people from tolerating uncertainty; delaying reassurance-seeking can build uncertainty tolerance.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

The Gardener's Mind: Cultivating the Life You Want

A fulfilling life results from daily, intentional mental cultivation; the mind grows whatever is sown, so cultivate valuable thoughts and habits now.
fromwww.bbc.com
1 day ago

How my on-air 'brain fog' moment sparked a big debate

When I rather nervously shared a personal post about dealing with brain fog at work on the social network LinkedIn last week, I had no idea that it would have such an enormous impact. It's been viewed hundreds of thousands of times. Women have stopped me on the street to talk to me about it. I've been overwhelmed by hundreds of messages from people sharing support and their own experiences of it. Usually I cover technology news. But given the response, it felt important to talk about this as well.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Compare-and-Despair is Especially Brutal Around Midterms

Negative comparisons are automatic thoughts whose harm is reduced by recognizing them, naming them, practicing self-kindness, and keeping perspective amid perfectionist pressures.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Emetophobia in Autistic People: What Clinicians Should Know

Emetophobia is an intense, debilitating specific phobia causing avoidance that impairs daily functioning and may be more frequent among autistic adults.
Mental health
fromwww.bbc.com
1 day ago

Bake Off winner and Strictly star John Whaite reveals steroid addiction

John Whaite's five-year illegal steroid use worsened eating disorder and body dysmorphia, caused physical and sexual side effects, and triggered suicidal thoughts.
Mental health
fromSlate Magazine
23 hours ago

It's Supposed to Be the Simplest Part of Being a Mom. These TikTok Influencers Are Ruining It.

Public TikTok displays of massive frozen breast milk surpluses highlight wide lactation variability and provoke postpartum envy, anxiety, and debate about breastfeeding norms.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Nature-Based Exercise and Mental Well-Being: Why and How

Physical activity in natural outdoor settings produces greater reductions in anxiety and anger and increases energy, positive engagement, and overall affect than urban settings.
Mental health
fromHuffPost
2 days ago

The Surprising Reason You Can Feel Terrible After Good Sex

Post-coital dysphoria produces agitation, melancholy, anxiety, or emptiness after consensual sex and affects a significant share of both women and men.
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Gap Between Clinical Sleep Science and Public Sleep Culture

Sleep has become a public culture priority. The sleep industry now exceeds $68 billion. Nearly half of adults report insomnia symptoms at some point. Chronic insomnia means difficulty falling or staying asleep at least three nights per week for at least three months, with daytime consequences and/or significant distress. About 1 in 3 Americans uses a wearable device to track sleep, suggesting the public truly values sleep.
Mental health
#gambling-addiction
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

I'd run down the road thinking I was God': cannabis users on their psychosis and the clinic trying to help them

It's two years since Isiah found himself on the roof of a south London shopping centre, about to jump. I was very done, he says of that night in November 2023. It felt there was no other route or option. First, I did a walk around everywhere important to me: primary school, secondary, college. Then he headed to Lewisham shopping centre. I remember my head was telling me: You're probably better off doing this.' He was exhausted by his paranoia,
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Researchers Identify New Risk Factor for Women's Depression

Depression, that is, "major" or "clinical" depression, is so prevalent that many mental-health authorities call it "the common cold of mental illness." Depression has a host of known risk factors: female gender, family history, distorted thinking patterns, medication side effects, adverse life events ( divorce, financial reverses, the death of loved ones), and chronic illnesses (diabetes, multiple sclerosis, heart disease, Alzheimer's, Parkinson's diseases, and hormonal disorders).
Mental health
#gaza
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

It's Time to Retire the Advice "Find a Job You Love"

Loving one's work can produce meaningful fulfillment but also leads to overwork, lower extrinsic rewards, and significant personal sacrifices, making passion-driven career advice potentially harmful.
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

I don't believe in God but, as a trauma survivor, I'm learning to forgive myself | Jackie Bailey

Normally, a person goes about their life, making meaning of everything that happens to them, slotting it into a world that makes sense. Psychologist Bessel van der Kolk explains that a traumatic event short circuits this process. Trauma overwhelms a person, rendering them unable, in the moment, to integrate the event into their lives. In the context of spirituality, trauma is a hand grenade, exploding two of spirituality's primary functions: to help a person make meaning and feel at home in the universe.
Mental health
fromIndependent
2 days ago

'Our autistic son should never have been charged... it's help he needs, not to be locked up'

Young man's parents say he was in the midst of mental health crisis at time of incident - and is now in legal limbo
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

The Dangers of Digital Trends

The "flip the camera" social media trend is public bullying that harms victims' mental health, cognitive development, and undermines societal moral norms.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Schizophrenia Treatment Can Be More Than Just Medicating

Antipsychotics often treat hallucinations and delusions but fail to address social withdrawal, cognitive deficits, illness heterogeneity, while group therapy can improve certain outcomes.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Believing That Aging Is Bad Could Weirdly Be Good for You

Separating negative societal stereotypes about older adults from one's own expectations about aging can enable longer, more fulfilling life.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Why It's Not Smart to Give Your Child a Smartphone

Giving young children smartphones before maturity increases risk of addiction, isolation, anxiety, and long-term social and mental-health problems.
Mental health
fromHuffPost
3 days ago

Read This If You're Decorating For The Holidays Before Thanksgiving

Putting up holiday decorations earlier can boost mood, evoke comforting nostalgia, and reduce stress by increasing joy and connection.
fromThe Atlantic
3 days ago

We're Thinking About Young Adulthood All Wrong

It shows up in songs, films, ads, social-media posts-but it says more about Americans' idealization of youth than it does about what it actually feels like to be young today. The 2024 World Happiness Report found that when American adults were asked to rate the extent to which they were living their "best possible life," those over 60 answered the most positively, followed by 45-to-59-year-olds. People younger than 30 trailed behind.
Mental health
#self-care
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago
Mental health

Self-Care Isn't Optional, It's Imperative

Self-care is the courageous foundation for personal fulfillment, resilience, and the ability to give fully to others.
fromApartment Therapy
11 months ago
Mental health

30 Gift Ideas for Someone Who Just Got Through a Tough Year (So, Everyone?!)

Gifts that promote relaxation, self-care, and mental wellness offer meaningful support for people facing grief, breakups, or emotional hardship.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Being Kind to Others and to Oneself All at Once

Acts of kindness toward others enhance personal well-being and social connection while being low-cost, simple, and an alternative to individualistic coping.
#dementia
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago
Mental health

When a Loved One With Dementia Becomes Paranoid

Validate and enter the reality of a person with dementia, using empathy, gentle redirection, and calming connection rather than logic to address paranoia.
fromBusiness Insider
6 days ago
Mental health

I'm 73 and care for my 97-year-old mom. Her dementia has made me consider my own mortality.

A 97-year-old woman's progressive dementia damages recognition and behavior, strains caregiving relationships, and prompts her son to confront his own aging and future care needs.
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

We're Listening: But What Do We Hear?

We are listening to more than music. In addition to music, SiriusXM, a satellite radio company, provides sports talk, news, talk shows, and podcasts. As of 2024, SiriusXM boasted 150 million listeners. As of 2025, 4,509,765 podcasts have been registered around the world, with Apple alone hosting 2,800,138. In the United States, over 200 million people have listened to a podcast at least once, and 158 million consume podcasts on a monthly basis.
Mental health
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Sectioned children face more trauma in the institutions supposed to protect them | Letter

Children with severe eating disorders can be subjected to prolonged locked institutional care, isolation, and inadequate family support, causing lasting trauma and guilt for parents.
Mental health
fromScary Mommy
4 days ago

My Neurodiverse Kid Makes More Sense To Me Than My "Normal" Kid

A 16-year-old neurodivergent student publicly advocated for neurodiversity, showing confidence and self-advocacy while parental pride and sibling embarrassment reveal complex family dynamics.
Mental health
fromZDNET
4 days ago

Using AI for therapy? Don't - it's bad for your mental health, APA warns

Consumer AI chatbots are widely used for mental health support but cannot replace licensed mental health professionals and pose risks to vulnerable users.
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Gifts From Nature You Forgot to Notice

As the season of gratitude approaches, most of us begin to think about the people, opportunities, and experiences that enrich our lives. These matter deeply. But in my work exploring the rewilding of the human mind, I've found that one of the greatest sources of support in our lives is something we rarely acknowledge-because it's all around us, all the time.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Midlife Friendship Gap

High-quality friendships in midlife improve emotional, psychological, and physical health and counter rising loneliness and social disconnection in adults in their 40s and 50s.
Mental health
fromFast Company
4 days ago

If you say yes to any of these 5 questions, science says you're more emotionally intelligent than you think

Asking for advice rather than feedback yields more actionable improvement suggestions and builds rapport, increasing the likelihood of receiving useful input and support.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Giving Thanks at Work: The Science and Power of Recognition

Consistent, specific, authentic recognition of effort, strengths, and people boosts morale, engagement, well-being, performance, and retention while reducing stress and turnover.
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Feel Satisfied Not Stuffed: Manage Holiday Stress and Desire

While the holiday season is supposed to be a time of joy, connection, and lots of filling up on delicious holiday dishes, for many people, the pleasures fall short of their hopes. For some people, Thanksgiving and Christmas celebrations inspire stress, the pressure to live up to family expectations, and overeating to feed one's emotional pain, along with psychological and/or physical isolation. Parents juggle restless kids in unfamiliar settings, hosts fret over creating "perfect" gatherings, and privacy can be hard to come by.
Mental health
fromBusiness Insider
4 days ago

Pilot who tried to turn off engines after taking magic mushrooms thought he was 'already dead'

Emerson's lawyers said he had an unusual reaction to psilocybin, the active ingredient in the drug. He was left feeling detached from reality for several days, a condition known as Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder. Emerson "believed he was either trapped in a dream or already dead," his lawyers wrote in a sentencing memo filed Wednesday. They add that he didn't believe Flight 2059 was real, but he boarded because he believed it would help him wake up and see his family again.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

What Carl Rogers Meant When He Said the Client Knows Best

Carl Rogers is known for developing client-centered therapy, the essence of which can be summed up in the idea that it is the client and not the therapist who knows best and what directions to go in. But the idea that the client can be trusted to find their own direction is at odds with most psychology and psychiatry interventions, and is what made Rogers' approach to therapy so radical, not only at the time of his writing in the 1950s, but even today.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

The Myth of Creative Blocks: When Inspiration Disappears

Creative blocks are symptoms of fatigue, fear, emotional overload, or loss of meaning; addressing these underlying issues restores creativity and agency.
#suicide-prevention
fromBoston.com
4 days ago
Mental health

Patriots WR Mack Hollins raises awareness of suicide prevention with pregame attire

fromBoston.com
4 days ago
Mental health

Patriots WR Mack Hollins raises awareness of suicide prevention with pregame attire

fromFortune
4 days ago

Ex-Meta exec says Mark Zuckerberg taught him a lesson in work-life balance: Now he has strict rules for meetings and emails at his $1 billion tax firm | Fortune

One of the things I'm also passing on is, there's only so many hours in a day,
Mental health
Mental health
fromScary Mommy
4 days ago

Kids Are Doing The "Flip The Camera" Trend & It's Really Mean-Spirited

The "Flip the Camera" TikTok challenge tricks people into recording themselves and then posts the footage online, leading to humiliation and bullying.
Mental health
fromBustle
4 days ago

Simone Biles Revealed Her Plastic Surgeries So Others Would Feel "No Shame"

Simone Biles underwent three cosmetic procedures—breast augmentation, lower blepharoplasty, and earlobe surgery—and promotes self-love and bodily choice without shame.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Are You Suffering From Low Selfie-Esteem?

Digital culture shifts selfhood outward, privileging selfies and social media validation over internal memories, feelings, and face-to-face interaction.
#adhd
Mental health
fromIrish Independent
5 days ago

Just Between Us: "I made 20k in my first 24 hours on OnlyFans" - Niamh O'Connor on why she walked away

Rapid OnlyFans wealth brought financial freedom but caused exhaustion, body-image harm, online abuse, and an eventual decision to leave to rebuild life and self-worth.
Mental health
fromTruthout
5 days ago

Burnout Is Not Inevitable: Building Movements That Can Hold Us

Sustaining political movements requires nervous-system regulation, rest, ritual, mutual care, and centering neurodivergent wisdom to counter trauma, burnout, and fascist threats.
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Being a Gifted, High-IQ Person in a Non-Gifted Family

Growing up intellectually gifted in a household in which no one shares your cognitive intensity creates a kind of loneliness that cannot easily be named. It is more than being smart. You are just being who you naturally are, but, inevitably, you are out of sync with the world around you. One of the sad realities of being neurodivergent and out of sync with others in the family is that you inevitably feel oppressed or humiliated.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Can Despair Truly Kill Us?

Hope, purpose, and passion for life promote longevity and healthspan, while despair and perceived meaninglessness can cause severe health damage and increased mortality.
Mental health
fromLondon Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com
5 days ago

Medication-free treatments for depression: Understanding your options - London Business News | Londonlovesbusiness.com

Antidepressant prescribing is high and rising; many patients experience significant side effects, and medication-free treatment options, including psychotherapy, are available.
Mental health
fromAxios
5 days ago

When a friendly chatbot gets too friendly

ChatGPT's update makes the assistant warmer and more emotionally attuned, raising risks of false intimacy and harm for isolated or vulnerable users.
Mental health
fromFast Company
5 days ago

Creators are suffering from a mental health crisis, new study shows

Many content creators experience high rates of anxiety, depression, burnout, suicidal thoughts, and financial instability, with worsening outcomes over time and limited specialized mental-health support.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

Social media's beauty filters may look harmless but they're quietly affecting Black youths' mental health

Race-related online experiences, including filters and traumatic content, increase anxiety, depression, and disrupt sleep and concentration among Black adolescents.
fromMission Local
5 days ago

He died in a San Francisco jail. His family wrote a play about it.

His parents filed a lawsuit against the jail staff who had been responsible for his care. His father is working to pass Theris' Law, legislation that would empower people to put family members into emergency treatment. And Coats' father and uncle in recent months created a nonprofit, Brothers Against Drug Deaths, to advocate for mental health and addiction support particularly within Black and other underserved communities.
Mental health
fromBig Think
5 days ago

Why forcing positivity after trauma doesn't build resilience

GEORGE BONANNO: The big question, really, when I think about trauma is how do most people respond to the things that we think of as traumas? I tend to use the word potential trauma or potentially traumatic event. And that's because events are not traumatic, they're potentially traumatic, but how do most people respond? We know that some people get PTSD, but what do most people, how do most people react?
Mental health
Mental health
fromVulture
5 days ago

Lady Gaga Had a Psychotic Break After A Star Is Born

Lady Gaga experienced severe mental health crises in the late 2010s — including lithium treatment, a psychotic break, hospitalization, tour cancellations — and now reports recovery.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

The Science Behind Self-Affirmations

Self-affirmation exercises measurably improve well-being, reduce psychological barriers, activate reward-related brain regions, and support motivation and behavior change, with some lasting effects.
Mental health
fromTiny Buddha
6 days ago

Healing Without Reconciling with My Mother and Learning to Love Myself - Tiny Buddha

Sending a candid letter to an estranged parent can be a courageous act that releases pain, reduces expectations, and opens the possibility of reconciliation.
fromInsideHook
6 days ago

A Male Therapist's Take on Scott Galloway's New Book

In his new book, Notes on Being a Man, Galloway states bluntly: "There's no such thing as 'toxic masculinity...there's cruelty, criminality, bullying, predation, and abuse of power. If you're guilty of any of these things, or conflate being a man with coarseness and savagery, you're not masculine; you're anti-masculine." As a man and a therapist who treats mostly men, this resonates with me and what I've heard from my clients.
Mental health
Mental health
fromBuzzFeed
5 days ago

I Tracked Down The Girls Who Bullied Me As A Kid. Here's What They Had To Say.

Athletics and simple acts of inclusion can bolster girls' confidence and social standing, yet many seemingly thriving girls still endure deep insecurity and severe bullying.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

A Narcissist in the Family Often Leads to Estrangement

Narcissistic family members—parents, siblings, or in-laws—create conflict, foster sibling jealousy, and often drive estrangement through favoritism, manipulation, and lack of empathy.
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

To Be Directive or Non-Directive: That Is the Question

It was a gray winter afternoon early in my career when my client-let's call him Dan-stormed into my office, visibly angry. "I lost my f-ing job again because I told my boss the project sucked," he said. Dan was relatively new to therapy and known for reacting impulsively in social and work settings, often to his own detriment. My instinct kicked in: help him see what he could have done differently.
Mental health
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