Mental health

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Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
4 hours ago

Psychology says feeling mentally "full" isn't laziness - it's your brain demanding maintenance - Silicon Canals

Mental exhaustion is a physiological signal that the brain needs rest and maintenance, not a moral failing or laziness.
#social-media
fromAbove the Law
3 days ago
Mental health

The 'Social Media Addiction' Narrative May Be More Harmful Than Social Media Itself - Above the Law

fromAbove the Law
3 days ago
Mental health

The 'Social Media Addiction' Narrative May Be More Harmful Than Social Media Itself - Above the Law

#introversion
fromSilicon Canals
3 hours ago
Mental health

Introverts who force themselves to be social often experience this hidden form of exhaustion - Silicon Canals

fromSilicon Canals
23 hours ago
Mental health

Psychology says people who fade into the background in groups usually possess these 8 hidden strengths that others completely miss - Silicon Canals

fromSilicon Canals
3 hours ago
Mental health

Introverts who force themselves to be social often experience this hidden form of exhaustion - Silicon Canals

fromSilicon Canals
23 hours ago
Mental health

Psychology says people who fade into the background in groups usually possess these 8 hidden strengths that others completely miss - Silicon Canals

Mental health
fromwww.cbc.ca
4 hours ago

Youth show growing rate of psychosis in Ontario: CMAJ study | CBC News

Rates of psychotic disorders, including schizophrenia, have risen about 60% for people aged 14–20 in recent birth cohorts.
Mental health
fromSan Jose Spotlight
1 hour ago

Diridon: San Jose mayor is meeting the homeless housing challenge - San Jose Spotlight

A subset of homeless individuals with severe mental illness or addiction require supervised inpatient care; deinstitutionalization removed those long-term options, creating gaps in treatment.
fromPsychology Today
4 hours ago

Dealing with the Fear of Looking Dumb

In some cases, fear of looking dumb is a symptom of social anxiety disorder (APA, 2022), and it can be associated with perfectionism and fear of failure. It can show up in issues such as imposter syndrome, or feeling like a fraud and worrying about not rising to the expectations of a high-achieving position. It can also be related to stereotype threat, when someone's membership in a marginalized group leads them to worry that they will act in a way that confirms negative stereotypes.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 hours ago

How Can Patience Help You Deal With Life's Frustrations?

Patience is a capacity to endure difficulties, frustrations, and suffering with some sense of calm. Perseverance, self-regulation, and judgment are components of patience. Patience can help you manage your emotions, reactions, and responses in stressful situations. While positive psychologists don't specifically name patience as one of the top 24 character strengths, it is seen as an important element of human behavior. Strengths researchers propose that patience is an amalgam of several recognized character strengths, including perseverance, self-regulation, and judgment (Niemiec, 2018; Peterson and Seligman, 2004).
Mental health
Mental health
fromFortune Well
2 hours ago

Your kid is losing the equivalent of one night's sleep every week because they are glued to their phones, new study reveals | Fortune Well

Social media notifications and FOMO cause many 10-year-olds to lose sleep, with 12.5% waking at night and average sleep below recommended levels.
Mental health
fromEntrepreneur
5 hours ago

I Was Burning Out. Then One Simple Question Gave Me a Solution

Burnout is overcome by a small, repeatable commitment and by sharing burdens instead of carrying them alone.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 hour ago

The age when happiness quietly bottoms out-and most people don't see it coming - Silicon Canals

Happiness reaches its lowest point around age 47.2 in advanced countries and around 48.2 in developing countries.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 hour ago

Why people over 70 report being happier than people in their 30s - Silicon Canals

People aged 65–79 report higher happiness due to improved emotional regulation, acceptance, gratitude, present-focused engagement, and reduced comparison and need for control.
#microdosing
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 hours ago

Lack of mental health beds contributed to UK teenager's death, inquest finds

A shortage of mental health beds and poor communication between agencies contributed to the death of a teenage girl on hospital grounds, an inquest has found. Ellame Ford-Dunn, 16, who had a history of self-harm, died in March 2022 after absconding from an acute children's ward where she had been put because of a dearth of appropriate mental health beds.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
5 hours ago

One Way to Reduce Anxiety: Check Your Caffeine Intake

Consuming more than 400 mg of caffeine daily can cause anxiety, rapid heartbeat, sleep disruption, and effects last longer in slow caffeine metabolizers.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
9 hours ago

When the World Feels Unsteady: Anxiety and Eating Disorders

Collective uncertainty and chronic stress increase eating disorder risk and relapse by intensifying the need for control and dysregulating the nervous system.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
20 hours ago

The Power of Community in Huntington's Disease

A gene-positive, asymptomatic Huntington's Disease carrier hesitates to join community support due to isolation, pride, and fear, but recognizes potential benefits.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
6 hours ago

If you cancel plans to stay home alone more than you admit, psychology says this might be why - Silicon Canals

Repeatedly canceling plans often reflects social burnout or anxiety-driven avoidance, serving as self-protection rather than mere tiredness or introversion.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
8 hours ago

Positive Childhood Experiences for Addiction Prevention

Positive childhood experiences promote healthier adult outcomes, independently and by buffering adversity, reducing risk behaviors and supporting resilience and addiction prevention.
fromSlate Magazine
13 hours ago

It's Causing People to Lose Jobs, Shatter Relationships, and Drain Their Savings. One Support Group Is Sounding the Alarm.

Last August, Adam Thomas found himself wandering the dunes of Christmas Valley, Oregon, after a chatbot kept suggesting he mystically "follow the pattern" of his own consciousness. Thomas was running on very little sleep-he'd been talking to his chatbot around the clock for months by that point, asking it to help improve his life. Instead it sent him on empty assignments, like meandering the vacuous desert sprawl.
Mental health
#emotional-exhaustion
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago
Mental health

People who always say "I'm just tired" when something is clearly wrong have been using this cover for these 9 things most of their life - Silicon Canals

fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago
Mental health

People who always say "I'm just tired" when something is clearly wrong have been using this cover for these 9 things most of their life - Silicon Canals

fromBuzzFeed
20 hours ago

The Latest Version Of Celebrity Thinness Isn't Just Annoying, It's Dangerous. I Should Know.

This comes after millions of women, myself included, have spent years trying to unlearn the toxic messages we were fed in our youth. That beauty equals thinness. That discipline means restriction. That our bodies must be controlled and minimized to be acceptable. We fought for size diversity, for the radical idea that you can be beautiful, strong and worthy without disappearing. And just as that movement was starting to shift the cultural tide, here comes this trend of pharmaceutical shrinking that pretends thinness is wellness.
Mental health
#anxiety
fromSilicon Canals
9 hours ago
Mental health

People who always arrive 5 minutes early no matter what usually display these 8 traits-and most of them come from anxiety not politeness - Silicon Canals

fromSilicon Canals
9 hours ago
Mental health

People who always arrive 5 minutes early no matter what usually display these 8 traits-and most of them come from anxiety not politeness - Silicon Canals

Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
7 hours ago

Support new mothers with mental ill health | Letter

Perinatal mental illness causes significant maternal harm and infant risks but is preventable and treatable with coordinated biological, psychological, and social support.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
8 hours ago

Parenting in Winter Is Hard

Long, dark winters biologically strain nervous systems, reduce mood-regulating chemicals, increase illness and routine disruption, causing widespread fatigue, dysregulation, and parenting strain.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
16 hours ago

Psychology says preferring solitude over constant socializing is a subtle sign of these 7 unique traits - Silicon Canals

Preferring solitude often signals strengths like deep reflection, analytical clarity, and productive mental space rather than a social or personal deficit.
fromSlate Magazine
13 hours ago

Overcoming Grief Through Ritual

When we think of rituals, we tend to think of face masks and wellness trends. But there are actually ways to use rituals to help heal grief and deal with stressful times. On this episode, Lucy Lopez, Elizabeth Newcamp, and Zak Rosen are joined by ritual expert Betty Ray to talk about creative ways to help children process grief and big emotions, how to use ritual to create safety and expression, and much more.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
10 hours ago

Global Study Identifies Genetic Links to Depression

Genetic analyses have identified hundreds of variants linked to depression and revealed existing non-psychiatric drugs as potential treatment candidates.
Mental health
fromTiny Buddha
7 hours ago

Breaking the Cycle of "There's Something Wrong with Me" - Tiny Buddha

Childhood experiences of conditional parental approval can create lifelong feelings of being fundamentally flawed and can be unconsciously replicated in parent-child relationships.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
7 hours ago

Open Questions About Electroconvulsive Therapy Reveal Fuller Picture

Nearly all ECT recipients reported negative effects—chiefly memory loss—while about half reported benefits such as improved mood and reduced suicidality.
Mental health
fromMail Online
22 hours ago

Why night owls and early birds are a mixed bunch - which one are YOU?

People fall into five chronotype subtypes—three night-owl types and two morning types—with distinct brain patterns, behaviors, and health risks.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

When Human Experience Strains the Spirit

Resilience can lower immediate stress from cyberbullying but does not prevent anxiety or depression rooted in threats to identity, belonging, and meaning.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Short Videos, Big Impact on Youth Mental Health

Frequent, emotionally driven short-form video use is linked to poorer mental health, increased compulsive use, and reduced sleep in adolescents and young adults.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

PMDD is ruining my life. What can I do?

Premenstrual dysphoric disorder causes severe, cyclical psychological and cognitive impairment during the luteal phase that profoundly disrupts daily functioning and relationships.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

A Neurosurgeon's Prescription for Anxiety

Taking an active role retrains fear-based brain circuits via neuroplasticity, restoring agency and reducing anxiety more effectively than passive symptom treatment.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

People who were constantly told they were "too much" as children now display these 8 behaviors in every adult relationship without realizing they're still apologizing for existing - Silicon Canals

Childhood labeling as 'too much' leads adults to minimize themselves, causing anxiety, apologizing for existence, and submissive behaviors in relationships.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Anorexia Nervosa: When Critique Loses Sight of Care

Anorexia nervosa is shaped by culture and competing theories, yet some intensive treatments produce real-world benefits even without a perfect explanatory model.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

How to Know If Your Parent Is Emotionally Unavailable

Emotional unavailability in a parent undermines self-esteem and conditions children to prioritize parental approval over authentic self-expression, causing shame and resentment.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

3 Keys to Getting Stuff Done

Restore motivation by planning weekly and daily priorities, doing hard tasks before easy ones, cultivating curiosity, rewarding progress, and using baby steps to stay on track.
Mental health
fromFuturism
1 day ago

New Study Examines How Often AI Psychosis Actually Happens, and the Results Are Not Good

Prolonged use of AI chatbots can induce reality- and action-distorting effects in some users, causing severe mental-health crises and even linked deaths.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Autism and Headphones: Beyond the Stereotypes

Noise-canceling headphones reduce steady background noise but can increase sensory overwhelm and make sudden sounds unexpectedly harsher, especially for autistic listeners.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Women who basically raised themselves display these 10 strengths in adulthood that came at a price no one ever talks about - Silicon Canals

Women who raised themselves become resilient, resourceful, and self-sufficient but carry emotional costs including difficulty accepting help, hypervigilance, and exhaustion from constant self-reliance.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Reading was the key to breaking through the fog of my parents' dementia | Jo Glanville

People with advanced dementia can retain comprehension and emotional responsiveness, while caregivers endure severe, long-lasting burdens that inform calls for assisted dying.
Mental health
fromwww.bbc.com
1 day ago

'My ketamine addiction put me in a Japanese prison'

Ketamine addiction drove Izabel Rose to procure drugs in Japan, leading to five months' imprisonment and a traumatic but ultimately life-changing experience.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Anna longed for a second child. Coming to terms with secondary infertility meant letting go of her fixed notion of family | Bianca Denny

Secondary infertility caused Anna profound emotional distress, social isolation, relationship strain, and self-blame while intensifying preoccupation with conceiving a second child.
Mental health
fromABC7 San Francisco
1 day ago

Moms with struggling adult children describe Reiner family tragedy as their 'worst nightmare'

A family murder case underscores gaps in California mental health and substance-abuse conservatorship processes and delayed implementation of SB 43 and Prop 1 investments.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Sharing Your Truth With a Defensive or Aggressive Partner

Real safety is an internal state built on capacity to meet challenges, supported by practical preparation and information gathering.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Ex-British army chief calls on ministers to back MDMA-assisted therapy for veterans

Easing MDMA restrictions could lower trial costs and enable MDMA-assisted therapy that may markedly reduce PTSD symptoms in veterans and other emergency workers.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Adjustments must be made': how to live well after mid-life

Midlife commonly triggers psychological strain and requires deliberate attention to mental health as lifespans lengthen and the second stage of life extends.
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

Can Deadbots Make Grief Obsolete?

When Justin Harrison got the call in 2022 telling him that his mother would likely die within the day, he didn't panic. He got on a plane to Singapore, where he was scheduled to present at a conference about his start-up, You, Only Virtual, a platform on which users can chat with AI versions of their dead loved ones, and which Justin believes can ultimately eliminate grief as a human experience. He learned about his mother's death while flying over the Pacific.
Mental health
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

It's not just about surviving': the Ukrainian frontline city where life goes on under cover

Children in Kherson live under constant threat, finding refuge and psychological support in a basement community centre where art and activities provide therapy.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Carlos Alcaraz v Novak Djokovic: Australian Open 2026 men's singles final live

Over the 74,301 years he's been playing tennis, warming to Novak Djokovic hasn't always been easy. And the man himself knows it, frequently bristling at sleights perceived, imagined and real, his 24 grand slam titles unable to replace the basic need to feel loved. What we all learn from Djokovic, though what even Djokovic himself can learn from Djokovic is how to execute the perennially torturous business of loving yourself.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Addiction: Hope, IFS, and Common Treatment Miscalculations

Addictive behaviors function as survival tactics by protective subpersonalities that soothe underlying emotional pain; generalist therapists can use IFS to engage.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

When Did We Lose the Art of Containment?

Practicing emotional containment—holding feelings to choose when and whom to share with—reduces distress and avoids exhausting performative oversharing on social media.
#adhd
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

If your parents never once knocked before entering your room you now struggle with these 8 things in adult relationships and probably never connected the two - Silicon Canals

Growing up without basic privacy fosters lifelong hypervigilance, boundary difficulties, anxiety, and intimacy problems in adult relationships.
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Looksmaxxing Is Just Another Dead End

I've often asked patients why they're so preoccupied with becoming the best in some domain, why they need something so much that they're willing to organize their lives around it, sacrificing all types of pleasures for it. Most of the time, there isn't much of an answer. It's like a game, a distraction, and a fantasy; there's no rhyme or reason, no sense of why they do it or what's to come, and no understanding of how being the best generates long-standing happiness.
Mental health
Mental health
fromLAist
2 days ago

Two California courtrooms hear how companies may have hooked kids on social media

Instagram features and company directives intentionally encourage addictive use among youth, prompting lawsuits alleging companies prioritized profits over children's mental health.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Inner Death: The Death We Don't Talk About

Childhood physical abuse can trigger nervous system shutdowns causing emotional numbness, identity loss, and long-term patterns like over-functioning, emotional distance, and fear of closeness.
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Overthinking Is The New Failure to Launch

What these parents don't realize is that today's failure to launch is not always behavioral in nature. It can be due to cognitive constipation (bear with me on the Gastrointestinal metaphor; I am trying to make a point). Yes, that's right. It is those nasty doses of overthinking-the behind-the-scenes fuel-that crank up the hidden anxiety burning in your adult child's brain.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

When in Doubt, Do What's More Difficult

Choose the more difficult option when facing major decisions to expand your world, build self-confidence, and avoid anxiety-driven contraction of your comfort zone.
Mental health
fromBuzzFeed
2 days ago

People Are Sharing The Common Parenting Styles That Can "Ruin A Child's Future"

Support neurodivergent children by teaching coping skills and boundaries rather than infantilizing them or forcing conformity to appear 'normal'.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

Can you guess our screen time? A priest, pensioner, tech CEO and teenager reveal all

A 16-year-old limits screen time to under an hour daily, avoids social media, and worries about online permanence and peers' heavy social-media use.
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

The Super Bowl Mentality

After 18 weeks of the NFL regular season, the moment is almost here. The Super Bowl represents the pinnacle of pressure. For the athletes that take the field, it's the moment they've been waiting for. The culmination of years of preparation for that one game. There is little margin for error and the moment is unforgiving. Yet, the psychological demands of Super Bowl game day aren't as unique as we think.
Mental health
Mental health
Optimal performance occurs at moderate arousal; too little or too much reduces effectiveness, and trauma can narrow emotional tolerance but can be expanded with practice.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

6 Ways to Hold Things Together When Your Spouse Is Depressed

When a partner is depressed, prioritize your wellbeing, set limits, apply selective, practical support, and enlist outside help to maintain structure and reduce overwhelm.
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Can Avoiding Dating Be Relationship OCD?

People may avoid romantic relationships for various reasons. Some genuinely prefer being single, others are focused on other life goals, and some may simply not feel drawn to dating at a certain stage in life. But for some, avoiding dating is not a free choice. Instead, it is driven by fear, doubt, and attempts to protect themselves from emotional distress. In these cases, relationship obsessive-compulsive disorder ( ROCD) may be operating quietly in the background, shaping decisions from behind the scenes.
Mental health
Mental health
fromSan Francisco Bay Times
3 days ago

Money Dysmorphia Explained: Why Smart People Feel Broke When They're Not - San Francisco Bay Times

Money dysmorphia causes intense financial anxiety and guilt despite objectively healthy finances, driving overwork, avoidance of desired experiences, and chronic uncertainty about having "enough."
Mental health
fromReadWrite
3 days ago

NCPG launches 1-800-MY-RESET problem gambling helpline

1-800-MY-RESET is now the National Problem Gambling Helpline, offering free, confidential, 24/7 access to a nationwide network of trained professionals and local referrals.
Mental health
fromAxios
3 days ago

Immigration enforcement fears are reaching children - here's what parents can do

Adverse childhood experiences create chronic stress that impairs nervous system function, mental health, and long-term community economic and resource outcomes.
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Moment You're In Matters More Than the One You Remember

One of my earliest cognitive therapy patients asked if we'd spend time exploring his past. He thought we might find patterns that would explain his depression. I was taken aback. I had just discovered a set of powerful, active techniques that helped people change how they felt in the here-and-now. As a psychiatric resident, I had seen that endless venting without specific techniques for change led to little or no relief.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Chilling' hacking network is targeting vulnerable children, charity warns

The Molly Rose Foundation (MRF) said online networks linked to a global ecosystem labelled the Com were carrying out extreme exploitation, cyberbullying, violence and abuse and called for a coordinated global response from governments, regulators, law enforcement and tech companies. The warning follows the publication of a report by the online risk consultancy Resolver in partnership with the MRF, which was founded by the family of Molly Russell, a British teenager who killed herself in 2017 after viewing harmful content online.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Big Changes to Psychiatric Diagnoses Are Coming, Maybe

The DSM is the authoritative manual defining psychiatric diagnoses and is due for substantial revision, raising questions about scientific validity and clinical practicality.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

They're taught that showing feelings is shameful': eight reasons men don't go to therapy and why they should

Jake's marriage to Louise is in trouble, and she has insisted he come and see me. If not for Louise, you wouldn't be here, would you? I enquire tentatively. He looks sheepish at first; then emboldened, he gives an emphatic No. As is almost always the case, Jake's wife has registered a problem that has passed him by, and prompted his visit.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPhys
3 days ago

When both partners work from home: The hidden cost of always-on technology

When both partners work from home, digital interruptions increase after-work frustration, strain relationships, and impose a heavier psychological burden on women; planning can mitigate impacts.
#loneliness
fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago

8 things lower-middle-class people do to feel safe that wealthy people don't even think about - Silicon Canals

Growing up outside Manchester, I remember watching my mum count out exact change at the supermarket checkout, keeping a running total in her head as she shopped. Meanwhile, my university roommate would just toss things in his trolley without a second thought. That's when it hit me: Financial security isn't just about having money. It's about the mental space that money creates.
Mental health
Mental health
fromAlleywatch
3 days ago

Spring Health Acquires Alma to Address Care Continuity in Mental Health

Spring Health acquired Alma to integrate Alma’s clinician-insurance platform, expanding access to personalized, connected mental health care at scale while retaining Alma’s CEO.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Caring for Your Grandchildren Is Good for Your Brain

Caring for grandchildren is associated with better memory and verbal fluency and slower cognitive decline in grandmothers, independent of care frequency or type.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

How to Stop Worrying About Things You Can't Control

Worry is a protective emotional and physiological response that focuses attention and motivates preparation, but it becomes harmful when it fixates on uncontrollable outcomes.
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Exercise Alone Is Not an Effective Treatment for Depression

That sounds impressive; however, the devil is in the details that the popular media completely ignored. For example, only 11 of those studies were focused on depression. The authors concluded that exercise had a medium effect on depression. It is impossible to know how a "medium" effect compares with drug therapy since the studies were not head-to-head comparisons. The study also reported that exercise benefited many other health conditions, including HIV or kidney disease, various mental disorders, and cancers.
Mental health
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago

Psychology says people who retire without these 7 things in place usually regret it within the first year - Silicon Canals

Successful retirement requires more than money; cultivating purpose, structure, and seven specific elements before leaving work prevents regret, depression, and health decline.
Mental health
fromVulture
3 days ago

Bruce Willis 'Doesn't Know' He Has Dementia

Bruce Willis has frontotemporal dementia and does not recognize his condition due to anosognosia, while his wife and caregiver describes adapting to their changed connection.
Mental health
fromZDNET
3 days ago

I bricked my iPhone to prevent doomscrolling - and accidentally fixed my life

Excessive daily phone use and social media scrolling displaces meaningful activities, worsens mood, and leads to cyclical app deletion and reinstallation.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

Psychology says people who feel empty inside often display these 8 oddly specific behaviors without realizing it - Silicon Canals

Mindless scrolling, constant external validation seeking, and filling silence with noise are behaviors that often signal emotional emptiness and attempts to mask an inner void.
fromBustle
4 days ago

I Didn't Realize My Mental Health Would Cost $20,000 a Year

Sometimes, you don't need to think about your brain. It just... runs. You wake up, remember your passwords (mostly), answer emails without crying (ideally), sleep at night instead of staring at the ceiling replaying a weird thing you said in 2016 (actually), and generally move through the day without feeling panicked, sluggish, or sad.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

The Shadows We Carry

Internalized shadows from historical oppression reshape identity and belonging, causing people to feel unseen, excessive, or inauthentic across different social spaces.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

What Therapists Can Do That AI Never Will

Repairing ruptures through listening, acknowledgment, and apology strengthens therapeutic connection and enables progress, especially for clients wounded by narcissistic parental dynamics.
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

When Memory Worries Deserve Attention

Most people will forget a name, misplace their phone, or lose track of a conversation at some point. Usually, those moments pass without much thought. But for many adults, especially as they age, small lapses can trigger a much deeper fear: Is this the beginning of cognitive decline? As a neurologist, I hear this concern often. And as a researcher, I have learned something important: Worry about cognition and cognitive disease are not the same thing.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Keep Your Pen Moving: 6 Science-Backed Benefits of Gratitude

You've just had a crummy day, and you wish you hadn't. Your first instinct is to pick up the phone, call your best friend, and complain. But you also know deep down that you want to be more positive. You know that complaining emphasizes the negative in your life, and you'd like to create a shift for yourself. You recall that you started a gratitude journal, and when you use it, you find you really enjoy noticing the good things more than the bad.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

Survey of over-50s women finds almost two in three struggle with mental health

Almost two in three women over 50 in the UK struggle with their mental health as they deal with menopause, relationship breakdowns and changes to their appearance, a survey has found. Brain fog, parents dying, children leaving home and financial pressures can also trigger difficulties such as sleeping problems, feeling anxious or overwhelmed, and a loss of zest for life.
Mental health
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