Mental health

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fromMail Online
15 hours ago

What daydreaming REALLY means... and why it can be harmful

Maladaptive daydreaming is when you're listening to music, watching a movie, or just staring into space while imagining different scenarios in your head,' she explained in a recent TikTok video. 'It is a form of dissociation where your brain is imagining alternate realities to cope with how scary your actual reality is,' she added. LePera explained that often in these scenarios, people will replay situations where you have the 'perfect response' to a past uncomfortable interaction.
Mental health
Mental health
fromFast Company
1 hour ago

A neuroscientist's 10 signs you're doing better in life than you think

Many people misjudge their success due to 'success dysmorphia', feeling inadequate despite objective progress; recognizing achievements rather than chasing milestones fosters joy.
fromFast Company
3 hours ago

80% of employees struggle with this hidden workplace bias. Here's what employers can do

Around the office, people clutch coffee like a life raft, waiting for their brains to come online and cursing the 8 a.m. meeting. And the cheerful colleague. But at least they got in early enough to find parking and grab coffee before it ran out-this time. Now: which person are you? The early riser, or the one watching them, wondering why you can never feel that awake at this hour no matter how hard you try?
Mental health
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
32 minutes ago

Tech giants head to landmark US trial over social media addiction claims

Parents, teens, and school districts are suing major social media companies for designing addictive platforms that allegedly harm children's mental health.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 hours ago

Nottingham attacks survivor fears repeat if lessons not learned

A Nottingham survivor warns that, without meaningful improvements to local mental health services and direct intervention, a similar fatal attack could occur again.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
9 hours ago

The Hidden Costs of Compulsive Caring

Chronic caretaking can become a central identity and relational pattern that organizes intimacy and self-worth, with emotional costs and reduced reciprocity.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
9 hours ago

The Emotional Impact of Being Admitted to a Psychiatric Unit

Inpatient psychiatric care can stabilize acute psychosis and prevent harm but can leave traumatic memories, shame, and isolation that often require processing and sharing to heal.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
8 hours ago

Psychology says if you struggle to relax on days off, you may be carrying these 7 "productivity beliefs" from childhood - Silicon Canals

Childhood beliefs tying worth to achievement often make adults equate productivity with value, undermining true rest and contributing to burnout.
#self-worth
fromIndependent
5 hours ago

'Do I have any grounds to contest my elderly cousin's new will?'

'The cousin is slipping mentally and I think they were put under pressure by other relatives who stand to benefit' Query: Dear Mary Frances, I'm in a very difficult situation with my wider family and don't know what to do. An elderly cousin of mine, a farmer, has been in a nursing home for quite some time. Their farm is rented out and I was put in charge of their finances, managing the rent of the farm to a neighbour, who has taken good care of it.
Mental health
fromPitchfork
18 hours ago
Mental health

Kanye West, in Wall Street Journal Ad, Attributes Antisemitism and Erratic Behavior to Brain Damage

A missed right frontal-lobe injury from a car accident led to decades of undiagnosed bipolar type‑1, causing severe mental-health decline, denial, and damaged relationships.
fromMedium
3 years ago
Mental health

5 Signs That Your Biggest Fear is 'Being a Burden'

Covert codependency (fawning) keeps people connected by preventing others' worry through self-sufficiency and suppressing personal needs to avoid being a burden.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
19 hours ago

What Your Nervous System Needs You to Know

The nervous system detects safety before conscious thought and alters bodily states, producing signals and behaviors that indicate need for protection or connection.
fromFast Company
14 hours ago

5 habits that are sabotaging your happiness

What's the big idea? Why do we fall into the same patterns-whether that's people-pleasing, perfectionism, or emotional numbing-even when we know they're not good for us? These strategies help us feel safe, but replacing that armor with inner strength lets us move with freedom instead of fear. Listen to the audio version of this Book Bite-read by Kati herself-in the Next Big Idea App. 1. Control is a survival strategy.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
11 hours ago

The Health Care Empathy Dilemma

Different empathy types affect caregivers differently: compassion empathy protects against burnout while contagion empathy increases burnout risk by merging others' emotions.
#adhd
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
14 hours ago

How Neglect Works Its Way Into Families With Means

Material possessions and busy parental schedules can cause emotional neglect when they replace meaningful parental time and emotional connection.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
12 hours ago

When Dissociation Goes From Protective to Problematic

Dissociation protects people during trauma but can cause memory gaps, emotional detachment, and courtroom misunderstandings; grounding techniques help survivors remain present.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
11 hours ago

Strengths That Autistic Adults Often Bring to Work and Life

Autistic adults often have strengths like hyperfocus, deep knowledge, and attention to detail that, when recognized, improve quality of life, careers, and relationships.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
19 hours ago

4 Words to Quickly Stop Your Child's Overthinking

Coach anxious children to Pause, Acknowledge, Contain, and Engage (PACE); interrupt overthinking loops rather than offering reassurance or logical answers to worries.
fromPsychology Today
13 hours ago

Build Emotional Resilience With Brief Exercise Sessions

First, if you're already living an active lifestyle, we know from research that you've likely built some stress resilience already. While it's impossible to avoid periodic stress, active folks are more likely to weather stressful periods. To quote Nowacka-Chmielewska et al (2022), "Exercise can significantly alter the CNS [central nervous system] expression pattern of several genes and pathways strongly related to vulnerability to stress, and various molecules have been already identified."
Mental health
#burnout
Mental health
fromBored Panda
20 hours ago

"Meme God": 45 Hilarious Memes From This IG Page That Might Awaken Your Last Brain Cell

Humor and meme-based content can alleviate stress and serve as an effective, engaging tool for both personal mood relief and brand marketing.
#loneliness
fromScary Mommy
16 hours ago

If PPD Is Making You Feel Disconnected From Your Baby, You're Not Alone

You spent hours picking nursery colors and finishes, agonized over the Snoo or a regular crib, and picked out their homecoming outfit months in advance. You planned every detail, expecting your first moments at home with your baby to be some of the most joyful of your life. When that time does come, instead of basking in happiness, you're overcome by anxiety, sadness and hopelessness, making the baby's needs feel overwhelming.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
18 hours ago

Why Religious Harm Isn't Always Recognized as Trauma

Non-affirming religious environments and messages cause lasting shame, anxiety, and self-doubt that can persist into adulthood and impair well-being.
fromScary Mommy
16 hours ago

No, PPD Isn't Just "Baby Blues" - Here's How To Tell The Difference

I just want to talk to whoever has romanticised the idea of being a new mom. When you're in a flurry of diaper changes, following a two-hourly pumping schedule and meticulously cleaning and mixing up bottles while running on less sleep than you've ever had, mommyhood ends up being more of a frenzied checklist of tasks to get done and not enough time snuggling and making babytalk with a babbling infant.
Mental health
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Life after Molly: Ian Russell on big tech, his daughter's death and why a social media ban won't work

Ian Russell's daughter died by suicide after exposure to harmful social media content, prompting his grief-driven campaign for accountability, research, support, and age-restricted platform access.
Mental health
fromFast Company
1 day ago

Why the millennial midlife crisis may be the most depressing of all

Millennials face a distinct midlife crisis shaped by missed life milestones and financial constraints that limit traditional crisis behaviors.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

A new start after 60: I jumped in the sea for the first time, and finally began to heal

A lifelong fear of deep water can be overcome through deliberate practice, experienced instruction, and confronting avoidance even in later life.
Mental health
fromSlate Magazine
23 hours ago

Is Trump Losing It?

Multiple recent behaviors and medical events raise concern that Donald Trump may be exhibiting signs of cognitive decline, though clinical diagnosis requires personal examination and medical history.
Mental health
fromFast Company
2 days ago

Unwinding with screens may be making us more stressed. Try this instead

Reducing cognitive and emotional stimuli—including digital screen use—allows brain regulatory systems to recover, improving sleep, attention, and mental quiet despite growing wellness-industry activity.
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

When the World Feels Like Too Much

Even when our own lives are relatively stable, constant exposure to war, political unrest, climate crises, and humanitarian suffering activates the brain's threat system. The nervous system is not designed to distinguish between danger that is physically nearby and danger that is emotionally vivid or repeatedly witnessed. Over time, this creates chronic vigilance. When people observe patterns of harm, exclusion, or dehumanization playing out publicly, the body registers risk.
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Why UAP Disclosure Challenges Mental Health Ethics

If you saw something in the sky that you genuinely could not explain-something now officially categorized as an unidentified anomalous phenomena, or UAP-would you tell your therapist or psychiatrist? For many people, the honest answer is no. Not because they doubt their own perception, but because they worry about what might happen next. They fear being seen as unstable, having the experience reframed as a symptom, or having it documented in a way that could affect future care, employment, or credibility.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

If you grew up during the era of "children should be seen and not heard" you probably display these 8 behaviors as an adult - Silicon Canals

Childhood suppression of expression teaches chronic people-pleasing behaviors, like excessive apologizing, that persist into adulthood and undermine self-worth and assertiveness.
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

When Dark Thoughts Need Acknowledgment

"In the still of that late winter night, 1979, for the first time I laid in bed, cold and numb except for a thin, hot streak coursing through my head, and fantasized about killing my father." These words hung conspicuously at the end of one of the essays I wrote for my MFA thesis last year. My collection of childhood stories included this account of the time when I was 14 years old and my dad had just roughed up my 17-year-old brother.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Screen time limits for children are no longer enough, new US report finds

Common advice like limiting individual youth access to screens, or asking parents to keep tabs on their children's every digital movement is not only impossible, but for adolescents in particular, potentially invasive, Schleider said. Instead, the AAP is putting more emphasis on the structural responsibility of companies and society, Schleider said. Their statement recommends regulations that limit overt, sexualized, commercialised, or harmful content to youth, including algorithms that send teens and children down rabbit holes with damaging themes.
Mental health
Mental health
fromYourTango
1 day ago

People Who Don't Answer Emails At Night Usually Do These 4 Things To Have A Life Beyond The Inbox

Establish and enforce personal boundaries—such as prioritizing self-care and limiting phone/email access—to prevent work from overflowing into personal life and causing burnout.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Psychology says people who feel stuck in life often repeat these 7 daily behaviors that quietly keep them there - Silicon Canals

Daily habits like overthinking, excessive planning, and protective behaviors create self-reinforcing cycles that keep people stuck and hinder progress.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

Psychology says if you instantly sense tension in a room, you may have these 8 signs of high emotional intelligence - Silicon Canals

High emotional intelligence enables rapid detection and interpretation of subtle emotional cues and unspoken dynamics, providing a decisive social and workplace advantage.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Is it ADHD? Maybe. Maybe Not.

Lifestyle, medical, and psychiatric factors can impair attention; ADHD requires symptoms beginning before age 12, and identifying causes is essential for diagnosis and treatment.
Mental health
fromConsequence
1 day ago

Natasha Lyonne Announces She's Relapsed: "Recovery Is a Lifelong Process"

Natasha Lyonne announced a relapse after years of sobriety and urged honesty, support, and perseverance for those in recovery.
Mental health
fromThe Independent
2 days ago

Natasha Lyonne says she's relapsed after a decade of sobriety

Natasha Lyonne relapsed after ten years of sobriety and vowed to regain sobriety for her upcoming film "Bambo".
Mental health
fromBuzzFeed
1 day ago

17 People Share The Exact Moment They Knew Their Family Was Truly Toxic

Toxic family dynamics cause persistent anxiety, identity invalidation, body-shaming, and may necessitate cutting ties for mental health.
#bereavement
fromBuzzFeed
2 days ago
Mental health

After Our Son Died, My Husband Gave Me The Most Meaningful Christmas Gift Of My Life

fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago
Mental health

I heard the news on the radio: my parents and sister had died in a helicopter crash. How would I survive their sudden loss?

fromBuzzFeed
2 days ago
Mental health

After Our Son Died, My Husband Gave Me The Most Meaningful Christmas Gift Of My Life

fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago
Mental health

I heard the news on the radio: my parents and sister had died in a helicopter crash. How would I survive their sudden loss?

Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Avoidance Is Not Always About Triggers

Avoidance during grief or infertility often reflects fear about trusting one's ability to emotionally recover later, not only fear of immediate triggers.
fromwww.mercurynews.com
3 days ago

Asking Eric: Why does this fall to me, the sibling who actually has a job?

My mother and late father sold vintage and secondhand items on auction sites for years to supplement their household budget. I taught my father to list online many years ago. I work two jobs and also freelance. I'm unmarried, in my 50s, live a half-hour drive away from the family home, and also commute one hour each way during the week. My 58-year-old brother lives with Mom. He was laid off just before the pandemic
Mental health
fromBuzzFeed
3 days ago

I Gave Up My High-Profile NYC Job And Moved Home To Serve Ramen. It Changed My Life.

"It's $2.13 an hour plus tips. $7 an hour when you're working the bar. Plus, you don't have to fold napkins and silverware. The job's yours, if you want it." I nodded quickly. "Yes, I do," I said, rising from my seat. The woman interviewing me smiled crookedly, told me to wear all black, and said I could start on Tuesday.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Psychology's Latest Advice on Aging Well

Getting older has its pluses, at least compared to the alternative, as many people like to say. However, there are also some considerable challenges that everyone faces in their later years. Your body doesn't always cooperate with your will, and there are times you feel like your memory can confound you by not cooperating either. People's roles change, and they lose family members, friends, and partners.
Mental health
fromBuzzFeed
2 days ago

New Alleged Details Are Emerging About Karamo Brown's Falling-Out With The "Queer Eye" Cast

We received word just in less than an hour ago that Karamo Brown is not going to be joining us today.
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

I stopped using my phone for everything and my anxiety dropped-here are 8 old-school habits that made me calmer - Silicon Canals

Six months ago, I found myself sitting in a coffee shop, supposedly working on an article, but instead I was switching between seven different apps, responding to notifications, and feeling my chest tighten with each ping. My heart was racing, my breathing was shallow, and I realized I couldn't remember the last time I'd gone more than five minutes without checking my phone. That's when it hit me: the device that was supposed to make my life easier had become my biggest source of stress.
Mental health
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Could a surfing retreat in Morocco conquer my fear of the sea?

A week-long trauma-informed surf retreat in Morocco combines yoga, surf lessons and group therapy to help a journalist confront wave-related fear rooted in trauma exposure.
fromBusiness Insider
2 days ago

When my college football career ended, I hit rock bottom. Losing over 100 pounds helped me get my life back on track.

When my D1 college football career ended, I didn't just lose the game. I lost my identity. Football had structured my entire life: my schedule, my body, my purpose. When that structure disappeared, I didn't know who I was anymore. I had been living what I now recognize as a lukewarm lifestyle, doing just enough to get by, but not anchored in anything solid. Without football, there was nothing left to lean on.
Mental health
Mental health
fromFast Company
3 days ago

Stop tracking employee engagement. Try this instead

Engagement tools measure motivation but often fail to capture connectedness, causing widespread employee disconnection despite high engagement scores.
fromMedium
2 days ago

The Future Where No One Works-Except the Billionaires Who Still Do

If a world without work is paradise, why are its architects still working? Our ability to create has exploded, but our ability to feel meaning in what we create has collapsed. Billionaires tell us AI will free us from work, but they still show up to the office. That's the clue we're ignoring. The danger isn't job loss, it's loss of purpose. As friction disappears, so does the proof that our actions matter. And without those tiny moments of impact, we don't become liberated.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Importance of Parentless Teens Sharing Stories Together

Connecting parentless teens with peers who experienced similar loss reduces isolation and supports healthy grieving.
Mental health
fromBusiness Insider
2 days ago

I moved away from my family in my 30s. When I called crying, my dad dropped everything and came to see me.

Moved two hours from a close-knit family for work, she lost daily paternal support and experienced unexpected grief, overwhelm, and parental guilt.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

How to Stop Your Diagnosis From Defining You

Mental health diagnoses can clarify and validate experiences but risk becoming identities; they reflect sociocultural power and exist along a health spectrum.
Mental health
fromHarvard Gazette
3 days ago

Need a cheaper, more accessible, private OCD treatment? There's an app for that. - Harvard Gazette

A CBT-based smartphone app, Perspectives, shows promise in expanding access to effective OCD treatment and addressing provider shortages.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Permission to Play: A Well-Being Essential for Autistic Life

Play is a biological and psychological need that supports regulation, creativity, connection, and well-being across the lifespan, especially for autistic individuals.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Psychology's Misdiagnosis Problem

AI can substantially reduce diagnostic errors in psychology by synthesizing complex, multi-source information that humans struggle to weigh accurately.
Mental health
fromBusiness Matters
5 days ago

The psychological impact of diet culture: Navigating mindset for sustainable weight loss

Sustainable weight loss requires transforming mindset, challenging diet culture, embracing self-compassion and body diversity to avoid harmful behaviors and unrealistic expectations.
#social-media
fromYourTango
4 days ago
Mental health

People Who Scroll Social Media Daily Often Feel Suddenly Sick For These 5 Reasons, Says Research

fromYourTango
4 days ago
Mental health

People Who Scroll Social Media Daily Often Feel Suddenly Sick For These 5 Reasons, Says Research

fromThe Drum
3 days ago

Has Gen Z OD'd on social media?

Recently I was completing a global project for a major fashion brand, which focused on the use of social media by young influencers between 16 and 24. I was short a few interviews, so in a crunch, put my own three Gen Z children in front of the camera. What I heard disturbed me, both as an agency CSO, and even more, as a parent.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Brave Listening for Suicidal Thoughts: Helping a Loved One

Respond to suicidal disclosure with calm, nonjudgmental listening; validate feelings, ask about intent and plan, remove means, stay and seek professional help immediately.
Mental health
fromTODAY.com
3 days ago

Have Mental Health Days Gone Too Far? One Teacher Raises Questions About Resilience

Widespread use of mental-health days can encourage avoidance, reduce school attendance, and undermine student responsibility and resilience.
Mental health
fromwww.housingwire.com
4 days ago

Navigating recovery: Counseling and coaching options for homeowners after natural disasters

Connecting disaster survivors to counseling and HUD-approved financial coaching accelerates emotional and financial recovery, reduces eviction and foreclosure risk, and improves payment outcomes.
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

The Powerful Impact of Peer Victimization on Teen Depression

Being a target of negative experiences by one's peers has consistently been related to decreased self-worth, poor engagement in school, and worse grades among children and adolescents. One of the most consistent of these consequences is depressive symptoms. Put simply, kids' mental health is strongly impacted by being picked on by their classmates at school. Our recently published study examined data from over 100,000 Brazilian adolescents to disentangle how pernicious the effect of being victimized was on reports of symptoms of depression.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Why You Can't Chill (Even When You Are Exhausted)

Rest resistance causes guilt and undermines well-being by linking self-worth to constant productivity, making leisure stressful and unsustainable.
Mental health
fromFast Company
3 days ago

Why you should stop relying on self-discipline and do this instead

Self-discipline promotes achievement and focus but excessive emphasis can erode values and boundaries, increasing risk of burnout, isolation, and existential despair.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

What Is Filter Dysmorphia, and Why Is It Alarming?

Filter dysmorphia occurs when digitally edited facial images feel more familiar than one's real face, altering self-perception, self-worth, and collective standards of appearance.
Mental health
fromFast Company
3 days ago

My employee calls in sick after negative feedback

An employee regressed after prior improvement, responding to feedback by calling in sick and becoming withdrawn, causing attendance and accountability concerns despite capability.
Mental health
fromBustle
4 days ago

'The Pitt' References A Real-Life Tragedy In Season 2

Season 2 of The Pitt integrates the 2018 Tree of Life synagogue shooting into a patient's storyline, connecting survivor trauma with the main character's PTSD.
Mental health
fromScary Mommy
3 days ago

The World Feels Like It's Ending, But We Still Need Some F*cking Whimsy

People increasingly seek whimsy and small pleasures to relieve anxiety and exhaustion amid global crises.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

6 Ways to Make Creativity a Non-Negotiable Part of Your Life

Protect regular, low-pressure time for wandering and openness to sustain creativity amid stress, multitasking, and competing life demands.
fromFast Company
4 days ago

How to make your out-of-office emails a little spicier (with examples)

So, you've finally done it. No more putting it off, pushing through the grind, waiting for a more opportune time once things settle down. Alas, you've mustered up the gall to cash in on your paid vacation time. Now you have several days strung together to travel, rest, or do whatever the heck your heart desires. I love that for you.
Mental health
Mental health
from101GREATGOALS.COM
4 days ago

Bournemouth v Liverpool: Line-ups, stats and preview

Match broadcasts live in the UK on Sky Sports and Premier League, streamable via Sky platforms or Now; gambling support helplines and websites provided.
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

Our family has a unique approach to grievances: if you make peace, you heap coals of fire on your enemy's head'

Give your tormentors so much sweetness that they develop diabetes. To a girl in her early teens, that sounded like nonsense. I was the centre of the universe. Surely, no one had ever been as badly treated as I was! And here my father was, telling me to be nice to them? I would ask: Is this some turn-the-other-cheek rubbish? My father has quite a distinctive cackle, and I heard it in those moments.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Very Different Psychiatric Diagnoses Share Common Genes

Alcohol, cannabis, opioid, and nicotine use disorders share substantial genetic liability and cluster together as a single brain disorder, supporting a unified addiction-liability.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Parents and Their Child's Mental Health Recovery

Active listening, emotional validation, empathy, clear boundaries, and emotion-focused therapy strengthen parent-child bonds and help prevent youth mental health problems.
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

How Shame and Self-Blame Impact Relationships

In childhood, we lack the emotional and cognitive maturity to fully understand the harm that comes from those we depend on for safety and love. To cope with fear, helplessness, and confusion, many of us blamed ourselves. This self-blame can create a false sense of control in a chaotic environment and allows us to preserve an emotional bond with caregivers, even if those caregivers are also the source of harm.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Breaking Free From the Role I Was Given as a Child

Breaking down the walls of denial in my DID system of parts has been anything but easy, but it has been necessary to thrive. I was sitting across the table from my closest friend from graduate school as we co-worked. She is also a mob daughter, but from a different lineage. We were discussing how only now, in 2026, am I fully grasping who my father actually was, despite beginning trauma-informed therapy in 2012 and spending a life savings to survive, understand, and heal.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Why It's Time to Stop Using the Word 'Trigger'

The term trigger originated in work with war veterans and combat-related trauma. Long before PTSD was formally recognized as a diagnosis, clinicians observed that soldiers returning from war could experience intense, involuntary reactions to stimuli that resembled aspects of combat. Loud noises, backfiring cars, helicopters, certain smells, or sudden movements could instantaneously activate the nervous system into survival mode. The word was intentionally literal: Just as pulling a gun's trigger leads to immediate discharge, trauma-related triggers caused an automatic physiological response without conscious choice.
Mental health
Mental health
fromWander With Jo
4 days ago

Why Moving Abroad Doesn't Fix Everything: The Emotional Toll of Moving Abroad

Expat life often increases mental-health risks—anxiety, depression, burnout, and isolation—driven by culture shock, language barriers, visa uncertainty, and financial stress.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

When Grief Enters the Locker Room

Suicide deaths in sport cause collective shock and grief across athletes and staff and expose insufficient understanding and support for athlete mental health.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Finding Help Following Suicide or an Attempt

Survivors of suicide face severe trauma, guilt, and isolation, and support groups and crisis centers offering grief counseling are critical yet often scarce.
Mental health
fromFortune
4 days ago

AI makes human intelligence more important, not less | Fortune

Organizations must invest in brain capital—brain health and brain skills—to unlock AI-era economic value and sustain workforce resilience, creativity, and innovation.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Why Confidence About Puberty Matters for Teens

Middle schoolers with higher confidence in managing puberty experience fewer depression and anxiety symptoms, regardless of age, gender, or pubertal timing.
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