Mental health

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Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
3 hours ago

There's a version of grief that belongs to people who finally got the life they wanted and then realized the person they were when they wanted it no longer exists. Nobody warns you that becoming someone new can feel like losing someone you loved. - Silicon Canals

Achieving long-desired goals can trigger genuine grief when the pursuit itself—not the outcome—was structuring your identity.
Mental health
fromTetraLogical
1 week ago

Designing for people with anxiety - TetraLogical

Thoughtful design reduces stress and anxiety by lowering cognitive load, while poor design amplifies these conditions for users experiencing threat responses.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
11 hours ago

When Trauma Still Hurts: Memory Rescripting

Memory rescripting, a trauma-focused technique developed in the 1990s, enabled successful treatment of agoraphobia in a patient who refused traditional exposure therapy despite being an ideal CBT candidate.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
11 hours ago

Can a Boom in Manufacturing Lead to Mental Health Problems?

Single-industry economic booms create unequal benefits and mental health risks, particularly for younger, less-educated workers who face severe hardship during inevitable busts.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
21 hours ago

Most Kids Don't Need Therapy: Here's What May Help More

Parents are over-relying on child therapy when parent-focused interventions addressing triggers and responses produce more effective behavioral change.
Mental health
fromFast Company
1 day ago

Your employees aren't burned out. They're indoors too much

Americans spend 93% of time indoors, causing chronic inflammation and health conditions misdiagnosed as burnout rather than environmental deprivation.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
14 hours ago

Hoarding Disorder May Lead to Increased Suicide Risk

Hoarding disorder affects 2-6% of the population, characterized by compulsive accumulation and clutter, with 13% of sufferers attempting suicide and significant associations with depression and social isolation.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
15 hours ago

How Childhood Trauma Impacts Our Sense of Trust

Trust is a complex, multifaceted relational capacity that develops through interactions with others and can be distorted by early trauma, requiring therapeutic acknowledgment rather than reassurance.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
20 hours ago

Why Our Brain Tells Us Horror Stories at Night

Nighttime cognition shifts toward rumination and catastrophic thinking due to reduced prefrontal cortex efficiency, causing minor problems to feel like existential crises that resolve with daylight.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
12 hours ago

When Friends Fall Ill: The Psychological Angle

Illness in friendships triggers complex, sometimes irrational emotional responses that reveal fundamental aspects of who we are and how we handle vulnerability.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
18 hours ago

The Manconomy Has a Body Image Problem Nobody Is Naming

Eating disorders in men are increasing through fitness optimization and looksmaxxing culture, with warning signs disguised as discipline rather than recognized as disordered eating patterns.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
19 hours ago

Can Hyperbaric Oxygen Treat Psychiatric Disorders?

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy improves PTSD, depression, anxiety, and cognitive impairment by restoring cellular energy, reducing neuroinflammation, and stimulating neuroplasticity through oxygen pressurization and cycling.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

I stopped calling myself an introvert when I realized I could talk for six hours with someone who felt safe. The exhaustion was never about people. It was about the amount of translation required to be understood by someone who wasn't really listening. - Silicon Canals

Introversion labels obscure specific social dynamics; exhaustion stems from mismatched communication styles rather than inherent temperament.
#childhood-trauma
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

The people who stay calm when everyone else panics aren't brave. They learned very early that someone in the room had to function, and their body volunteered before their mind had a choice. The cost shows up decades later in ways no one connects back to that original moment. - Silicon Canals

Childhood trauma physically alters immune and metabolic systems with measurable biological damage lasting decades, while children often develop crisis-management responses that exact long-term physiological costs.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago

Psychology says people who were constantly criticized as children don't grow up to be tougher adults - they grow up to be adults who flinch before anyone has raised a hand and apologize before anyone has accused them and the hypervigilance that kept them safe at seven is now destroying every relationship they enter at sixty-seven because their body still reads love as a trap with better packaging - Silicon Canals

Childhood trauma and harsh criticism create lasting emotional wounds that rewire how adults perceive safety, relationships, and intimacy, causing the nervous system to misidentify emotional connection as danger.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Why Family-of-Origin Trauma Is So Hard to Recognize

Family trauma survivors often struggle to recognize abuse due to denial and normalization, requiring therapeutic support to acknowledge how early unstable relationships shape adult attachment and behavior patterns.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

The people who stay calm when everyone else panics aren't brave. They learned very early that someone in the room had to function, and their body volunteered before their mind had a choice. The cost shows up decades later in ways no one connects back to that original moment. - Silicon Canals

Childhood trauma physically alters immune and metabolic systems with measurable biological damage lasting decades, while children often develop crisis-management responses that exact long-term physiological costs.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago

Psychology says people who were constantly criticized as children don't grow up to be tougher adults - they grow up to be adults who flinch before anyone has raised a hand and apologize before anyone has accused them and the hypervigilance that kept them safe at seven is now destroying every relationship they enter at sixty-seven because their body still reads love as a trap with better packaging - Silicon Canals

Childhood trauma and harsh criticism create lasting emotional wounds that rewire how adults perceive safety, relationships, and intimacy, causing the nervous system to misidentify emotional connection as danger.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Why Family-of-Origin Trauma Is So Hard to Recognize

Family trauma survivors often struggle to recognize abuse due to denial and normalization, requiring therapeutic support to acknowledge how early unstable relationships shape adult attachment and behavior patterns.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Living a Great Life With an Invisible Disability

Invisible disabilities are medically real conditions affecting millions, requiring accommodation despite lacking visible signs, and deserve recognition without judgment or assumption of fraud.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

If a coworker who used to join group lunches suddenly starts eating alone every day, something more important than introversion is happening. They've likely hit the point where the gap between who they are at work and who they actually are became too expensive to maintain over a sandwich. - Silicon Canals

Suppressing authentic self-expression at work causes measurable psychological and social harm, leading people to withdraw from workplace social interactions to avoid exhaustion from maintaining a false persona.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

When Anxiety Is Really Fear in Disguise

What people call anxiety is often the brain's fear system activating to protect us, sometimes overreacting when no immediate danger exists.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

How Beliefs About Depression Can Harm

Beliefs about depression's nature significantly impact treatment outcomes, with biological explanations potentially hindering recovery through reduced agency and pessimism.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

The Rise of AI and the Risk of Emotional Atrophy

Increased reliance on AI companions for emotional support may erode human connection capacity, with 72% of American teens using AI for companionship and 33% finding digital interactions more satisfying than human conversation.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

The Unexpected Benefit of Joining a Dying Profession

Psychoanalysis dominated mid-twentieth century culture but declined after the 1970s with the rise of biological psychiatry and medication-based treatments, though the profession continues quietly today.
#anxiety-management
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

I couldn't stop worrying until I learned about the 6.30pm rule

A therapist's "No Worry Time" strategy—designating evening hours as worry-free—helps manage anxiety by giving the brain rest and allowing non-anxious parts of self to resurface.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

I'm a middle-aged mother who hoped boxing would fix anxiety. Instead it knocked me out | Anna Spargo-Ryan

Confronting anxiety through repeated exposure to challenging activities reveals inner strength and transforms self-perception.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

I couldn't stop worrying until I learned about the 6.30pm rule

A therapist's "No Worry Time" strategy—designating evening hours as worry-free—helps manage anxiety by giving the brain rest and allowing non-anxious parts of self to resurface.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
3 days ago

I'm a middle-aged mother who hoped boxing would fix anxiety. Instead it knocked me out | Anna Spargo-Ryan

Confronting anxiety through repeated exposure to challenging activities reveals inner strength and transforms self-perception.
fromSlate Magazine
1 day ago

Soldiers Need to Understand Why They're Fighting. I Know What Happens When They Don't.

The research shows that for many who are diagnosed with PTSD, the condition arises not from what was done to us but what we did—or what we failed to prevent. This mechanism, known as moral injury, can be sympathetic ('I couldn't save them') but is often not sympathetic at all ('I killed them'). For people carrying this factor in PTSD, the task of integration, of sitting with and holding what we've done, is far more challenging.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Accepting That Misophonia Means Doing Things Differently

Misophonia requires lifestyle adaptations that conflict with personal values, causing grief that can be addressed through cognitive behavioral therapy focused on acceptance and identity integration rather than symptom elimination.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

People who were taught that rest is laziness don't struggle with productivity. They struggle with the terrifying blankness of an afternoon with nothing to prove, because their nervous system reads stillness as danger and achievement as the only form of safety it was ever taught. - Silicon Canals

Chronic productivity often stems from inability to tolerate rest rather than lack of motivation, requiring recognition that stillness is valuable, not lazy.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago

I asked 9 therapists what their clients in their 40s most regret. Almost all of them said the same thing and it had nothing to do with career or money - Silicon Canals

People in their forties most regret neglecting close friendships during their twenties and thirties while prioritizing careers and family obligations.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

When to Announce Your Pregnancy: What the Research Says

Pregnancy announcement timing involves balancing medical risk, emotional support needs, workplace discrimination concerns, and personal authenticity without a universally correct approach.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
2 days ago

From childhood to midlife and beyond: how to handle anxiety at every age

Anxiety affects one in five UK adults and 500 children daily in England; it stems from intolerance of uncertainty but can be managed through acceptance rather than avoidance.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

How War News Can Affect Your Mental Health

Consuming war-related news increases stress levels, with vulnerability varying by age, emotional regulation ability, and personality traits.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Depaysement: Mental Health Impacts as the Environment Changes

Dépaysement describes disorientation and alienation from familiar home environments due to environmental change, causing significant mental health impacts that differ from homesickness.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Viewing Harmful Material Online and Children's Stress

Younger people experience greater difficulty regulating stress responses from digital content because their prefrontal cortex develops more slowly than their limbic system, leaving them more vulnerable to automatic stress-driven behaviors.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

What Does It Mean to Own Your Addiction?

True addiction recovery requires understanding the story behind addictive behaviors rather than simply erasing or disowning them as unwanted parts of oneself.
Mental health
fromwww.dw.com
3 days ago

Living amid bombings in Iran: How fear impacts mental health

Chronic exposure to violence, war, and government oppression in Iran significantly increases mental health conditions including PTSD, anxiety, and depression, while unmet basic needs erode social relationships that are critical for resilience.
Mental health
fromFortune
3 days ago

Burned-out workers sick of toxic bosses are using medical leave as a sneaky extended vacation to job hunt-and it's not actually illegal | Fortune

Workers are using FMLA and medical leave provisions to take extended time off for mental health and burnout, with some abusing the system as paid vacation rather than genuine medical treatment.
Mental health
fromwww.dw.com
3 days ago

War, oppression and fear: In Iran, traumas are accumulating

Chronic exposure to violence, political repression, and economic hardship in Iran significantly increases rates of mental illness, PTSD, anxiety, and depression while eroding social relationships that provide resilience.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

When Anxiety Comes Out as Irritability

Irritability often masks underlying anxiety, functioning as a defensive response that transforms fear and helplessness into anger, which feels more controllable and manageable than vulnerability.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

A Conversation With Eamon Dolan on 'The Power of Parting'

Estrangement from family is often a healthy response to abuse, not selfishness, and challenges cultural myths romanticizing reconciliation at all costs.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

I asked 15 therapists what their clients in their 40s most commonly grieve and not one of them said a relationship or a career. Every single one described the same loss in different words. - Silicon Canals

People in their forties commonly experience grief over the gap between who they became and who they imagined becoming, a phenomenon therapists call mourning a phantom life rather than a traditional midlife crisis.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Emotions Are Facts: Why Therapy Requires Talking About Them

Discussing emotions is a fundamental, non-optional component of psychotherapy, not an optional preference that clients can avoid.
Mental health
from24/7 Wall St.
4 days ago

Pastor Says Dave Ramsey Pushed Them to Confront Traumatic Past in 2015

Unresolved emotional pain directly sabotages financial decision-making and wealth-building efforts, requiring emotional processing alongside financial strategies.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

Psychology says older parents who say "I don't want to be a burden" aren't being selfless-they're performing the only version of dignity they were ever taught, one where needing people is a failure, and their children hear humility but what's actually happening is a person rehearsing their own disappearance - Silicon Canals

Older adults' statements about not wanting to be burdens reflect deeply ingrained generational values about independence and dignity rather than genuine selflessness or consideration.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 days ago

New study raises concerns about AI chatbots fueling delusional thinking

AI chatbots may encourage delusional thinking in vulnerable individuals by validating and amplifying grandiose, romantic, and paranoid delusions through sycophantic responses.
#disordered-eating
Mental health
fromIndependent
4 days ago

The online dangers of eating disorder content: 'I watched a few of her videos and quickly thought: 'I don't trust myself with this''

Disordered eating cases are rising as social media algorithms expose vulnerable users to harmful body and diet content, with pro-anorexia communities actively promoting eating disorder behaviors.
Mental health
fromIndependent
4 days ago

The online dangers of eating disorder content: 'I watched a few of her videos and quickly thought: 'I don't trust myself with this''

Disordered eating cases are rising as social media algorithms expose vulnerable users to harmful body and diet content, with pro-anorexia communities actively promoting eating disorder behaviors.
Mental health
fromIndependent
4 days ago

The online dangers of eating disorder content: 'I watched a few of her videos and quickly thought: 'I don't trust myself with this''

Disordered eating cases are rising as social media algorithms expose vulnerable users to harmful body and diet content, with pro-anorexia communities actively promoting eating disorder behaviors.
Mental health
fromIndependent
4 days ago

The online dangers of eating disorder content: 'I watched a few of her videos and quickly thought: 'I don't trust myself with this''

Disordered eating cases are rising as social media algorithms expose vulnerable users to harmful body and diet content, with pro-anorexia communities actively promoting eating disorder behaviors.
Mental health
fromApartment Therapy
4 days ago

How I Found My Way to a New "Me" After Leaving an Abusive Marriage

A domestic violence survivor navigates complex grief after her abuser's suicide, rebuilding her life through therapy and family support while learning to separate trauma from cherished memories.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

When Therapists Say They Don't Treat Dissociation

Dissociation exists on a spectrum beyond DID and commonly appears in trauma therapy, requiring all clinicians to understand its subtle manifestations to provide effective trauma-informed care.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Has Therapy Felt Useless? You May Have Been Misunderstood

Some people have excessive self-control causing emotional suppression and isolation, requiring specialized therapy approaches like Radically Open DBT instead of standard emotion-regulation focused treatments.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

A Brain-Based Parenting Shift That Can Help Kids With ADHD

ADHD challenges stem from executive function differences, not motivation or capability; children struggle with attention, memory, and follow-through rather than understanding expectations.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

The Fear of Being Alone

Self-acceptance and staying present with loneliness, rather than seeking rescue, builds inner power and leads to healthier relationships and personal completeness.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Why Men Need Therapists Who Aren't Afraid of Them

Men in therapy need therapists who can authentically handle difficult truths without being triggered, requiring therapists to do deep personal work to create safe emotional space.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Needed: Providers Who Can Diagnose and Treat Adult ADHD

Adult ADHD affects 6% of U.S. adults annually and ranks as the second most common psychiatric diagnosis, yet most clinicians lack training in its assessment and treatment.
Mental health
fromwww.theguardian.com
5 days ago

It has changed my life': How a dose of nature is treating mental illness

Dose of Nature prescribes outdoor time as mental health treatment, achieving 64% recovery rates compared to NHS talking therapies' 50%, with nature exposure providing serotonin boosts and immune system benefits through phytoncides.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

4 Ways to Stop Relying on Reassurance for Self-Worth

Reassurance-seeking is a nervous system regulation strategy that provides temporary relief but increases dependence on external validation, while building internal self-worth through self-trust and consistency creates lasting stability.
Mental health
fromMail Online
5 days ago

The 7 types of hyperarousal - do you get cold sweats or tingly hands?

Hyperarousal manifests in seven distinct types: anxious, somatic, sensitive, sleep-related, irritable, vigilant, and sudomotor, each with unique characteristics and manifestations.
Mental health
fromFast Company
6 days ago

Your employees aren't lazy, they're afraid

Organizational change resistance stems from nervous system threat responses, not laziness or defiance, causing widespread stress that traditional interventions cannot resolve.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

How Childhood Trauma Shapes Dissociative Identity Disorder

Dissociative identity disorder develops from chronic childhood trauma as a protective dissociation mechanism that becomes maladaptive over time.
fromIrish Independent
6 days ago

Real Health: Fear less - understanding anxiety and taking back control

The episode explores the difference between healthy and unhealthy fear, examining how fear serves protective functions while also understanding when fear responses become counterproductive and interfere with daily functioning and well-being.
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

When Conflict at Home Shapes a Child's World

Domestic conflict within homes significantly impacts children's psychological development, though it receives far less public attention than international warfare.
Mental health
fromInfoQ
1 week ago

From Symptom Checkers to Smart Chatbots: The Role of AI in Virtual Care

Online health searches create two critical problems: unnecessary emergency visits for minor conditions and missed recognition of genuine medical emergencies, both causing harm and inefficiency.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
6 days ago

I'm 66 and I finally understand why my father never talked about his feelings - it wasn't stoicism or emotional unavailability, it was that his generation was handed a definition of strength that made needing anyone feel like personal failure - Silicon Canals

Men of previous generations were taught that emotional expression and seeking help constituted weakness, leading them to silently endure hardship and pass this harmful rulebook to their sons.
Mental health
fromMail Online
6 days ago

The exact age Gen Z consider you 'old', revealed - are you past it?

Gen Z perceives old age beginning at 62, significantly younger than Boomers who believe it starts at 67, reflecting generational differences in aging perceptions.
fromTiny Buddha
1 week ago

I Stopped Asking "Why Me?" and Started Asking "What Now?" - Tiny Buddha

Between stimulus and response there is a space. In that space is our power to choose our response. ~Viktor Frankl. For a long time, my first response to difficulty was a single, aching question: 'Why me?' It surfaced whenever life took an unexpected turn—when plans collapsed, when effort didn't materialize, when circumstances felt unfair and overwhelming.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

I'm 44 and I haven't cried since my father's funeral three years ago - not because I've healed but because somewhere between the eulogy and the drive home my body decided that was the last time and I've been waiting ever since for the next wave to come and it just won't and the numbness is worse than the grief ever was - Silicon Canals

Dr. Bessel van der Kolk writes in 'The Body Keeps the Score' that trauma doesn't just live in our minds - it reshapes how our bodies respond to emotion. Sometimes, when we experience significant loss, our nervous system essentially decides that feeling is too dangerous and shuts down the whole operation.
Mental health
Mental health
fromSlate Magazine
6 days ago

I Underwent "Conversion Therapy" as a Child. As a Psychiatrist, I Know How Professionally Derelict It Is.

States may regulate licensed therapists' conduct to prevent conversion therapy, which medicine deems fraudulent and harmful, protecting children from identity-changing treatments.
fromInside Higher Ed | Higher Education News, Events and Jobs
1 week ago

Youth Suicide Rates Decline, Risks Remain

The number of suicides per 100,000 young people ages 10 to 24 declined by nearly 12 percent, from 11 to 9.7, between 2021 and 2024. The decrease was driven largely by reductions among young men, whose suicide levels fell by nearly 15 percent, while suicides among young women declined by about 2 percent.
Mental health
Mental health
fromScary Mommy
6 days ago

FDA Drug Official Moves To Hire A Friend Who Touts Unproven Claims About Antidepressants

Nearly 23% of American women take antidepressants, but FDA officials are considering adding unproven pregnancy risk warnings to antidepressant labels despite robust evidence supporting their safety during pregnancy.
fromBrooklynVegan
1 week ago

Colter Wall announces "indefinite hiatus from live music": "The truth is that I am mentally unwell"

The truth is that I am mentally unwell. Despite this, I have pushed myself to continue with touring. As a result my mental health has only further declined. After discussions with my team, we have decided to cancel the remaining shows and take an indefinite hiatus from live music.
Mental health
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

The generation that prided itself on never needing anyone raised a generation that goes to therapy twice a week - and the distance between those two facts is where most family pain actually lives - Silicon Canals

Generational differences in mental health attitudes create family tension between parents who valued silence and independence versus adult children who openly discuss mental health and seek therapy.
Mental health
fromFast Company
1 week ago

3 science-backed ways to practice optimism at work (that aren't phony or forced)

Forced positivity suppresses stress responses and impairs cognitive function; genuine optimism involves naming obstacles and maintaining mental flexibility during uncertainty.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

Psychologists explain that the grief of not having children doesn't follow the stages people expect because there is no single loss to process. It's a recurring absence that resurfaces at every milestone, every holiday, every quiet evening, and the pain isn't that it keeps happening once but that it keeps happening in new forms for the rest of your life. - Silicon Canals

Grief from childlessness is a unique, ongoing loss without a single event or clear moment of acceptance, manifesting through countless ordinary moments that unexpectedly trigger profound emotional weight.
Mental health
fromScary Mommy
1 week ago

Here's Why Your Brain Hits "GO" On Every Anxious Thought Right When You Want To Sleep

Nighttime anxiety spikes are normal and caused by factors like blood sugar dysregulation, reduced distractions, and the brain's protective mechanisms becoming hyperactive in darkness and quiet.
Mental health
fromBloomberglaw
1 week ago

Meta, Google Pivot in Addiction Trial to Accuser's History (1)

Meta and Google defend against social media addiction claims by attributing the plaintiff's mental health issues to family and school problems rather than platform use.
fromBusiness Insider
1 week ago

I battled depression while working in Big Tech

With sweaty palms and trembling knees, I asked him to grant me a one-month medical leave because my depression had become unbearable. I struggled to find the words. 'It's hard to explain,' I eventually said. 'I just don't have any energy. To do anything. I'm drained all the time, physically. And nothing feels good to me. I hate myself. I only get out of bed to come to work.'
Mental health
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

When Even a Neuroscientist Feels Overwhelmed

Modern crises create a 'Traumademic' where overlapping global and personal stressors trigger emotional hijacking, causing the ancient feeling brain to override rational thinking through constantly activated alarm systems.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Loosening the Grip: Finding Peace by Letting Go of What Hurts Us

You control your emotional response to hurt by shifting focus from toxic relationships when the pain of staying exceeds the pain of letting go.
fromBusiness Insider
1 week ago

I worked a corporate job for 8.5 years. I quit over a text message.

I spent years climbing the corporate ladder. I believed success would bring me satisfaction. Instead, I became so exhausted that I couldn't enjoy family time, hobbies, or even quiet moments at home. I was always frustrated, crying, and snapping at the people around me.
Mental health
fromBusiness Insider
1 week ago

How rage room happy hours became all the rage

Monet, a special-ed high school teacher, clarified that the kids aren't the problem. It's the rest of it: the endless paperwork, shifting lesson plans, and constant assessments. Inside the rage room, Monet was tentative at first, but then entered a flow state, conjuring up something that was bothering her before taking each swing.
Mental health
Mental health
fromTiny Buddha
1 week ago

Moral Injury: When the People Meant to Protect You Fail - Tiny Buddha

Trauma from betrayal occurs when trusted authorities fail to protect us after we disclose harm, creating lasting psychological wounds beyond the initial injury.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

How to Find Hope in Difficult Times

Hope is a motivational state combining clear goals, identified pathways, and personal agency to navigate life's challenges and improve happiness.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

Children who were punished for crying didn't stop feeling. They just learned to process grief at a delay, which is why they're the adults who suddenly break down in the shower over something that happened six months ago and can't explain why today was the day it arrived - Silicon Canals

Suppressing childhood emotional expression through punishment creates unprocessed grief that resurfaces unexpectedly in adulthood, not resilience.
Mental health
fromBusiness Insider
1 week ago

Using too many AI tools at once can actually make you less productive and cause 'brain fry,' study finds

Workers using multiple AI tools simultaneously experience mental fatigue called 'AI brain fry,' characterized by cognitive fog and reduced decision-making ability beyond optimal tool usage levels.
Mental health
fromESPN.com
1 week ago

Gary Woodland: Done wasting energy trying to hide PTSD

Gary Woodland publicly disclosed his PTSD diagnosis following 2023 brain surgery, stating he can no longer hide his ongoing mental health struggles while competing on the PGA Tour.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Why Mental Health Language Is Everywhere Now

Mental health terminology has migrated from clinical settings into everyday conversation, reducing stigma and increasing awareness, but clinical meanings shift in common speech, requiring precision for effective care and public discourse.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

I used to think I was introverted. Then I realized I'm not drained by people. I'm drained by performing the version of myself that makes people comfortable, and the difference between those two things changed how I understood my entire twenties. - Silicon Canals

Exhaustion from social interaction often stems from self-presentation performance rather than introversion itself, affecting mental health through the cognitive and emotional labor of maintaining curated personas.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Why Children Are Especially Vulnerable to Trauma

Trauma is a deep psychological wound from adverse experiences that prevents recovery and moving forward, distinct from painful but recoverable life events.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

Psychology says the generation that survived the most hardship is also the least equipped to talk about it - and their children are paying the therapy bills for that silence - Silicon Canals

Unprocessed trauma from the Greatest Generation created intergenerational emotional wounds passed through silence rather than communication, requiring descendants to seek therapy to break the cycle.
Mental health
fromwww.psychologytoday.com
1 week ago

Why Gen Z Feel Less Happy Even as Society Gets Richer

Material prosperity and technological advancement have not translated into increased happiness, with younger generations reporting the lowest well-being despite unprecedented access to education, healthcare, and information.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

Skills That Feel Worse May Work Best for Long-Term Recovery

Behavioral activation skills use after discharge from intensive treatment predicts sustained depression improvement, while short-term mood-focused skills do not support long-term symptom recovery.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

IFS Research: Group Therapy for PTSD and Substance Use

PTSD and substance use disorder require integrated treatment combining past- and present-focused techniques, delivered briefly via telehealth to diverse populations.
Mental health
fromwww.bbc.com
1 week ago

Sent 90 miles after giving birth while 'soaked in urine'

A new mother with postpartum psychosis was forced to travel 90 miles for emergency care due to insufficient specialist mother and baby units, highlighting critical gaps in mental health service accessibility across the UK.
fromBustle
1 week ago

Hilary Duff Opened Up About Her Experience With Eating Disorders

Of course, those normal things came up. Then on top of it, I was dealing with people commenting on my body at a young age, starting to get photographed, and people asking you how many times you weigh yourself or comparing you to people that were thinner than you or other girls in your line of work.
Mental health
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

The reason some people can't rest even when they finally have permission to rest is that their body never got the signal that the emergency is over. They finished surviving years ago. Their nervous system hasn't been informed. - Silicon Canals

Chronic stress or trauma can cause the nervous system to remain in a persistent fight-or-flight state long after the threat has ended, preventing people from genuinely resting or enjoying earned downtime.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

People who stay calm during emergencies but fall apart over minor inconveniences aren't fragile. Their system was calibrated for catastrophe, and it genuinely doesn't know how to scale down to a traffic jam or a lost set of keys. - Silicon Canals

Accumulated small daily frustrations can trigger greater stress responses than single major crises in people whose nervous systems were calibrated for survival under chronic danger or high-stakes conditions.
#cognitive-health
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago
Mental health

People who stay mentally sharp well into their 80s don't do crossword puzzles or brain games - they all quit doing these 6 things that most people never realize are slowly eroding their cognitive flexibility - Silicon Canals

fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago
Mental health

People who stay mentally sharp well into their 80s don't do crossword puzzles or brain games - they all quit doing these 6 things that most people never realize are slowly eroding their cognitive flexibility - Silicon Canals

Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

Psychology says the reason your aging parent keeps telling the same stories isn't memory loss it's that those stories are the last place where they still felt like the main character in their own life and repeating them is the closest thing they have to being seen again - Silicon Canals

Repeated stories from aging parents often reflect identity preservation rather than cognitive decline, anchoring them to meaningful moments when they were protagonists of their own lives.
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