#recurring-dreams

[ follow ]
Psychology
fromMail Online
5 hours ago

Scientists reveal scary dreams might actually be GOOD for you

Experiencing fear in dreams may indicate better emotional regulation skills, despite being linked to worse mood the following day.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 hours ago

When You Can't Picture Yourself in Your Own Future

Many young adults experience a psychological disconnection from their future, feeling detached from their own lives and milestones due to trauma and existential concerns.
Relationships
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Psychology suggests you will always push away good things if your subconscious mind doesn't believe you deserve them - and most people who do this don't recognize it as pushing, they just wonder why nothing good ever seems to stay - Silicon Canals

Self-sabotage often occurs unconsciously, pushing good things away despite a desire for improvement.
Books
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

Do You See Yourself in a Story?

Comic books have evolved into a serious medium for exploring trauma and psychological depth, exemplified by works like Maus.
#lucid-dreaming
Writing
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

How Lucid Dreaming Can Make Us More Creative

Lucid dreaming enhances creativity and problem-solving abilities, as shown by studies on haiku poetry written in this state.
Writing
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

How Lucid Dreaming Can Make Us More Creative

Lucid dreaming enhances creativity and problem-solving abilities, as shown by studies on haiku poetry written in this state.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

The Unlived Life: Jung's Most Haunting Concept

Success can lead to an unsettling realization of the unlived life, where unfulfilled aspects of personality and desires remain hidden.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

The Invisible Game: Jordan's Negative Space and Jung's Shadow

Michael Jordan and Carl Jung both emphasize the importance of recognizing overlooked spaces for extraordinary performance and deeper self-understanding.
Mental health
fromTiny Buddha
1 week ago

What's Really Happening When Your Thoughts Spiral at Night - Tiny Buddha

Anxiety serves as a messenger, revealing underlying fears rather than being an enemy to be eliminated.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Your Most Horrifying Thoughts May Not Mean What You Think

Intrusive sexual thoughts are a common form of OCD, often misidentified and not indicative of actual desire.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Death Drive

Some individuals exhibit necrophilia—a destructive impulse and love of death—driven by fear of life's uncontrollability, manifesting in pathological enjoyment of war and destruction.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
4 weeks 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.
#dreams
Writing
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

How to Get What You Want

Historical examples of powerful women demonstrate that independent thinking and strategic action enable individuals to achieve their goals despite systemic constraints.
Miscellaneous
fromThe Walrus
1 month ago

I Tried New Tech That Claimed It Could Hack My Dreams | The Walrus

A sleep doctor's early fascination with unexplained nighttime deaths led him to establish one of Canada's first independent sleep laboratories, pioneering sleep disorder diagnosis and treatment.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

Psychology says the anxiety most people feel on Sunday evenings isn't about Monday - it's a reactivation of these 9 childhood patterns that were embedded during a time when the end of the weekend meant returning to something the child was quietly dreading - Silicon Canals

Sunday evening anxiety stems from childhood experiences with school transitions and unfinished homework rather than actual work concerns.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Architecture of Identity: How the Brain Builds a Self

Attention is the brain's filtering mechanism; what passes through that filter is what gets encoded. What gets encoded becomes memory. And memory is the raw material of identity. So in the architecture of your identity, attention is the doorway.
Miscellaneous
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

What Archetypal Psychology Is and Why It Matters

Modern psychology excels at identifying symptoms but often overlooks deeper narrative patterns that shape human experience and meaning.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Publishing Untold Stories From the Worlds of the Subconscious

Unfortunately, hypnosis has a negative reputation among the general public, in large part because of how it's been portrayed by the movie and entertainment industry. Also, I was aware that in the late 19th century there were many false positive and negative claims about hypnosis that soured the public on the possibility that hypnosis could be helpful. I did not want to create or add to a 21st-century perception that hypnosis was quackery, and therefore chose to withhold telling about some of the most amazing events that I had encountered with my patients when I first wrote about hypnosis, because these stories might have been too hard to believe.
Mental health
fromFast Company
2 months ago

Why everything you think about yourself could be an illusion

For most of my life, I thought of myself as a fixed entity: This is me. These are my traits. This is who I am. I assumed I was essentially that same person who loved sugary cereal at age 8, fried chicken at 12, and tequila at 21, and who still loves those things now, even if my stomach disagrees. But this is an illusion. Neuroscience, physics, and Buddhism all agree: There is nothing fixed about us-not even close.
Philosophy
fromMail Online
1 month ago

Consciousness can connect you to the entire UNIVERSE, theory suggests

Your consciousness can connect you with the entire universe, a groundbreaking study suggests. Experts from Wellesley College in Massachusetts claim that traditional connections in the brain cannot fully explain how we are aware of our existence. Instead, they argue that quantum physics taking place within our skull is what generates awareness. This includes the idea that particles can exist in multiple states and locations at the same time.
Science
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

What to Make of Nightmares

A maggot dream revealed Amelia's disgust and fear tied to starting a small business and pointed toward coping through partner support and examining specific fears.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

Quote of the day by Carl Jung: "Until you make the unconscious conscious, it will direct your life and you will call it fate" - Silicon Canals

Unconscious patterns and autopilot behavior drive most decisions, causing repeated life outcomes until they are consciously examined and changed.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Thoughts That Are Born in Darkness

Genius idea generation is mysterious, distinct from academic skill, and unlimited information access risks replacing original thought.
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

If you can't fall asleep without background noise, psychology says it reveals something deeper about your mind - Silicon Canals

Like clockwork, every night around 10 PM, I reach for my phone and open my white noise app. The familiar whoosh of ocean waves or steady hum of a fan fills my bedroom, and only then can I finally drift off to sleep. For years, I thought this was just a quirky habit I'd developed during college. But recently, I discovered there's actually fascinating psychology behind why some of us literally cannot fall asleep in complete silence.
Mental health
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The Psychology of the Collective Unconscious

A shared, inherited collective unconscious shapes human emotions, recurring archetypal imagery, and convergent dream themes across cultures, especially during times of stress.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

Why We Call It Psychology, Not Animology

For Plato, psyche meant something like what we'd now call mind -understood as a complex system requiring governance. The psyche had distinct parts: a reasoning part that deliberates, a spirited part that feels emotion and courage, and an appetitive part that desires. Each part has its own function and its own form of excellence. And crucially, these parts need to be governed-integrated under what Plato called constitutional self-rule.
Philosophy
#maladaptive-daydreaming
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

Psychology says people who overthink everything at night usually have these 8 rare qualities during the day - Silicon Canals

Nighttime overthinkers often develop strengths like heightened attention to detail and creative problem solving that become valuable when properly channeled.
Mental health
fromNature
2 months ago

Daily briefing: What people with no 'mind's eye' can tell us about consciousness

Vividness of mental imagery, handwriting practices, psychiatric-diagnostic revisions, and emerging brain–computer interfaces shape memory, creativity, education, mental-health classification, and technology development.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How Childhood and Its Wounds Help Us Know Ourselves

Integrated psychological, spiritual, and saintly development transforms childhood wounds into compassion, guiding individuals toward universal stewardship and non-retaliatory grief.
[ Load more ]