#resilience-and-healing

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#resentment
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Resentment Resolution: Free Yourself From Emotional Burdens

Resentment is a persistent feeling of unfair treatment that links past offenses, leading to a degenerative emotional state.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Resentment Resolution: Free Yourself From Emotional Burdens

Resentment is a persistent feeling of unfair treatment that links past offenses, leading to a degenerative emotional state.
#anxiety
Mental health
fromTiny Buddha
6 hours ago

Anxiety Sucks, But It Taught Me These 7 Important Things - Tiny Buddha

Anxiety can be a lifelong struggle, but it offers valuable lessons despite its challenges.
Social justice
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Resilience and Reconstruction in Practice

A long-term approach is essential for supporting displaced individuals, emphasizing identity continuity and meaningful work for resilience.
Parenting
fromPsychology Today
3 hours ago

Working With the Inner Child

The inner child concept emphasizes how childhood experiences shape our adult selves and the importance of healing through compassionate responses.
#entrepreneurship
Productivity
fromEntrepreneur
6 days ago

The Wellness Habits That Drive My Entrepreneurial Success

A workable daily routine enhances mental focus, while exercise, nutrition, and sleep are essential for peak performance in entrepreneurship.
Mental health
fromFast Company
2 days ago

I scaled mental health products for millions

Entrepreneurship is often misrepresented, masking the anxiety and stress that founders experience behind the facade of autonomy and success.
Productivity
fromEntrepreneur
6 days ago

The Wellness Habits That Drive My Entrepreneurial Success

A workable daily routine enhances mental focus, while exercise, nutrition, and sleep are essential for peak performance in entrepreneurship.
Mental health
fromFast Company
2 days ago

I scaled mental health products for millions

Entrepreneurship is often misrepresented, masking the anxiety and stress that founders experience behind the facade of autonomy and success.
Philosophy
fromThe Atlantic
1 day ago

The Eighth Deadly Sin

The modern experience of disconnection and emptiness may represent a new form of sin, akin to the medieval concept of acedia.
Yoga
fromYoga Journal
2 days ago

Feeling Overwhelmed? Indecisive? Stuck? Yoga Can Help. Here's How.

Indecision can stem from a physical response to fear, leading to a state called 'functional freeze' that affects both body and mind.
Relationships
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Psychology says people who were the emotional anchor for their families rarely experience loneliness as a single event. They experience it as a slow accounting where they realize the support only ever flowed in one direction and nobody designed a return current. - Silicon Canals

Family support often flows in one direction, with one person bearing the emotional load while others remain uninvolved.
Productivity
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Not everyone who keeps working after the workday ends is ambitious. Some people simply discovered that the transition from productivity to stillness requires passing through a stretch of feeling they've been avoiding for years, and the extra hour of work is cheaper than the ten minutes of silence. - Silicon Canals

Many work late to avoid confronting uncomfortable emotions, not just to be productive.
fromPsychology Today
2 days ago

Grief, Storytelling, and Identity

The concept album is a response to the brutal murder of Breedlove's father and stepmother at the hands of his stepbrother. The frame—the first song and the last—of the album is about the murders and their aftermath. But this is not a true crime record.
Music production
Retirement
fromSilicon Canals
4 days ago

Psychology says the secret to a good retirement isn't wealth or health or even relationships - it's having at least one thing you're still in the middle of, still becoming, still learning how to do - Silicon Canals

Retirement fulfillment stems from ongoing pursuits and curiosity, not just financial security or traditional metrics of success.
Wellness
fromPsychology Today
4 days ago

Love or hate the wellness craze? Here's why.

Wellness culture influences behavior changes but can also provoke defensiveness and resistance due to perceived inadequacies.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
8 hours ago

Psychology says people who make others light up when they first meet them have usually known what it feels like to be overlooked - and instead of becoming bitter about it, they made a quiet decision at some point in their life that no one in their presence would ever feel that invisible again, and that choice is one of the most powerful things a human being can do with their own pain - Silicon Canals

Warm individuals often transform their experiences of invisibility into empathy, making others feel valued and seen.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
20 hours ago

Psychology says people who describe themselves as self-sufficient aren't always describing a strength. Sometimes they're describing the scar tissue that formed where the need for other people used to be, and they've carried it so long they genuinely mistake the numbness for peace. - Silicon Canals

Self-reliance is often mistaken for strength, but true strength includes the ability to seek help and share vulnerabilities.
Careers
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Why So Many Young Adults Can't Launch-and How to Help

Action precedes confidence; overthinking hinders young adults from launching their careers.
Yoga
fromYoga Journal
3 days ago

Want to Drastically Improve Your Life? Start Telling the Truth.

A society built on lies cannot survive, as truth is essential for meaningful interactions and human dignity.
#emotional-intelligence
Mindfulness
fromSilicon Canals
8 hours ago

Psychology says people who stay calm under pressure aren't suppressing their emotions - they've built a relationship with discomfort that most people spend their whole lives avoiding - Silicon Canals

Calm individuals process emotions differently, using reappraisal instead of suppression to manage stress and discomfort.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
9 hours ago

Psychology says the people who seem impossible to offend aren't thick-skinned. They decided long ago that showing hurt gives others a map they haven't earned, so they absorb the wound and reclassify it as information - Silicon Canals

Emotional toughness often masks deep sensitivity, leading individuals to absorb pain without showing it, as vulnerability can be weaponized by others.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
7 hours ago

Psychology says people who randomly cringe at past memories have a level of self-awareness that most people never develop - because the cringe only exists when a person is emotionally intelligent enough to look back at who they were and recognize the distance between that version of themselves and the one standing here now, and that distance is called growth even when it feels like shame - Silicon Canals

Cringing at past actions signifies emotional growth and self-reflection, indicating a recognition of personal development over time.
Mindfulness
fromSilicon Canals
8 hours ago

Psychology says people who stay calm under pressure aren't suppressing their emotions - they've built a relationship with discomfort that most people spend their whole lives avoiding - Silicon Canals

Calm individuals process emotions differently, using reappraisal instead of suppression to manage stress and discomfort.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
9 hours ago

Psychology says the people who seem impossible to offend aren't thick-skinned. They decided long ago that showing hurt gives others a map they haven't earned, so they absorb the wound and reclassify it as information - Silicon Canals

Emotional toughness often masks deep sensitivity, leading individuals to absorb pain without showing it, as vulnerability can be weaponized by others.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
7 hours ago

Psychology says people who randomly cringe at past memories have a level of self-awareness that most people never develop - because the cringe only exists when a person is emotionally intelligent enough to look back at who they were and recognize the distance between that version of themselves and the one standing here now, and that distance is called growth even when it feels like shame - Silicon Canals

Cringing at past actions signifies emotional growth and self-reflection, indicating a recognition of personal development over time.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
11 hours ago

There's a version of strength that only develops in people who had to figure out the rules of a place nobody explained to them. They don't talk about it because the people who had the rules handed to them wouldn't understand what was hard about it, and the people who also had to figure it out don't need the explanation. - Silicon Canals

Onsighting in climbing parallels navigating social systems, emphasizing perceptual capacity over resilience in understanding unwritten rules.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

When Is the Right Time to Start Trauma Therapy?

Clinicians often delay trauma-focused treatment due to overestimating the need for stabilization, while avoidance drives PTSD symptoms and treatment delays.
#happiness
Mindfulness
fromMindful
2 weeks ago

A Meditation to Allow Genuine Happiness, Even In Hard Times

Accessing genuine happiness during difficult times is essential for recovery and well-being.
Mindfulness
fromMindful
2 weeks ago

A Meditation to Allow Genuine Happiness, Even In Hard Times

Accessing genuine happiness during difficult times is essential for recovery and well-being.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
10 hours ago

People who are excellent in emergencies and fall apart during ordinary weeks aren't wired wrong. Their nervous system was calibrated for crisis, and calm registers as the absence of signal rather than the presence of safety. They function brilliantly when the house is burning because fire is the only temperature that feels familiar. - Silicon Canals

The autonomic nervous system has a social engagement system that affects how individuals respond to stress and calm.
#rest
Mindfulness
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

The underrated value of rest - Silicon Canals

Prioritizing rest can significantly enhance creativity, patience, and overall well-being, challenging the misconception that rest is for the lazy.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

There's a type of person who only feels permission to rest when they're physically sick, and the illness isn't the problem. The problem is the invisible equation they absorbed decades ago that says rest must be earned through suffering and a healthy body has no valid claim to stillness. - Silicon Canals

Sickness is often the only socially acceptable reason for rest, revealing deep-rooted beliefs about productivity and morality.
Mindfulness
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

The underrated value of rest - Silicon Canals

Prioritizing rest can significantly enhance creativity, patience, and overall well-being, challenging the misconception that rest is for the lazy.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

There's a type of person who only feels permission to rest when they're physically sick, and the illness isn't the problem. The problem is the invisible equation they absorbed decades ago that says rest must be earned through suffering and a healthy body has no valid claim to stillness. - Silicon Canals

Sickness is often the only socially acceptable reason for rest, revealing deep-rooted beliefs about productivity and morality.
Psychology
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 day ago

Always in crisis mode? You might be catastrophizing here's how to stop

Catastrophizing is a cognitive distortion where individuals jump to the worst possible conclusions, often leading to chronic distress and mental health issues.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
9 hours ago

There's a specific kind of person who can give the most precise, compassionate advice to everyone around them and then make the worst possible decisions for their own life. The clarity isn't selective. It's that they can only see patterns when they're not standing inside them. - Silicon Canals

People excel at identifying cognitive biases in others but struggle to recognize them in themselves, leading to a phenomenon called the bias blind spot.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

The person who thrives during a crisis and falls apart during ordinary weeks isn't broken. Their entire operating system was built for emergencies, and peace registers as a system error because they never learned what competence feels like without urgency underneath it. - Silicon Canals

Crisis-thrivers are often dysregulated, struggling with normalcy after emergencies, revealing a deeper issue with their nervous system's response to stress.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Do You Like the Person You See in the Mirror?

Body-image concerns are prevalent among women and girls, influenced by unrealistic beauty ideals in media, but can be improved through healing mental schemas.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Psychology says the people who age most visibly aren't the ones with the hardest lives - they're the ones who never learned to put things down, who carried every disappointment and every grievance and every unfairness forward into the next decade, and the carrying shows, eventually, in ways that no amount of sleep or skincare has ever been shown to address - Silicon Canals

Chronic psychological stress and the inability to release emotional burdens accelerate aging and impact physical appearance.
#mindfulness
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago
Mindfulness

I'm 66 and the most important thing I have done for myself in the last decade is learn to sit in a room alone without immediately filling it with something - without the television, the phone, the task - just the room and the light and whatever arrives in the quiet, and what arrives, it turns out, is mostly myself, and mostly myself is more than enough company - Silicon Canals

Learning to sit in silence and embrace stillness can be transformative and essential for personal growth.
Mindfulness
fromMindful
3 weeks ago

Seven Strengths for an Uncertain World

Inner strengths can be cultivated to help individuals thrive in a fast-paced, uncertain world.
Mindfulness
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

I'm 66 and the most important thing I have done for myself in the last decade is learn to sit in a room alone without immediately filling it with something - without the television, the phone, the task - just the room and the light and whatever arrives in the quiet, and what arrives, it turns out, is mostly myself, and mostly myself is more than enough company - Silicon Canals

Learning to sit in silence and embrace stillness can be transformative and essential for personal growth.
Mindfulness
fromMindful
3 weeks ago

Seven Strengths for an Uncertain World

Inner strengths can be cultivated to help individuals thrive in a fast-paced, uncertain world.
Yoga
fromYoga Journal
3 weeks ago

Overwhelmed by Tough Emotions? This Advice Can Help You Navigate Them.

Exclusive playlists for O+ members offer yoga insights to cope with life's challenges through mindful consumption.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
14 hours ago

People who go quiet when they're angry and then resolve it internally without ever bringing it up aren't emotionally mature. They've done the math on every confrontation and concluded that the cost of being heard has never once been lower than the cost of absorbing it alone. - Silicon Canals

Emotional maturity often misinterprets silence as resolution, overlooking the cost of expressing anger versus the cost of internalizing it.
Mindfulness
fromMindful
1 week ago

The Gift of Being Alive: A Q&A with Rhonda Magee

Embracing vulnerability and anger is essential for healing and fostering connection in the pursuit of racial justice.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
12 hours ago

The people who became adults without ever learning how to ask for help didn't develop independence. They developed a system where every need gets reclassified as a project they can handle alone, and the reclassification happens so fast now that they genuinely believe they never needed anything in the first place. - Silicon Canals

Resourcefulness can mask deeper emotional needs, leading to automatic self-sufficiency without recognizing the need for help.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago

I'm 37 and I've already learned the hard way that self-worth takes time, healing isn't linear, and letting go is painful while you're learning to move forward - Silicon Canals

Carrying emotional weight from the past hinders self-worth; true self-worth is built internally, not through external validation.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Bridging the Gap From Here to Your Future Self

Imagining a future self strengthens connections to values and enhances life choices by tracing continuity from past to future.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

Psychology says the adults most likely to end up in therapy aren't the ones who had dramatic or obviously painful childhoods - they're the ones who grew up in households where everything was technically fine, nobody was cruel, and something essential was quietly missing in a way that took decades to find the words for - Silicon Canals

Emotional neglect in seemingly fine childhoods can have profound effects, leaving individuals feeling their inner world doesn't matter.
Mindfulness
fromPsychology Today
3 days ago

EMDR in a World HyperFocused on Healing

EMDR is an evidence-based trauma therapy that helps reorganize fragmented experiences, leading to significant reductions in trauma symptoms.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
7 hours ago

Psychology says people who replay conversations in their head didn't develop that habit by accident - most of them learned early that saying the wrong thing had real consequences, and now their brain replays every exchange searching for mistakes and misfires like a security system that was installed in childhood and has never once been turned off - Silicon Canals

Replaying conversations stems from early experiences where words had significant consequences, leading to a defense mechanism of constant analysis.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
2 hours ago

Why You Feel Empty After Achieving Your Goals

The arrival fallacy explains post-achievement emptiness, revealing that many goals are inherited rather than authentically chosen.
Mindfulness
fromTiny Buddha
5 days ago

From People-Pleasing to Self-Trust: How to Come Back to Yourself - Tiny Buddha

Indecision and people-pleasing stem from past experiences of conflict and self-doubt, leading to a loss of personal identity.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
16 hours ago

Psychology says people who genuinely prefer being alone aren't antisocial or damaged - they've simply discovered that their own inner world is more honest, more interesting, and less exhausting than most rooms full of people, and that realization doesn't make them lonely, it makes them selective - Silicon Canals

People who prefer solitude are motivated by internal rewards and find fulfillment in solitary activities rather than social interactions.
Mindfulness
fromMindful
1 week ago

Being Courageous About Change: Mindful Guidance on the Proactive Pivot

Proactive pivoting involves making changes before they are necessary, requiring courage and strength to overcome resistance to change.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 day ago

Psychology says people who grew up in the 1960s and 70s don't handle hardship better than everyone else because they are stronger - they handle it better because they were never offered the alternative, and a person who was never offered the alternative develops a relationship with difficulty that people who were offered it spend their whole lives trying to build in a gym - Silicon Canals

Struggling is a norm for my generation because we never knew life could be comfortable.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 day ago

Positive Beliefs About Aging Can Influence Wellness

Recent discoveries reveal that positive beliefs about aging can improve cognitive and physical functions in older adults.
Mindfulness
fromPsychology Today
1 week ago

An Exercise for Releasing Emotional Pain

Emotional pain from past experiences can lead to mental and physical health issues, but journaling can help express and alleviate this pain.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

Psychology says people who've mastered not caring aren't detached - they went through a period of caring so much it nearly broke them, and came out the other side with a much shorter list - Silicon Canals

Mastering the art of not caring comes from exhaustion, not indifference, after deeply caring and learning what deserves emotional energy.
#resilience
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Secret to Resilience

Resilience is a dynamic concept shaped by support systems and relationships rather than a fixed personality trait, and embracing life's instability cultivates greater resilience and unexpected growth.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Secret to Resilience

Resilience is a dynamic concept shaped by support systems and relationships rather than a fixed personality trait, and embracing life's instability cultivates greater resilience and unexpected growth.
Medicine
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The Joy and Good Fortune of Catching It Early

A chain of coincidences led to early cancer detection and effective treatment, turning ordinary events into a perceived miracle.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
2 days ago

Psychology says the reason some people become gentler as they age while others become bitter has nothing to do with personality. It depends on whether they processed their grief along the way or stored it in their body and called it toughness - Silicon Canals

Grief, especially non-finite losses, significantly influences whether individuals become gentler or more bitter as they age.
Wellness
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

When Self-Care Becomes Another Thing to Be Good At

Performative self-care undermines its benefits by splitting attention between the experience and its documentation, eliminating the presence required for genuine restoration.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
3 days ago

The cruelest myth about self-discipline is that you have to feel ready - you don't, you never will, and the people who figured that out earlier simply have more years of evidence that the feeling eventually follows the action - Silicon Canals

Self-discipline begins with action, not feelings of readiness or motivation.
Mindfulness
fromMindful
2 weeks ago

Just One Thing: Be Kind to Yourself by Being Kind to Others

Recognizing the importance of kindness to others leads to personal peace and fulfillment.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
5 days ago

Time-Outs Work, if We Can Learn to Do Them Right

Well-implemented time-outs lead to positive outcomes and healthier relationships in adults who experienced them as children.
Mindfulness
fromPsychology Today
2 weeks ago

Grief, Loss, Abundance, Joy: Finding Refuge in Harsh Times

Acceptance of loss is essential for emotional balance and finding solace in nature can help mitigate distress.
Psychology
fromPsychology Today
6 days ago

How Self-Compassion Helps You Take Real Responsibility

Self-compassion fosters accountability and well-being, while shame hinders personal growth and responsibility.
Yoga
fromYoga Journal
2 months ago

4 Ways to Process When You're Beyond Overwhelmed

Pausing with breath and low-intensity movement calms the nervous system and improves how you respond to overwhelming stress.
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

The Harmony of Self-Care

Sitting in the audience, listening to these professionals in perfect harmony, brought me back to my days in the band. I wasn't good, it was mandatory, and I played the trombone. I desperately wanted to quit. We couldn't have backpacks in school, so I walked through the halls lugging my trombone in my right hand and books under my left armpit. This made me a perfect target for a bully or two to come up behind me and smack the books out from under me.
Wellness
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month 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
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

The hardest part of healing isn't facing what happened to you. It's grieving the version of yourself that had to exist because of it. - Silicon Canals

Therapy's hardest work involves grieving the adaptive self—the survival identity you constructed—rather than confronting initial trauma, requiring surrender rather than courage.
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
2 months ago

You know you're finally healing when these 8 old patterns have stopped running your life - Silicon Canals

Healing requires confronting recurring patterns, reducing compulsive busyness, recognizing triggers, and building positive habits that support emotional regulation.
fromPsychology Today
2 months 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.
Mindfulness
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

How to Cultivate Inner Harmony in Stressful Times

Even amid fear and uncertainty, mindful awareness and compassion reveal inner sensations of safety and strength, fostering steadiness, resilience, and collective healing.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

People Heal in Different Ways and at Different Paces

Disaster recovery is highly localized and deeply personal; returning to 'normal' is often impossible, and people manage life and livelihood while carrying grief and memory.
Mindfulness
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

How to Shift from Surviving to Thriving

Practicing gratitude and living with intention build resilience and replenish emotional and physical reserves to better withstand daily pressures.
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