the timeless + the cutting-edge

Category: Daily Fact

  • Write Yourself a Redemptive Story Proven to Improve Well-Being
    , ,

    Write Yourself a Redemptive Story Proven to Improve Well-Being

    Many of us love movies in which protagonists rise above adversity to discover their authentic selves, inner strength, and purpose. After many ups and downs, they look back on their journeys and shape them into narratives. The storytelling ends with orchestral music and long shots. Then the credits roll, and we, as the audience, are…

    Read More

    //

  • High vs. Low-Context Communication in Real Life Explained
    , ,

    High vs. Low-Context Communication in Real Life Explained

    Have you ever felt like you almost understood a conversation, but not quite? Or, on the other hand, received explicit information with a detailed explanation that was too straightforward and efficient to be a bit intimidating? Sometimes words deliver exactly the message you need, while other times you must infer or guess. Beyond personal preference,…

    Read More

    //

  • Co-Regulation: One of the Best Things You Can Do with Someone
    , ,

    Co-Regulation: One of the Best Things You Can Do with Someone

    Have you noticed that your partner’s steady voice or a friend’s warm hug can calm down a rising panic? Or, when you sing a lullaby to an infant, you feel soothed too? Those moments, in fact, may biologically shape our emotional lives. What Is Coregulation Coregulation is a type of emotional regulation where one person’s…

    Read More

    //

  • Your Feeling of Being the “Final Version” Is An Illusion
    , ,

    Your Feeling of Being the “Final Version” Is An Illusion

    We’ve all been there: scrolling through old photos, you marvel at how much you’ve evolved. The angsty teen who hated vegetables is gone, replaced by a kale-smoothie enthusiast. Your music tastes flipped from emo anthems to indie folk. Relationships that once defined you faded, making way for new priorities. Reflecting on these shifts feels profound—proof…

    Read More

    //

  • Autobiological Reasoning to Create a Life Story and Identity
    ,

    Autobiological Reasoning to Create a Life Story and Identity

    We often think of our life story as a fixed library of facts, or a collection of things that “just happened” to us. But we are less of a librarian and more of an active editor. We all have that moment cringing towards memories. Or, something that once felt like a tragedy has somehow morphed into…

    Read More

    //

  • Window of Tolerance: An Important Framework for Trauma-Informed Care
    , ,

    Window of Tolerance: An Important Framework for Trauma-Informed Care

    Have you felt like there’s an invisible line you can function within, and that you’d snap if pushed across it? And this line might be changing. Sometimes, you can manage to function under pressure, yet when chronic stress accumulates over a period of time, you become hypervigilant, and even small setbacks can feel overwhelming. You…

    Read More

    //

  • Everyday Performance for Good Impression Is Not That Helpful
    ,

    Everyday Performance for Good Impression Is Not That Helpful

    Impression management is a normal part of social life. But it is not that important when it comes to overall competence. Particularly, if it becomes excessive, impression management can turn into mental health issues.  Different Stages of Performance Much like a theater, how we present ourselves has metaphorically different stages. Social psychologist and sociologist Erving…

    Read More

    //

  • Why Are Memories under Trauma Often Fragmented?
    , , ,

    Why Are Memories under Trauma Often Fragmented?

    Trauma can shape not only what we remember, but also how we remember it. Unlike ordinary memories, which are usually stored as coherent narratives, traumatic memories often surface as fragmented, brief flashes of images, sounds, smells, or bodily sensations. Trauma Can Alter Brain Structure Sometimes, sudden flashes of fragmented memories can disrupt our ability to…

    Read More

    //

  • Our Memories of Surprises are Better than the Expected
    ,

    Our Memories of Surprises are Better than the Expected

    Most of our lives are recorded in “Standard Definition.” We remember the gist of our commute, the general flavor of our lunch, and the basic outline of our workday. To save energy, the brain operates as a prediction machine; it guesses what will happen next based on what happened yesterday. When those predictions are right,…

    Read More

    //

  • The Way You Describe Something Can Surprisingly Shape the Memory
    ,

    The Way You Describe Something Can Surprisingly Shape the Memory

    Did you know that our memory is more constructive than a perfect playback of a recording? Rather than remembering the past as neutral information, every time we recall an event, the brain reconstructs the story from bits and pieces. That is the nature of memory. But what if the memory is influenced, for example, by…

    Read More

    //