the timeless + the cutting-edge

Category: Mental Wellness

  • Making Small Mistakes May Make People Like You More
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    Making Small Mistakes May Make People Like You More

    Have you watched your secret-admiring person spill their coffee and found you just loved them even more? Not because of schadenfreude, of course (hopefully). But they suddenly feel more like a real human than fitting into some ideal. Is It True or Just Illusional? You’re not imagining this; it’s actually a well-documented phenomenon. In 1966,

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  • Stop Worrying about Reputation; Focus on Characters Instead
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    Stop Worrying about Reputation; Focus on Characters Instead

    Reputation is a story other people tell about you. It can be shaped, spun, withheld, or weaponized. Someone who wants to can take a single moment out of context and make it the whole of you in someone else’s mind. And there is almost nothing you can actually do about that. Stop worrying about reputation

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  • Create a Safe Reality: A Better Way to Reduce Rumination
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    Create a Safe Reality: A Better Way to Reduce Rumination

    I’ve been dealing with rumination, and I’ve realized it actually exists for a reason. Every time my mind replays the same scene over and over, I feel a twisted sense of safety, as if I’ll be safe as long as I keep replaying it. But when I stop, the anxiety surges. If this pattern resonates

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  • The Popular Myth about Dislikes and Insecurities
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    The Popular Myth about Dislikes and Insecurities

    There’s a particular kind of deflection that often shows up in conversations: the idea that any criticism or dislike directed at someone is really just projection. You don’t like me because you’re insecure. People who dislike you are just jealous. It’s a quick diagnosis and accusation—how convenient. But does it actually make sense? Do They

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  • Cognitive Flexibility Can Lead to Better Emotional Regulation
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    Cognitive Flexibility Can Lead to Better Emotional Regulation

    Have you noticed that negative emotions often arise when we think things *should* happen a certain way? For many millennials who grew up being taught that emotional strength means having grit, it’s easy to imagine that managing negative emotions is about standing firm like an oak tree in a storm. But research suggests that cognitive

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