humanity
Mental health is a fundamental right; the future of humanity depends on it.
The Emotional Echo: How Micro-Rejections Shape Our Inner World. AI-Generated.
Most people understand the sting of major rejection. A breakup, a job denial, a falling-out with a friend—these events leave marks that are easy to recognize. But psychology has begun paying increasing attention to something far quieter: micro-rejections. These are small, often fleeting moments of social dismissal that many of us overlook or brush aside. A text left unanswered, a slightly cold tone from someone we care about, a subtle exclusion from a group conversation, a joke that doesn’t land the way we hoped—it’s easy to dismiss these experiences as trivial. Yet they leave emotional echoes that can meaningfully influence our behavior, self-perception, and overall psychological health.
By Kyle Butler3 months ago in Psyche
Beauty Can Be Terrifying
Piranesi by Susanna Clarke is, aside from being my favourite fiction book I have ever read, a perfect example of beauty and the sublime. While this is not a review of the book, it serves as a perfect illustration of what we are going to discuss: the limitless and boundless beauty—and horror—of the sublime.
By Avocado Nunzella BSc (Psych) -- M.A.P 3 months ago in Psyche
Why We Remember Some Moments Forever — and Forget Others Instantly
How memory operates is curious. We can remember a phrase uttered ten years ago even if we cannot recall what we consumed for lunch two days prior.Though we forget significant dates, misplace keys, and struggle to remember names, we may still recall the aroma of our grandmother's cooking, the mood of our childhood home, or the exact shade of the sky on a day of special importance.
By Shahjahan Kabir Khan3 months ago in Psyche
Breaking Free From Trauma. Top Story - December 2025. Content Warning.
Do you believe that we are put on this earth for a reason? You don't have to be spiritual to believe. I believed in something more when I was growing up. It was my way of surviving my childhood as a sex-offender's daughter.
By Elizabeth Woods3 months ago in Psyche
Unveiling the Hidden Science Why December Feels so Different
December is more than just a month in the calendar - there's a noticeable shift in the atmosphere. As the year and streets may quiet down or burst into celebration. The passage of time might feel like a flurry or a gentle descent, much like falling snow, and emotions turn into reflection, nostalgia, Joy or longing.
By José Juan Gutierrez 3 months ago in Psyche
The Art of Becoming Unshakeable
Life rarely announces when it’s about to test you. One moment you’re moving forward confidently, and the next, something hits you from an angle you never expected. People tend to believe strength comes from being naturally tough, but the truth works in a quieter and far more interesting way: strength is built in layers, through choices you make every day, and through the tiny battles no one sees. Becoming unshakeable is not a personality trait — it’s a psychological skill set.
By The Insight Ledger 3 months ago in Psyche
Pure Clairvoyance and the Power of Intuition
There are moments in life when logic simply doesn’t explain what we feel. I’ve always had that strange inner signal—quiet, persistent—long before I ever used the word “intuition.” I didn’t ask for it. It was just… there. Like a little vibration in the background, something I learned to pay attention to as the years went by.
By Lionel Girardon – Certified Pure Clairvoyant (INAD)4 months ago in Psyche
The Narcissist Took My Lunch
No, but seriously. The stuff you're about to read was only supposed to take a few moments to jot down, but ended up taking my entire lunch break to put perfectly in words. Granted that circumstance, I knew the name was a clever and compelling choice for this writing.
By JeRon Baker4 months ago in Psyche
Dialogues Across Time. AI-Generated.
I feel we are at the corner of something revolutionary and yet evolutionarily necessitated. Some psychologists acknowledge only the past century as a time for our field when it has been alive and well, but giving credit to the late Charles Darwin means first acknowledging the agencies that formed out of novel curiosity, which would eventually call the field home. Psychology evolves, sometimes quickly, but the questions at its core remain the same.
By Inner Terrain w/ Daniel Chapman4 months ago in Psyche










