anxiety
A look at anxiety in its many forms and manifestations; what is the nature of this specific pattern of extreme fear and worry?
The House of Two Worlds
The Cinematic Doorway Intro I finished shaping this piece in a quiet room today, letting the story settle into its own rhythm. This is the next chapter in the House of Two Worlds a moment caught between shadow and clarity, where the rooms speak in their own language. I included the long story and the summary of the words placed with music and spoken word. This is a debut to houses divided. There are many different lifestyles. An artist needs a creative environment. However, with rents so damn high everyone cannot live alone to create. Living in a paint bucket of music, art, and film is a struggle with a more conformist individual. Life is short. Life can be real.
By Vicki Lawana Trusselli about 2 hours ago in Psyche
Drip by Drip, I Disappeared. AI-Generated.
I used to think exhaustion was something you could sleep off. That if I just pushed through one more day, one more week, I would eventually βcatch upβ with myself. But at some point, I stopped recognizing the person doing the pushing.
By Jude Ankrah2 days ago in Psyche
Divine Expression
For the last six years, I have been walking through this life in a solitary fashion. I have been searching for something I could never fully put into words, yet would be recognized when it was attained. A spiritual calling that has followed me throughout my life since I was a child. Once I found my significant other, or better said, once she found me, my spiritual path was inadvertently put on standby.
By Kaylon Forsyth2 days ago in Psyche
Surviving a Red-necked Nightmare. Content Warning.
It was the summer of 1984, and I was ten years old. Weβd recently moved to Springtown, a rural town at the time outside of Fort Worth. We were city kids who knew barely anything of country life. Soon, each of us would have a crash course to introduce us to the community
By Mother Combs2 days ago in Psyche
American Parents
The Gentle Parenting Trap That's Creating Anxious Helpless Adults THE GENERATION THAT CAN'T COPE π€¦ American parents of the current generation have more information about child development, more awareness of psychological wellbeing, and more resources for parenting education than any previous generation in history, and they are producing the most anxious, most depressed, most fragile, and most functionally impaired generation of young adults ever documented, with rates of anxiety disorders among eighteen to twenty-five year olds increasing by approximately sixty percent over the past decade, depression rates doubling, and measures of resilience, independence, and distress tolerance declining to levels that have alarmed developmental psychologists, university administrators, employers, and anyone who works with young adults and who has observed the progressive deterioration of their capacity to navigate the normal challenges of adult life without parental intervention or institutional accommodation ππ’
By The Curious Writer4 days ago in Psyche
American Loneliness
THE COUNTRY THAT FORGOT HOW TO CONNECT π± America is experiencing a loneliness crisis so severe that in 2023 Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy declared it a public health epidemic comparable in health impact to smoking fifteen cigarettes daily, and the statistics behind this declaration paint a picture of a nation that has achieved unprecedented technological connectivity while simultaneously producing unprecedented levels of social disconnection: approximately one in two Americans reports experiencing measurable loneliness, the average American has fewer close friends than at any point since tracking began with the number declining from an average of three close friends in 1990 to an average of two in 2021 and with a significant percentage reporting zero close friends, time spent in person with friends has decreased by approximately twenty-four hours per month compared to two decades ago, membership in community organizations including churches, civic groups, and social clubs has declined by approximately twenty-five percent, and young adults aged eighteen to twenty-five report the highest loneliness levels of any demographic despite being the most digitally connected generation in history ππ’
By The Curious Writer4 days ago in Psyche
Psychology
EXPERIMENT 1: THE INVISIBLE GORILLA π¦ In 1999 psychologists Daniel Simons and Christopher Chabris conducted an experiment that would become one of the most famous demonstrations of human cognitive limitation ever produced: they asked participants to watch a video of six people passing basketballs and to count the number of passes made by the team wearing white shirts, and approximately halfway through the video a person in a gorilla suit walked into the frame, faced the camera, beat their chest, and walked off, and when asked afterward whether they noticed anything unusual approximately fifty percent of participants reported seeing nothing out of the ordinary, completely failing to detect a gorilla that was visible on screen for a full nine seconds while they were focused on counting basketball passes π
By The Curious Writer4 days ago in Psyche
The Second Brain
THE INTELLIGENCE YOU NEVER KNEW YOU HAD 𧬠There is a nervous system in your digestive tract that contains approximately five hundred million neurons, more than your spinal cord and more than any other organ system outside your brain, and this network called the enteric nervous system or colloquially the second brain operates with such autonomy that it can function completely independently of the brain in your skull, controlling digestion, producing neurotransmitters, communicating with your immune system, and influencing your emotional state through pathways that neuroscientists are only beginning to understand, and the discovery that your gut contains a nervous system complex enough to deserve the label brain has transformed our understanding of the relationship between what you eat, how you feel, and who you are in ways that challenge the Western assumption that identity and consciousness reside exclusively in the head while the body below the neck is merely a transport system for the brain above it π§ π‘
By The Curious Writer4 days ago in Psyche
The Comparison Trap
THE THIEF THAT ROBS YOU DAILY Theodore Roosevelt reportedly said that comparison is the thief of joy, and while the attribution is uncertain the observation is scientifically precise because social comparison which is the automatic largely unconscious process of evaluating your own attributes, achievements, and circumstances relative to those of other people has been demonstrated through decades of psychology research to be one of the most reliable predictors of dissatisfaction, depression, and diminished wellbeing, operating as a psychological mechanism that systematically distorts your perception of your own life by measuring it against standards that are irrelevant, inaccurate, and impossible to meet, and the social media era has amplified this mechanism from an occasional annoyance into a constant pervasive influence that shapes your self-concept, your emotional state, and your life decisions in ways that consistently move you away from satisfaction and toward the chronic inadequacy that characterizes modern psychological life π±π
By The Curious Writer4 days ago in Psyche
The Emotion
How Unfelt Feelings Become Physical Symptoms THE BODY THAT SPEAKS WHEN THE MOUTH WON'T π£οΈ The migraine that appears every Sunday evening before the work week begins, the back pain that flares during family visits, the stomach problems that intensify during relationship conflict, the skin conditions that worsen during periods of unexpressed anger, and the chronic fatigue that has no medical explanation despite extensive testing are not coincidences or imaginary complaints but rather your body's attempt to communicate emotional information that your conscious mind refuses to process, because the body and mind are not separate systems but are two expressions of a single integrated organism, and emotions that are suppressed from conscious awareness do not disappear but rather are rerouted through the autonomic nervous system into physical symptoms that serve as the body's protest against the emotional censorship your psychological defenses impose π₯
By The Curious Writer4 days ago in Psyche
Your Brain
The Neuroscience of Letting Go of Thoughts That Don't Serve You THE MENTAL CLUTTER DESTROYING YOUR LIFE π§Ή Your brain contains approximately eighty-six billion neurons forming trillions of connections that collectively produce every thought, memory, emotion, and behavior you experience, and like any system of this complexity it accumulates clutter over time in the form of neural pathways that were once useful but that no longer serve you, thought patterns established during childhood that were adaptive responses to childhood circumstances but that have become maladaptive in adult life, emotional reactions calibrated to threats that no longer exist, and habitual mental processes that consume cognitive resources without producing useful outputs, and this neural clutter which you experience as persistent negative self-talk, automatic anxiety responses, ruminative thought loops, and emotional reactivity that seems disproportionate to the situations triggering it, is not a permanent feature of your psychology but rather a collection of neural pathways that can be weakened and eventually eliminated through a process neuroscientists call synaptic pruning, the brain's built-in mechanism for deleting connections that are not being reinforced through use π§ β¨
By The Curious Writer4 days ago in Psyche




