psychology
Studying the complexities of the human mind and its many functions and behaviors.
The Myth of January First
Every December, as the calendar year draws to a close, millions of people around the world engage in a time-honored tradition: the crafting of New Year's resolutions. Gyms overflow with new members in January, health food stores see spikes in sales, and social media fills with proclamations of transformation and change. Yet by February, these ambitious declarations have largely faded into distant memories, replaced by the familiar rhythms of old habits and comfortable routines. Studies consistently show that approximately eighty percent of New Year's resolutions fail by the second week of February, with fitness and weight loss goals ranking among the most commonly abandoned objectives.
By Paul Claybrook MS MBA3 months ago in Longevity
Behind the Science: The Visionaries at Wellbeing International Foundation Pioneering Cell-Free Therapy
In the competitive world of biotechnology and regenerative medicine, true innovation often comes not from following established paths but from questioning fundamental assumptions. This is precisely the story behind Wellbeing International Foundation, where a small team of dedicated scientists and healthcare professionals has spent decades developing a revolutionary approach to healing that challenges conventional wisdom about how our bodies repair themselves.
By Wellbeing International Foundation3 months ago in Longevity
Staying Emotionally Strong as We Age
There comes a moment in life when morale becomes more fragile. Not necessarily because everything is going wrong, but because many things have changed. The body no longer responds in the same way, familiar reference points shift, some people disappear, and the world sometimes seems to move on without waiting for us. This loss of morale is neither a weakness nor a failure. It is a human, common, and deeply understandable reaction. What matters most is not denying it, but learning how to move through it without becoming trapped by it.
By Bubble Chill Media 3 months ago in Longevity
Reiki for Emotional Release
Reiki for emotional release offers a neurometaphysical framework for processing emotional material that has become embedded in the body’s sensory, autonomic, and energetic systems. Emotional suppression does not exist only in the mind; it exists in muscle tone, fascial density, breath restriction, and autonomic bracing patterns that form after overwhelming events. People often describe feeling “stuck,” “frozen,” “disconnected,” or “unable to let go,” yet they cannot identify why logic, insight, intention, or effort does not resolve the weight they carry. The explanation is physiological and energetic: the nervous system cannot release what it has not yet metabolized, and the energetic system cannot flow through what the body refuses to feel. Reiki creates the conditions for that metabolization to occur.
By Reiki Massage Metaphysical Healing Service3 months ago in Longevity
I Finally Stopped Lying to Myself – And It Destroyed Everything I Thought I Wanted
They told me to keep quiet. To smile prettier. To post the highlight reel and never the breakdown. To chase the salary, the status, the “someday when I’m successful” fantasy. So I did. For years I performed the perfect life while dying inside a little more every day.
By Millicent Chisom4 months ago in Longevity
Doctors Misdiagnose Her ‘Crushing’ Chest Pain as Indigestion — A Wake-Up Call for Women Everywhere. AI-Generated.
When 42-year-old Maya Singh felt a sudden pressure in her chest, she assumed it was stress. She had been juggling long work hours, caring for two kids, and preparing for her father’s medical appointment. But when the pressure intensified into what she described as a “crushing, heavy weight,” she rushed to the nearest emergency room. What unfolded next became a frightening example of how easily women’s heart symptoms are dismissed — and why this issue desperately needs more attention.
By Fiaz Ahmed 4 months ago in Longevity
Concussion Party
Forgive me for everything I am about to write. I have a concussion. Truly, genuinely. I fell, rather spectacularly, down a medieval staircase. It wasn’t actually the clumsiest thing I did that day, but regardless, it had an equally spectacular impact, literally, on the back of my head. It was quite a shock when the headache hadn't faded 3 days later, and my wit with friends seemed to be lagging by a full minute delay.
By Kirstyn Brook4 months ago in Longevity
Whispers of the Heart**
Love rarely announces its arrival. It does not enter like a storm or thunderclap. Instead, it slips into one’s life the way dawn touches the horizon—softly, steadily, almost secretively. One moment the heart is calm, the next it begins to flutter in ways it cannot explain. This mysterious, delicate unfolding is what makes love one of the most enchanting experiences of the human soul.
By The Insight Ledger 4 months ago in Longevity









