A neighborhood can carry trauma long before anyone names it. Real healing begins when systems tell the truth about the wounds ...
Reset: When tempted to be critical, silence is golden. Think before you speak, because negative statements poison a ...
Traumatic memories can bias our attention and shape our current behavior. While we try to avoid triggers, we may also be ...
Gray divorce refers to couples 50 and older ending their marriages. Researchers Brown et al. found that the divorce rate for this age group doubled between 1990 and 2010. Today, nearly 40% of all ...
Most of us assume that being calm under pressure is always a good thing. After all, who wouldn't want to be less prone to anxiety, sadness, and emotional ups and downs? And to some extent, that's true ...
Today, survivors of sibling abuse have access to organizations, communities, and other resources that offer life-changing ...
A new study finds that psilocybin, when paired with structured therapy in a clinical setting, appears to be safe and efficacious for treating cocaine use disorder.
Trauma can leave people shifting between fear, submission, rage, and guilt without recognizing these patterns and their impact on relationships. Therapy can address these patterns.
You may have heard that trust in science is collapsing. The evidence suggests something different: most people still trust scientists, but many no longer trust themselves to navigate a chaotic ...
Brain injury often causes balance and gait impairments. Neuromodulation offers a noninvasive, time-limited way to restore or significantly improve balance.
Loneliness in later life begins when contact remains, but dignity, purpose, and the feeling of being needed quietly disappear.
You're the one everyone leans on. So why does it feel so lonely at the top of everyone's list? A look at the cost of being needed—and the courage it takes to be seen.
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