10 stories tagged #Silicon Canals

  1. The Hidden Cost of Not Having a Preference: A Survival Strategy from Childhood
    health

    The Hidden Cost of Not Having a Preference: A Survival Strategy from Childhood

    The 'easygoing' adult who never picks the restaurant may be suppressing preferences learned in childhood for survival.

    3w ago 1 min read
  2. Why Your Body Vetoed Your Salary Negotiation Before You Spoke
    world

    Why Your Body Vetoed Your Salary Negotiation Before You Spoke

    Negotiation anxiety isn't a tactical failure. It is a somatic response to perceived relational danger. Learn to recognize the pattern and regulate your nervous system.

    2mo ago 2 min read
  3. Why I Stopped Hitting Snooze: A Career Change Changed My Morning Routine
    health

    Why I Stopped Hitting Snooze: A Career Change Changed My Morning Routine

    After 15 years of feeling lazy, a career shift at 33 led to waking up naturally at 5:30 without an alarm.

    2mo ago 1 min read
  4. Why Staying Home on Weekends Signals Emotional Intelligence
    health

    Why Staying Home on Weekends Signals Emotional Intelligence

    Psychologists reveal the traits of people who prefer solitude over socializing, linking quiet weekends to self-awareness, creativity, and emotional strength.

    2mo ago 1 min read
  5. The Hidden Cost of Success: Navigating Achievement Grief and Identity Shift
    health

    The Hidden Cost of Success: Navigating Achievement Grief and Identity Shift

    Experts analyze the phenomenon of achievement grief where reaching goals triggers identity loss, offering psychological frameworks for maintaining stability after success.

    2mo ago 3 min read
  6. Eldest Daughters Aren’t Naturally Capable-They Were Assigned Responsibility
    health

    Eldest Daughters Aren’t Naturally Capable-They Were Assigned Responsibility

    New psychological insight reveals eldest daughters’ 'competence' is often a survival strategy forged in early family systems-not innate personality.

    2mo ago 1 min read
  7. Old Friends Are Cognitive Anchors in an Age of Performance Identity
    tech

    Old Friends Are Cognitive Anchors in an Age of Performance Identity

    Affluent professionals increasingly lose touch with their pre-success motivations. Long-standing friendships serve as irreplaceable memory anchors-preserving original desires before social comparison reshaped them.

    2mo ago 2 min read
  8. At 66, I Stopped Being On-Call - And Discovered the Difference Between Being Needed and Being Valued
    health

    At 66, I Stopped Being On-Call - And Discovered the Difference Between Being Needed and Being Valued

    A veteran electrician reflects on five decades of overavailability-and how setting boundaries reshaped his relationships, energy, and sense of self-worth.

    2mo ago 1 min read