16 stories tagged #attachment theory

  1. The Locked Door of Generational Pride
    health

    The Locked Door of Generational Pride

    How trauma shaped work culture and self-reliance across generations.

    2mo ago 1 min read
  2. How People Gain Internal Authority in Their Thirties
    health

    How People Gain Internal Authority in Their Thirties

    Discover the shift from external judgment to inner self-assessment among adults. Learn what true 'unbothered' individuals really value.

    2mo ago 1 min read
  3. Your Phone Knows You Better Than Humans Do
    tech

    Your Phone Knows You Better Than Humans Do

    How smartphones' emotional intelligence surpasses human relationships, creating a new psychological dependency.

    2mo ago 2 min read
  4. The Hidden Roots of Favor-Tracking Behavior
    health

    The Hidden Roots of Favor-Tracking Behavior

    Why some people track favors not out of greed but as a survival mechanism shaped in childhood.

    2mo ago 1 min read
  5. The Quiet Power of True Confidence
    health

    The Quiet Power of True Confidence

    How secure individuals naturally ease social tension by reducing others' self-consciousness, creating space for authentic connection.

    2mo ago 1 min read
  6. Psychology Reveals the Hidden Trauma Behind Unshakable Composure
    health

    Psychology Reveals the Hidden Trauma Behind Unshakable Composure

    Psychology reveals why unflappable leaders often rely on childhood survival tactics. True resilience involves emotional processing, not suppression.

    2mo ago 1 min read
  7. Why Some Hurt People Go Silent
    health

    Why Some Hurt People Go Silent

    Exploring the psychological roots of emotional suppression in adults who learned to hide pain early in life.

    2mo ago 1 min read
  8. Replying Conversations: The Brain's Emotional Safety Scan, Not Overthinking
    health

    Replying Conversations: The Brain's Emotional Safety Scan, Not Overthinking

    New psychological research reveals that replaying conversations is not overthinking, but a vital brain function for assessing emotional safety and relational security. Understand the underlying 'why'.

    3mo ago 2 min read