Posts

More Than a Salary Slip: Why Feeling Valued at Work Really Matters

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For most people, work is an activity that starts as simply a way of doing things like being paid money, becoming financially stable, having independence. But at some point, work transforms itself into something more than just what it was supposed to be from the very beginning. It becomes an activity wherein people spend a lot of their time and where people meet other people. In today’s world, a lot of people are caught in a rather perplexing paradox of being paid without being appreciated. It’s a feeling that’s hard to put into words but easy to recognize. You meet deadlines, take initiative, maybe even go beyond your role, but the acknowledgment never comes. Or worse, your efforts are only noticed when something goes wrong. Over time, this lack of recognition doesn’t just affect your motivation; it starts affecting how you see yourself. You begin to question your abilities, your worth, and whether what you do even matters. Riya stared at her screen long after everyone had logged off. ...

The Paradox of Choice: How Unlimited Options Overwhelm in the Digital Age

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We live in a digital world where there seem to be limitless resources and endless options. Take Amazon, for instance. Let’s say you want to buy something simple like headphones, and suddenly you are looking at hundreds of nearly identical options. You then decide to watch a film on Netflix or Amazon Prime Video, only to find yourself scrolling through the vast selection of films for the next half an hour without making any decision. Both instances result in something quite peculiar. Despite having unlimited options, you feel stuck and even frustrated by your overwhelming choices. This is the paradox of choice in the digital age. At first thought, more options should make life easier and more satisfying. But in reality, too many choices can actually increase stress and slow down decision-making! Too much choice can cause more harm than good and can even be the source of increased stress and delay in decision-making. With every option seeming like an easy reach, the brain begins analyzin...

The Science of Luck: How Probability and Perception Shape Our Idea of Fortune

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When life feels strangely aligned. You wake up, things move smoothly, and even small events seem to fall into place. Then there are other days where nothing works the way you expect. A delay turns into a problem.  On the other hand, there are certain days that feel… different. Nothing dramatic, nothing you can clearly point to, but somehow things just fall into place. You reach somewhere at the right time. You meet the right person. A small decision leads to something unexpectedly good. In both cases, most people don’t stop to think too much. They just say, I’m lucky today or  This is just bad luck. It feels natural to say that. Almost like the mind needs that explanation but if you slow down and look at it carefully, something interesting appears. Luck is not really something that controls events from outside. It is more like a way the mind understands what it cannot fully predict. At the base of it, two things are always involved: randomness and perception. Let’s take random...

Screen, Verdict Film Analysis - Rang De Basanti (2021)

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DIRECTOR  : RAKYESH MEHRA CAST : AAMIR KHAN, SIDDHARTH AND OTHERS "Rang De Basanti" is a compelling cinematic exploration of youth, patriotism, and psychological resilience, highlighting the importance of mental health and inner independence amidst societal upheaval. The film intricately depicts how the young protagonists, initially cynical and carefree, undergo profound emotional and ideological transformations through their engagement with revolutionary ideals and personal loss. Their journey underscores the significance of inner strength when confronting systemic corruption and violence, emphasizing that mental resilience is essential for activism and social change. The characters’ evolving sense of purpose reveals the importance of psychological independence—clinging to one's convictions despite external pressures and threats, which is vital for authentic self-expression and societal impact. The film also subtly addresses mental health by illustrating how trauma, grie...

Sports Psychology Isn’t Just Motivation: The Science Behind Focus, Strategy, and Elite Performance

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We often admire athletes for their strength, speed, and ability to perform under pressure. Watching a match or a competition, it is easy to think that success comes from motivation, discipline, and physical training alone. Brands like Nike and Adidas reinforce this idea by showing athletes as confident, powerful, and always ready to push past limits. While motivation is part of performance, sports psychology shows that the reality is much more complex. Sports psychology is the study of how mental processes influence athletic performance. It goes beyond motivation and looks at how attention, decision making, perception, and team dynamics affect what athletes do in real situations. At elite levels, physical training is only one part of success. The way an athlete thinks, processes information, and responds under pressure is equally important. One of the most important areas is attention control. Athletes are constantly exposed to distractions such as crowd noise, pressure from competitio...

Empowering Students Resilience: Building Coping Skills in the Classroom

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Written By : Ms. Arthy Sriram Counselling Psychologist, Chennai Resilience is the process and outcome of successfully adapting to difficult or challenging life experiences, especially through mental, emotional, and behavioral flexibility and adjustment to external and internal demands.  In today’s fast moving and ever changing world, resilience is a very important and essential skill for individuals of all ages. Resilience doesn’t just mean bouncing back from challenges, it’s also about growing stronger through adversity. To be resilient is to be determined, to have grit, and to be able to persevere. Resilience works like a muscle. We can build through effort and practice, it is a learned skill and not a personality trait.Resilience also fluctuates at different ages and developmental stages. There are many factors that contribute to resilient behavior like upbringing, social environment , environmental factors, tragedy, stress. Life is not a bed of roses nor is it full of thorns. B...

From Classrooms to Boardrooms: How the Halo Effect Influences Decisions

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You don’t really leave the classroom when you grow up, you just change seats. The blackboard becomes a presentation screen, uniforms turn into formal wear, and report cards quietly evolve into performance reviews. But something else makes that transition with us too: the way we form impressions of people, often quicker than we realize, and far more decisively than we’d like to admit. I have often seen this play out in both academic and professional spaces. A student who speaks fluently in class is assumed to be more intelligent overall. The neatly dressed intern is seen as more capable before they’ve even contributed to a project. Somewhere between these everyday observations lies a powerful psychological bias that shapes decisions, relationships, and opportunities, the Halo Effect. The Halo Effect, in simple terms, is a cognitive bias where one positive trait of a person influences our overall perception of them. If someone appears confident, we may also assume they are competent, tru...

Mirror of the Mind: Body Image and Self-Perception

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When people look into a mirror, they usually think they are seeing the reflection of their body. In reality, the image we see through our thoughts, beliefs, emotions, and the expectations of society. This internal interpretation is known as body image, and it plays a powerful role in shaping how people feel about themselves. Body image is not just about physical appearance. This picture includes how a person believes they look, how satisfied they feel with their body, and how they think others perceive them. Body image can sometimes be very different from reality. ( i.e., two people may have very similar body types, but they may view themselves in completely different ways. One person may feel confident and comfortable, while the other may feel insecure or dissatisfied). Many psychologists say body image is learned over time. Children are not born worrying about how they look. These ideas develop slowly as people grow and interact with the world. When someone repeatedly thinks negative...

Unfinished Goodbyes: The Psychology Behind the Last Meeting Theory

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There’s something quietly unsettling about the idea that every meeting could be the last, and yet, most of us don’t think about it until it’s already too late. We’ve all had those moments: rushing out of the house without a proper goodbye, cutting a call short with a casual “talk later,” or leaving a conversation mid-argument, assuming there will always be another chance to fix it. Life, after all, feels long when we’re in the middle of it. But then, one day, it isn’t. And what lingers isn’t always the big memories, it’s the small, unfinished ones. The words we didn’t say. The emotions we postponed. The closure we assumed would come naturally. A few years ago, Aarav left home in a hurry after a small argument with his mother. It wasn’t anything serious, just one of those everyday disagreements about him not calling enough. “I’ll talk later,” he said, half-distracted, already checking his phone as he stepped out. That “later” never really came. Days turned into weeks, and life got busy ...

The Art and Science of Persuasion: Why We Are So Easily Influenced

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You’re scrolling through your Instagram feed when you see that someone made a post that reads, “Only three hours remaining to get this offer!” This is accompanied by a countdown clock, plus several hundred comments indicating that others have taken advantage of the offer. You then see a post from a verified news site offering an update on something, and finally a post from someone using the phrase “most experts agree.” None of these feels like attempts at persuasion, but is nonetheless persuasive in its own way. Persuasion, in the context of social psychology, refers to an instance of social influence in which attitudes, beliefs, or behaviours are altered via communication and not coercion or instructions. Persuasion influences the way that information is perceived by manipulating cues within the brain during decision-making processes. Persuasion typically involves the use of mental shortcuts, which lead individuals to pay attention and make choices based upon these processes without t...