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Silence After the Announcement: Emotional Regulation in Public Figures

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When Personal News Becomes Public Narrative For the vast majority of people, events such as separation or divorce are private experiences shared only with close family and friends. However, for famous people, these intensely private moments are usually viewed by a big crowd. When an announcement is made, word spreads quickly via news networks, social networks platforms, and entertainment remarks. What might have been a quiet emotional transition becomes a widely discussed narrative. Celebrities face a unique challenge in these moments. They must process grief, disappointment, or uncertainty while also managing how they appear in public. The announcement of a divorce rarely ends the conversation. Instead it often begins a period of speculation, analysis, and sometimes criticism. Because of this environment, many public figures choose silence as their first response after sharing the news. This silence is not necessarily avoidable. Rather, it is often a deliberate strategy of emotional r...

The Science Behind Dreams: How Our Brain Processes While We Sleep

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Imagine this scenario when you’re deep asleep. You are walking through the street to your house. Suddenly, the road turns into a beach, your school teacher appears out of nowhere, and you are trying to catch a train that does not exist. Moments later, you wake up wondering why your mind even created something so strange. That’s how dreams are! They often feel chaotic, disconnected, and sometimes completely random. But psychologists and neuroscientists suggest that these “random” dreams may actually reveal important processes happening inside the brain while we sleep! One explanation comes from extensive research on memory. When we are asleep, particularly during REM (Rapid Eye Movement) sleep, the brain actively processes information collected throughout the day. Memories are reorganized, strengthened, or sometimes discarded. Because the brain is sorting through multiple experiences at once, fragments from different memories combine in unusual ways. A friend’s face, a place from childh...

Why Humans Celebrate: The Psychology and Anthropology of Festivals

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Every year, as spring arrives in India, families prepare for festivals like Gudi Padwa. All our homes are deep-cleaned, rangoli is drawn at doorways, and a gudi is raised outside houses as a symbol of prosperity and new beginnings. The festival marks the start of the new year in the Marathi calendar. While these practices may seem like simple traditions, they reflect something deeper about human behaviour. Around the world, cultures have always created festivals and rituals to mark time, celebrate milestones, and bring communities together. One of the main reasons humans seem to celebrate is to strengthen social bonds. Festivals create new chances for people to come together, cook, visit relatives, and take part in rituals and practices. These moments allow people to interact and reconnect in ways that everyday life often does not. Singing, dancing, sharing food, and performing rituals together make people feel part of a larger group. When an entire community celebrates the same festiv...

The Art of Pausing When Emotions Overflow

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There are moments when emotions don’t arrive gently, they rush in all at once. A single comment turns into a wave of hurt. A small disagreement suddenly feels overwhelming. Your heart races, your thoughts blur, and before you know it, you’ve said something you didn’t fully mean or shut down completely. Later, when everything is quiet again, you sit with that familiar thought: “I wish I had handled that differently.” This experience has a name, emotional flooding. It’s when your feelings become so intense that your body and mind struggle to keep up. Your brain shifts into survival mode. Logic takes a backseat, and your reactions become quicker, louder, or more withdrawn than you intended. It’s not because you’re “too emotional” or “bad at handling things.” It’s because your nervous system is overwhelmed. In those moments, the idea of pausing can feel almost impossible. When emotions surge, everything inside you pushes for immediate action like respond, defend, explain, fix. Silence can ...

Is Boredom a Lost Skill? Rediscovering the Power of Stillness and Creativity

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In the cult classic film The Karate Kid (1984), the protagonist Daniel grows frustrated when his teacher, Mr Miyagi, asks him to repeat simple tasks like “wax on, wax off.” At first, the work seems pointless and dull. Only later does Daniel realize that those repetitive, almost boring moments were training his mind and body. Now, think about your own life. When was the last time you allowed yourself to be bored? In a world filled with constant message notifications, channels for entertainment, and endless doomscrolling, boredom often feels like something to avoid. Yet boredom might actually be less of a problem and more of a mental space where reflection and creativity begin. Historically, attitudes toward ‘idleness’ have shifted. In ancient philosophy, periods of contemplation were not seen as wasted time but as necessary for understanding the world. Greek thinkers believed that stepping away from constant activity allowed the mind to explore ideas more freely. Later, modern industria...

Empowered Moms: Building Stronger Relationships for Lasting Connections

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Written By : Ms. Shraddha Jayaraman, Soft Skills Trainer, Hyderabad In the fast-paced world where working parents struggle to find time for their children, empowered moms are emerging with new trends that emphasize mindful and empathetic parenting. This shift from authoritarian to nurturing, emotionally supportive methods is fostering strong, respectful relationships between mothers and their children. These approaches aren’t just beneficial for kids – it strengthens family relationships in a way that lasts a lifetime. Here’s how empowered mothers are making these connections and why it matters. Research shows that children who grow up in emotionally supportive environments develop stronger social skills, self-esteem, and resilience. According to a study from Harvard University’s Center on the Developing Child, when parents are emotionally attuned to their children, they help build a foundation of emotional security. Empowered mothers prioritize emotional connections by actively listen...

The Hidden Impact of Urban Life on Mental Health — What Research Reveals

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Urban life refers to the lifestyle and experiences of people living in cities or towns, characterized by a variety of social interactions and cultures, high population density, rapid social change, elevated pollution levels, high living costs, routine hectic work, and environments driven by inorganic materials and infrastructure. It also offers many benefits, such as better hospitals, universities, career growth, cultural diversity, creative exposure, and the birth of many innovations due to diverse people meeting and sharing ideas. Therefore, urban life can also promote personal growth. Cities do not sleep well. There is a variety of pollution, including traffic noise at night. Many people work late hours, leading to poor sleep patterns that affect mood regulation. When sleep quality drops, emotional control diminishes. Small stresses seem bigger, patience becomes thinner, and over time, this increases the risk of depression and anxiety. Being around people is normal, but being surrou...

Midlife Worries—Is It A Crisis Or A Call For Change?

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“Sometimes life whispers before it begins to shout.” A Phase That Feels Like Everything Is Changing Too Fast Midlife often arrives quietly and then suddenly feels overwhelming. Many people describe this phase as a time when the world around them seems to shift faster than they can adjust. Careers stabilize yet feel less fulfilling. Children grow older and become more independent. Friendships change direction. Your sense of identity can begin to feel uncertain, as if the version of yourself that once made sense no longer fits the life you are living. This emotional confusion is not a sign of weakness. It is a natural human response to recognizing that time is moving forward. The fear of aging, worries about missed opportunities, and memories of dreams that were never fully pursued can create pressure within the mind. You may feel restless but also afraid to make changes. You may desire something new yet feel guilty for wanting more. These mixed emotions are not unusual. They reflect a d...

Comparison Is the Thief of Joy—But Why Is It So Addictive?

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“Why can’t you be more like them?” For many people, comparison starts long before social media. It might come from parents pointing out a cousin who gets better grades, teachers praising another student as the ideal example, or relatives asking why someone else seems to be doing better. Over time, these comments make comparison feel normal, even expected, in some cases. Today, the same habit is present online. A quick scroll through Instagram or LinkedIn can turn into a competition. Someone posts about landing an internship, someone else celebrates getting into graduate school, and another person announces a promotion. Even when we are genuinely happy for them, it can still trigger the same uncomfortable thought: Am I falling behind? Psychologists have studied this tendency for decades. In 1954, psychologist Leon Festinger introduced the idea of Social Comparison Theory. The theory suggests that people naturally evaluate themselves by looking at others. When there is no clear standard ...

A Childhood of Independence or Built-In Best Friends?

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Every now and then, a simple question sparks a surprisingly emotional debate: What’s better : growing up as a single child or with siblings? Ask a group of friends and the answers will come with strong opinions, dramatic stories, and probably a few exaggerated childhood memories. The only child might say, “I loved the peace and quiet.” The sibling might laugh and say, “Peace and quiet? I’ve never experienced that in my life.” Both childhoods, in their own ways, create very different worlds. Growing up as an only child often means learning independence earlier than most. There are no siblings to blame when the TV remote goes missing, no one to secretly share your snacks with, and definitely no one to fight over the front seat of the car. Only children learn to entertain themselves in creative ways like talking to imaginary friends, building elaborate games, or simply enjoying their own company. They often grow comfortable spending time alone, thinking deeply, and forming strong connecti...