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Unlocking Your Brain's Potential: The Power of Biohacking and Psychology

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Biohacking, particularly when it comes to feeling good and staying well, is really blowing up right now. It's about using science, tech, and changing how we live to make our bodies and minds work better. Biohacking offers an innovative approach to enhance your mental state, strengthen your recollection abilities, and optimize your overall brain activities.  Biohacking is an evolving field that focuses on improving your psychological well-being and physical fitness using a wide variety of techniques. With increasing numbers of people working in psychology and seeing the connections between biohacking and neuroscience, biohacking has become increasingly prevalent. There are so many methods available to help you feel better and think more clearly through biohacking. Some of these include taking nutritional supplements, learning about and practicing mindfulness, improving sleep quality, and exploring neurofeedback and electrical brain stimulation. We want to get better at things like b...

The Neuroscience of Play : How Hobbies Shape a Stronger, Healthier Brain

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Hobbies are considered activities that are done in one’s leisure time for enjoyment, which can include pursuits such as art, engaging in sports activities, and stimulating creative thinking. Hobbies provide a non-productive space for passion, relaxation, and creativity. Scientific evidence shows that hobbies act as natural antidepressants by stimulating dopamine release, reducing cortisol levels, fostering emotional regulation, and building stronger resilience against stress and anxiety. Let’s explore the impacts of hobbies on life. Stress management and mental health: Hobbies reduce stress, anxiety, and depression. A meta-analysis conducted in 2024 revealed that people who engage in hobbies report up to 37% reduction in stress and improved self-esteem. Play and childhood development: Play plays an important role in a child's development. Learning new games cultivates new connections in the brain through a process known as neuroplasticity. There are four types of play, including: F...

Learned Helplessness And Its Role In Daily Decision Making Patterns

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Understanding learned helplessness Learned helplessness is a psychological phenomenon in which repeated experiences of failure or lack of control lead individuals to believe that their actions have little or no impact on outcomes. This belief does not emerge overnight; it develops gradually through repeated exposure to situations in which efforts are met with frustration, disappointment, or lack of reward. Once internalized, learned helplessness can influence thought patterns, emotions, and behaviors, causing individuals to disengage from challenges or avoid decision making altogether.  It is important to note that learned helplessness is not a reflection of actual ability or intelligence. Instead, it is a learned expectation that effort will not lead to meaningful results. Over time, this mindset becomes self reinforcing. Even when opportunities for success appear, individuals may doubt their capacity to influence outcomes, limiting initiative and reducing motivation in daily life...

The Mood Menu: Aestheticizing Serotonin, Dopamine, Oxytocin, and Endorphin

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In recent years, science seems to have seamlessly integrated into everyday life. Terms like serotonin boosts, dopamine fasting, oxytocin rituals, and endorphin highs appear in Instagram captions, product labels, and self-improvement programs. Brain chemistry is no longer confined to psychology textbooks or medical journals, but has been transformed into a lifestyle framework, presented as a guide to happiness, motivation, connection, and calm. This trend is appealing because it suggests that emotional well-being can be managed through simple habits and routines, helping one to easily attain the ideal and perfect lifestyle. However, serotonin, dopamine, oxytocin, and endorphins are not just aesthetic trends. They are neurochemicals with complex and interconnected roles in the brain and body. Understanding how they actually function helps one to understand the fine line between hard facts and appealing information! Serotonin Serotonin is often labelled as the “happiness hormone,” but it ...

Tamil Nadu 2026 Elections: Campaign Dramas, Political Theater, and the Psychology Behind Voter Awareness

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As Tamil Nadu slowly moves toward the 2026 elections, the political atmosphere is already warming up. Loudspeakers return to street corners, posters reappear on compound walls, carefully scripted speeches circulate on social media, and leaders begin to speak not just to voters but to emotions. Elections in Tamil Nadu have never been silent administrative exercises. They are spectacles. They are performances. They are emotional events deeply woven into everyday life. Understanding this election is not only about parties or promises, but about psychology and how people are persuaded, moved, distracted, or awakened. Tamil Nadu politics has a long tradition of dramatic communication. From fiery oratory to symbolic gestures, political leaders here do not merely present policies. They perform narratives. These narratives are built around identity, pride, history, language, welfare, and emotional belonging. Psychology explains that humans do not make decisions purely through facts. We rely on...

How Seeing Earth from Space Changes the Human Mind

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"From space, I saw Earth not as a collection of nations, but as a single entity with one destiny.” - Ronald J Garan This statement by American astronaut Ron Garan makes us feel awed by the beauty of our Earth. When astronauts look back at Earth from space, many of them struggle to verbalize their emotions. There is something about that view that feels much bigger than words could ever describe. Scientists call this experience the overview effect. It refers to the deep psychological shift that occurs when someone sees our planet from orbit for the first time. This effect was first identified through astronaut reports and later studied by psychologists and space agencies. It describes a powerful change in perception. From space, Earth does not look divided. There are no visible borders, no political lines separating countries, no signs of conflict. Instead, it appears as a small spherical body floating in the galaxy of darkness. Seeing the planet from a bird's eye view can compl...

From Water Guns to Adulting: Why Holi Still Feels Like Home

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There comes a moment every year when life is busy, taxes are due, work deadlines loom, and your group chat is filled with “ So… Holi plans? ” It’s funny how a single festival can take you straight from adulthood’s endless to-do lists to childhood nostalgia in seconds. Holi has that power. One whiff of gulaal, one bucket of coloured water splashing somewhere in the street, and suddenly you’re eight years old again, chasing your cousins with a neon water gun you swore was the most powerful weapon ever invented. But here’s the beautiful irony: even as adults, tired, practical, slightly over-responsible, we still crave Holi. The festival doesn’t just remind us of home; it returns us to it, even if only for a day. Back then, Holi was an entire event, not just a festival. You woke up early, half-asleep, already plotting who you’d attack first. Your mother warned you not to get colour in your eyes; your father acted like he wasn’t involved but secretly filled the biggest bucket. You’d team up...

From Tehran to Tel Aviv: A Balanced Look at an Escalating Chapter

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In early 2026, headlines around the world began circulating words like “escalation,” “retaliation,” and “tension” between nations that many of us know only through news feeds and distant geography: Iran and Israel. Amid these complex global developments, it is easy to feel overwhelmed, confused, or even detached. But behind every headline are real people, families, routines interrupted, and futures uncertain. Understanding the situation with care and empathy allows us to hold space for humanity on all sides, even in times of geopolitical strain. At its core, the current escalation involves direct military actions and strategic moves between Israel and Iran, with involvement from the United States and other regional actors. On February 28, 2026, joint military strikes by Israeli and U.S. forces targeted multiple sites inside Iran in what authorities described as a pre-emptive measure amid longstanding concerns over security threats. Following this, retaliatory actions, including missile...

The Medicinal Oil Habit: Why Rubbing Away Stress Can Become a Mental Crutch

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For many people, the smell of medicinal oil is tied to relief. A headache begins, stress tightens the temples, exhaustion settles into the body, and instinctively the small bottle comes out. A few drops on the forehead or neck, a gentle massage, and there is a sense of calm. This habit is deeply rooted in everyday life across India and many other cultures. It is passed down from parents to children, from elders to the next generation. Yet behind this familiar ritual lies an important psychological question. When does relief become reliance, and when does comfort quietly turn into a mental crutch. Medicinal oils are often used for physical reasons like headaches, muscle pain, sinus pressure, or fatigue. However, many users report that the relief feels immediate even when the physical cause is unclear. Psychology explains this through the placebo effect. The mind strongly influences how the body experiences pain. When the brain expects relief, it often produces it. The scent, the cooling...

Why Objects Become ‘Ours’: The Psychology of Possession

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In Toy Story(1995), Andy’s attachment to his cowboy toy Woody shows just how powerful it can be to possess an object that you love. Woody is not just a plain toy; he is a companion, a source of comfort, and a part of Andy’s world. Now, think about your own life. Are there things you find hard to give up? Why do some objects feel so important while others do not? This is the psychology of possession and how objects can become a part of who we are. Philosophers have long inquired about the concept of possession of an object, particularly the idea of “objects of desire.” F.H. Bradley suggested that desire reveals not just interest in an object but a vision of the self that the object represents. Similarly, Hegel argued that possession becomes meaningful only when it is recognized by others, linking objects to social acknowledgement and selfhood.   Objects hold memories and help us define ourselves. A toy, a piece of clothing, or a photograph is often more than what it seems. It c...