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Quiet Echoes - A Heart Ready to Bloom

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Meera was fifty-three when she finally admitted to herself that loneliness inside a marriage felt heavier than loneliness outside it. After thirty years of smiling through silences that cut deeper than words, she walked out, not because she wanted freedom, but because she wanted peace. The world whispered that starting over at her age was foolish, but she was tired of shrinking herself to fit into a life that no longer felt like hers. Healing came slowly, like sunlight leaking through curtains after a long night. She learned to eat alone without feeling abandoned. She learned that choosing herself was not selfishness but survival. And she learned to sit with grief without letting it define her. On a rainy Tuesday, at a community library class she joined just to feel less invisible, she met Arvind, a quiet man with kind eyes and a history full of bruised edges. He, too, carried a past that had taught him love could be conditional and companionship could turn into captivity. They spoke l...

Moving Beyond Awareness: Embracing Neurodiversity and Inclusion in India

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Written By : Dr. Vamshi Krishna Arumbaka, Positive Psychologist and TedX Speaker, Hyderabad In the posh conference room of a sleek IT park in Hyderabad’s HITEC City, Anika Rao sat perfectly still, her fingers gently tapping against the underside of the table where no one could see. It was April 2026—Autism Awareness Month, and the irony was visible.  Around the table, her team from a global software firm chatted loudly about weekend plans and cricket scores, their voices overlapping in the easy rhythm of small talk. Anika smiled at the right moments, nodded, mirrored their high energy. She had perfected this script over years of masking, the exhausting art of appearing neurotypical so colleagues wouldn’t label her “difficult” or “not a team player.” By the time the stand-up meeting ended, her temples throbbed and her jaw ached. That evening, back in her family’s apartment in Kondapur, with the ceiling fan whirring and the pressure cooker whistling from the kitchen, Anika finally le...

How We Reason: The Psychology Behind Everyday Decisions

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Imagine this scenario: You are on an e-commerce website, comparing two similar products, a pair of headphones. One of them is advertised as “best seller,” which means that it appears in first place on the webpage and gets a slightly better rating than the second model. However, the latter model is cheaper and offers nearly the same features as the “best seller.” After spending a few moments scanning through these models, you decide to choose the “best seller” option, which seems logical and justified. In fact, this situation represents a typical decision-making practice that people face in their daily lives. Reasoning is one of the important processes during decision-making, which implies making conclusions based on available information. Deductive reasoning involves moving from a general principle to a particular situation. Therefore, if there is a rule stating that higher ratings mean higher quality, one would conclude that buying the best-rated headphones is a logical step. Inductiv...

Screen, Verdict Film Analysis - Athiran (2019)

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DIRECTOR  : VIVEK CAST : FAHADH FAASIl, SAI PALLAVI, ATUL KULKARNI AND OTHERS "Athiran" is a gripping psychological thriller that delves into the complex realm of mental health, highlighting the importance of awareness, empathy, and accurate diagnosis. The film masterfully portrays the devastating effects of misdiagnosis and the dangers of unethical treatment methods, as seen through Dr. Benjamin’s primitive and harmful approaches. The character of Vinayan, who suffers from schizophrenia, underscores how mental illnesses can be deeply misunderstood and hidden behind layers of delusion and paranoia, emphasizing the need for compassionate, professional intervention rather than exploitation. The narrative also explores the devastating impact of trauma and family secrets on mental health. Nithya’s traumatic past and her subsequent dissociation reflect how unresolved grief and guilt can manifest as psychosis, illustrating the importance of sensitivity and proper psychiatric care. ...

Benevolence: A Psychiatric Reading of Emperor Ashoka

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Written by : Dr. Jaikumar Velayudham, Consultant Psychiatrist, Chennai and Vellore Dr. Jaikumar Velayudham is a consultant psychiatrist with a deep interest in the intersection of history, psychology, and leadership. Through his writings, he explores the minds of iconic figures to uncover timeless mental health insights. He is a regular contributor to Mental Health Compass Magazine The life of Emperor Ashoka stands as one of history’s most compelling demonstrations of psychological transformation. Few rulers have travelled so dramatically from sanctioned violence to ethical governance. For mental health professionals, Ashoka offers a rare longitudinal case study of moral injury, guilt, post-traumatic growth, and the therapeutic potential of spirituality. Ashoka began his reign as a typical imperial expansionist. Raised in the politically charged Mauryan court under Emperor Bindusara, his early psychological environment was marked by rivalry, insecurity, and ruthless competition. Perso...

Every Ladder Has a Lesson, Every Snake a Consequence: The Psychology of Karma Through Play

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Most of us have played Snakes and Ladders at some point in our lives. It may have been during childhood summer vacations, family gatherings, or rainy afternoons spent indoors. We rolled the dice, climbed ladders with excitement, and groaned in frustration when a snake sent us sliding back down the board. At the time, it seemed like a simple game of luck. Yet few people realize that Snakes and Ladders was originally created in India as much more than a source of entertainment. Known as Moksha Patam , the game was designed to teach moral and spiritual lessons. The ladders represented virtues such as kindness, generosity, honesty, and humility, helping a person move closer to moksha, or liberation. The snakes symbolized vices such as greed, anger, pride, and deceit, pulling a person away from their goals. In many ways, the game was an interactive lesson on karma, the idea that our actions have consequences. While modern life may look very different from the world in which the game was cr...

The Psychology Behind Bed Rotting: Understanding Its Appeal and Implications

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Understanding the Trend of Bed Rotting In recent years, social media platforms like TikTok and Instagram have popularized the term bed rotting. It describes a behavior where individuals spend extended hours lying in bed, often accompanied by binge-watching shows, doomscrolling through social media feeds, or simply doing nothing at all. What was once described as laziness or procrastination has now been reframed as a form of self-care, particularly among younger generations who feel overwhelmed by the constant demands of daily life.  The appeal of bed rotting lies in its simplicity. Unlike structured self-care routines such as meditation, exercise, or meal prepping, bed rotting requires little energy or planning. It is accessible to nearly everyone: no special skills, tools, or spaces are needed. With rising pressures from academic competition, workplace stress, and the visibility of social media culture, many find this practice to be a low-effort way of reclaiming rest. Yet, as com...

Why We Love Online Personality Quizzes: The Power of Stories and Self-Understanding

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Personality tests have become a normal part of online culture, showing up in job interviews, social media profiles, and everyday conversations, where people describe themselves using labels like INFJ or Type 4. But for many of us, this interest started much earlier, with BuzzFeed quizzes that asked questions like what kind of pizza you are, which fictional character matches your personality, or what your choices say about you. These quizzes are not scientific, yet they still feel fun and strangely accurate at times. This raises a simple question: why are people so drawn to them? Most personality systems, whether they are casual online quizzes or structured types like the MBTI or Enneagram, work more like storytelling tools than scientific measurements. They take a wide mix of behaviours, habits, and preferences and turn them into a single category. Instead of saying you are sometimes outgoing and sometimes reserved, you get one label that tries to combine all of that into a simple iden...

Gender Diversity and Social Reality: How LGBTQ+ Individuals Navigate Identity, Stigma, and Survival in Society.

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For some people, identity doesn’t ask for much attention. It fits into the world they grew up in, into the expectations around them, into the way people already understand things. They don’t have to explain it often. They don’t have to think about whether it will be accepted before they speak. For many LGBTQ+ individuals, it doesn’t work like that. It’s not always loud in the beginning. It’s usually quiet, something slightly off, not wrong, just not matching what’s expected. And it’s not something you can always put into words right away. It sits there first as a feeling, something you circle around before you fully understand it. While that’s happening internally, the world outside is already structured. There are assumptions everywhere, even if no one says them out loud, about gender, about relationships, about how people are “supposed” to be. These ideas are repeated so often that they stop feeling like ideas and start feeling like facts. So when your experience doesn’t fit into tha...

Postpartum Depression: The Questions Families Are Afraid To Ask

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Everyone celebrates the baby. But who is checking on the mother? Written By Gurneet Kaur Jaitly, Counselling Psychologist The baby arrives, and the house fills with joy. Relatives visit with gifts. Family WhatsApp groups overflow with photographs. Everyone wants to know the baby’s name, weight, feeding schedule, and resemblance. But beneath this celebration, an important question often goes unasked: What is happening to the mother? In many Indian homes, a new mother is surrounded by expectations of happiness, gratitude, and strength. Yet emotionally, she may be navigating exhaustion, sleep deprivation, identity shifts, anxiety, and overwhelming responsibility—often in silence. Postpartum depression does not always appear loudly. Sometimes, it hides behind responsibility. Sometimes, behind smiles. And sometimes, behind the expectation that “this is just part of motherhood.” The Unspoken Exhaustion: Reading Between the Smiles We rarely ask the most important questions: Why is the mother ...