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Game Theory in Relationships: Trust, Betrayal, and Emotional Strategy

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If you sit with your own experiences for a moment just quietly, without trying to explain anything you might notice something small but very real. There are times when you almost say something, and then you stop. Not because you don’t have the words, but because something inside you pauses. It’s not loud. It doesn’t argue. It just gently holds you back for a second. That second matters more than it seems. Because in that moment, something is being weighed not in a logical, step-by-step way, but in a feeling-based way. A part of you is asking, “If I say this, what will happen?” And even if you don’t hear the question clearly, you feel it. That’s where relationships become deeper than just emotions. They become a space where your actions are shaped by another person’s possible reactions. And that changes how you move. You don’t just express what you feel. You adjust it. You shape it. You sometimes soften it  or keep it to yourself. Not because you’re pretending, but because you’re aw...

From Screens to Streets: Collective Effervescence on Tamil Nadu Election Result Day 2026

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On the morning of the Tamil Nadu Election Result Day 2026, something unusual happened across the state. Streets that were usually filled with office rush and honking traffic slowly transformed into emotional public spaces. Tea shops became debate rooms. Apartment corridors echoed with loud television volumes. Auto drivers paused to discuss constituency leads. Families who rarely sat together for breakfast stayed glued to screens, refreshing updates every few seconds. And somewhere between television studios, WhatsApp forwards, party songs, memes, and celebrations outside counting centres, Tamil Nadu experienced something larger than politics, it experienced collective emotion. When the trends began shifting dramatically, especially with the rise of TVK and the emotional reactions from supporters across parties, the atmosphere became impossible to ignore. Supporters danced outside party offices, people burst crackers, some cried in disappointment, while others hugged strangers on the st...

From 'Because I Said So' to 'Let’s Talk': The Rise of Negotiation Parenting

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By Gurneet Kaur, Counselling Psychologist A parent recently told me in a session, “I don’t want my child to fear me the way I feared my parents… but now I feel like nothing I say is final.” That sentence captures the heart of modern parenting. We are witnessing a powerful shift, from authority-driven homes to emotionally aware, conversation-led families. Today’s parents are choosing connection over control, dialogue over directives, and empathy over fear. This is the rise of negotiation parenting. And while it reflects emotional progress, it also brings a subtle complexity that many families are quietly struggling with. For generations, obedience defined ‘good parenting.’ But obedience without understanding often creates compliance, not character. Today, parents are explaining the why behind rules, encouraging children to express opinions, and validating emotions rather than dismissing them. Children who feel heard are more likely to develop emotional intelligence, confidence in self-e...

The Neuroscience of Failure: Why the Brain Experiences Psychological Pain During Setbacks

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Failure has a way of lingering longer than it seems like it should. You might move on with your day, talk to people, distract yourself, but somewhere in the background, it stays. Not loudly, not always clearly, but just enough that you feel it. It shows up as a kind of tightness, or a drop in energy, or that quiet urge to replay what happened one more time, as if looking at it again might change something. What’s strange is how physical it can feel. It’s not just a thought like “that didn’t work.” It feels closer than that, almost like your body reacted before your mind could fully explain why. And in a way, that’s not far from what’s actually happening. When something goes wrong, especially something you cared about, your brain doesn’t treat it like a simple piece of information. It reacts to it. And part of that reaction overlaps with the way it processes physical pain. Not because failure is the same as being injured, but because both situations signal that something important didn’...

What Are You Feeding Your Mind? Understanding the Black Coffee Theory

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There’s a quiet moment most of us have in a day, maybe it’s early morning, maybe it’s right before bed, when our thoughts get a little louder than usual. It’s in these moments that the mind reveals what it has been fed all day. Not just information, but attention. Not just facts, but focus. And slowly, almost invisibly, this focus begins shaping how we experience the world. A friend of mine once shared a small but telling story. Every morning before work, she would stop by the same café. For weeks, she kept complaining about how bitter the coffee tasted. “It’s always too strong, too harsh,” she’d say, almost expecting disappointment before even taking a sip. One day, out of curiosity more than anything else, the barista suggested she try something different, a cappuccino. Reluctantly, she agreed. That day, she walked into work surprised, almost amused. “I didn’t know coffee could taste like this,” she laughed. But what stayed with me wasn’t the change in her order, it was what she said...

AI-Induced Delusion: Understanding “ChatGPT Psychosis” and the Cognitive Risks of Human–AI Interaction

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At first, it just feels convenient. You open it, ask something, get a quick answer. No waiting, no confusion, no need to search through ten different pages. You move on, but then you come back, and then again. And at some point, without really noticing when it happened, it stops feeling like just a tool you use occasionally. It becomes something you turn to. Not just for answers, but for explanations, for clarity, sometimes even for reassurance. That shift is small, but it matters because the interaction doesn’t behave like most tools. It doesn’t sit there silently. It responds. It follows what you say. It adjusts its tone. It keeps up with your thinking in a way that feels smooth, and your brain picks up on that. We’re wired to treat language as social. The moment something responds in full sentences, stays on topic, and reacts to what we say, part of us starts treating it like an interaction, not just an output. Even if we know it’s not a person, it still fits into patterns our brain...

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...