Bullying Awareness & Prevention, Community, Media Use, Mental Health Topics How to survive a viral punishment: Cancel culture stories of social sanctions and online shaming by Wistar Murray on Aug 17, 2021 It wouldn’t surprise me if cavepeople worried about getting canceled. Steal someone’s share of the weekly mammoth meat and you’d probably be ostracized by the clan, forced to make your own fire in a lesser, lonelier cave. Until your people forgave your transgression and invited you back into the fold,…
Mental Health Topics, Self-Improvement, Work & Careers Reskilling can help you thrive in a new career and achieve your professional goals by Carol Pang on Aug 13, 2021 You may be considering a career change by personal choice or due to forced circumstances or a mixture of both. It is natural to feel both excited and anxious about switching your occupations. You might be concerned that you haven’t got the relevant experience, skills, and knowledge to make the…
Anxiety, Grief & Loss, Mental Health Topics Human psychology and a burning planet: How to harness your ecological grief and eco-anxiety to fight climate change by Wistar Murray on Aug 13, 2021 Humanity is (mostly) made up of moral, sensitive, and compassionate beings. We love big-eyed baby animals. We love gazing at waterfalls. We hate global pandemics that keep us from hanging out with our friends. And, of course, we hate reading again and again about the imminent destruction of our homes…
Media Use, Mental Health Topics, Parenting Dads get a bad rap: Insights into being a supportive father, despite what pop culture and societal stereotypes may say by Jason Crosby on Aug 6, 2021 Starting in the mid-20th century, father figures in pop culture, especially those portrayed on TV, have been characterized with negative attributes. Don’t be mistaken; there’s comedic gold to be mined from the blunders of characters like Bernie McCullough in “The Bernie Mac Show,” Hank Hill in “King of The Hill,”…
Mental Health Topics, Relationships Bridesmaids, bachelorette parties, and healthy friendship boundaries: How to stay sane while maintaining wedding protocols by Wistar Murray on Aug 6, 2021 Weddings came back with a vengeance this summer, and let’s be honest: It had been kind of nice to see people elope for a while. So cheap. So quiet. So little pressure on friends and family. You could just send a gift instead of making small talk with strangers and…
Feelings & Emotions, Mental Health Topics, Work & Careers How to deal with jealousy at work by Taylor Bennett on Aug 6, 2021 Does everyone in your workplace get along well… or is there an undercurrent of negativity—or even jealousy? Jealousy can be a difficult and destructive emotion – and it can wreak havoc in the workplace. It’s technically distinct from envy: Jealousy usually involves feeling like a rival to someone else, but…
Anxiety, Coping Skills, Mental Health Topics Coping with climate anxiety and extreme heat: A field guide by Jason Crosby on Aug 4, 2021 I’m stuck in four lanes of traffic for the next two miles. It’s late July in Texas, and not a single car is moving. It’s 93 degrees outside, plus 70% humidity to top things off. Sweating, frustrated, and frankly quite angry, I lean into my car horn, uttering a few…
Feelings & Emotions, Mental Health Topics, Psychology Novelty-seeking 101: The ups and downs of neophilia by Jason Crosby on Aug 2, 2021 I can specifically recall eating shrimp-fried rice for the first time (it’s still my favorite food) at seven years old. I was blown away by the fact that food could taste that amazing. On the other end of the spectrum, I can remember my first solo camping trip in Bridger…
Feelings & Emotions, Mental Health Topics, Work & Careers Are you feeling like a fraud? Signs of imposter syndrome and how to overcome it by Jason Crosby on Jul 29, 2021 We’ve all felt a little out of place before: Plenty of life events and transitions can leave us feeling uncomfortable and unprepared. Even when we’ve done the hard work and our efforts have been recognized, there are sometimes lingering feelings of inadequacy, an undercurrent that whispers, “You’re a fraud.” For…
Children, Teens, & Adolescents, Depression, Mental Health Topics, Parenting Children of depressed parents suffer inadvertent effects—these mental health interventions can help by Jason Crosby on Jul 27, 2021 When we think about or discuss mental health topics such as depression, our minds tend to zero in on what the individual with the mental health condition is going through. But what about those closest to them—like their children? As a mental health condition that can leave sufferers feeling distant…
Mental Health Awareness, Mental Health Topics Supernaturally talented but still human: Examining the unique (and also normal) mental health challenges of Olympians and elite athletes by Jason Crosby on Jul 21, 2021 When even the word “Olympian” means god-like, it’s hard to ignore the superhuman connotations behind the Olympics. And when we think about the great Olympians of our time like Michael Phelps or Simone Biles, we usually think about the ways in which their physical gifts and strength set them above…
Coping Skills, Media Use, Mental Health Topics Why do people like true crime before bedtime? Murder media as a psychological coping strategy by Wistar Murray on Jul 13, 2021 One foggy April morning in 1672, a woodsman stumbled upon a gruesome scene in the woods just outside the French village of Barfleur. The woodsman was already familiar with Madame Perrault’s forest cottage. Madame Perrault was an ailing, elderly woman, so the woodsman often stopped by with bread and soup…