
Dr. Mozelle Martin
Bio
Behavioral analyst and investigative writer examining how people, institutions, and narratives behave under pressure—and what remains when systems fail.
Stories (126)
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The Daily Crime Against Your Own Brain
Feed your brain junk long enough and it starts acting like a suspect under pressure—fidgety, unreliable, and ready to snap. That isn’t poetry. It’s what shows up in psychological evaluations, probation reports, and medical charts across professions and age groups.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin5 months ago in Psyche
When Love Becomes a Drug:
Addiction doesn’t always come in a bottle. Sometimes, it answers your texts. Sometimes, it sleeps in your bed. And if you’re the one addicted, it feels less like obsession and more like oxygen. You think you need it to stay alive.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin5 months ago in Families
Digital Lynch Mobs:
Trial by Internet Say it plainly: the internet made destroying people easy. Not just politicians or influencers with armies of critics. Ordinary professionals. Whistleblowers. Survivors. Experts who refuse to bend to whatever narrative is trending that week.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin5 months ago in The Swamp
Collapse as Routine:
Civilizations rarely fail in a single headline. They fail by habit. What shocks at first becomes tolerable, then law, then culture. Cruelty becomes commerce. Moral authority becomes political capital. Money becomes the mechanism of coercion. By the time the fracture is visible, the architecture that produced it has long been in place.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin6 months ago in Earth
The Era of Repair:
This question is often asked of older couples: how did you manage to stay together so long? The answers tend to sound deceptively simple, but they reflect a set of values that no longer dominate cultural norms. The truth is that long-term relationships were rarely sustained because everything was easy or people were perfectly compatible. They endured because repair was valued over replacement. In past generations, when something was broken, people fixed it. They did not discard it at the first sign of wear.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin6 months ago in Longevity
Misidentified & Misunderstood:. Top Story - September 2025.
They wag their tails, lick your face, and ask for nothing but love — yet thousands of dogs are dying in shelters and rescues each year. Not because they’re aggressive, but because they’ve been mislabeled.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin6 months ago in Petlife
Are Toilets Built for Toddlers Now?
Sit on a public toilet today and you might swear someone swapped it with a daycare chair. Most non-ADA bowls perch only 14 to 15 inches off the floor—barely above preschool height. If your joints are mint-condition, fine. But add arthritis, bad knees, a hip replacement, or just plain mileage, and every sit-to-stand becomes a micro-battle.
By Dr. Mozelle Martin6 months ago in Humans
Handwriting Was the Doorway.
When most people hear “handwriting analysis,” they think of a parlor trick. Popular culture hasn’t helped. Movies reduce it to a detective staring at squiggles on a page. Self-help books package it into “what your signature says about you.”
By Dr. Mozelle Martin7 months ago in Writers












