advice
Advice and tips on managing mental health, maintaining a positive outlook and becoming your happiest self.
The Invisible Weight of Anxiety — Living With a Mind That Never Stops Racing
Anxiety doesn’t always look like panic attacks or someone gasping for air. Sometimes it’s invisible—quiet, hidden beneath a smile or small talk. For me, anxiety has always felt like carrying a backpack full of bricks that no one else can see. On the outside, I might look composed, even cheerful. But inside, my thoughts are racing, my chest feels tight, and I’m constantly preparing for a disaster that never seems to come.
By Nadeem Shah 5 months ago in Psyche
Breaking Free from the People-Pleaser Trap — How I Learned to Value My Own Voice
The Trap I Didn’t See Coming For years, I thought being agreeable, kind, and always available for others was a good thing. I believed that if I kept everyone around me happy, they would like me more, respect me more, and maybe even love me more. But what I didn’t realize was that in trying to meet everyone else’s expectations, I was losing myself. Every “yes” that went against my true feelings was another step away from who I really was.
By Nadeem Shah 5 months ago in Psyche
How Journaling Helps Reduce Stress and Anxiety
Stress and anxiety can quietly take over, often before you realize how much they’ve been weighing you down. The racing thoughts. The constant what-ifs. The pressure to keep it all together while feeling like you’re falling apart inside. In moments like these, journaling can be more than just writing on paper—it can become a powerful tool for emotional release, clarity, and control.
By Richard Bailey5 months ago in Psyche
Attachment Styles and Coping: Insights from Ukrainian Adolescent Research (2024)
Why This Research Matters Attachment theory and resilience are well-known concepts in psychology. Yet when it comes to Ukrainian adolescents - especially in the context of war and displacement - empirical data is still scarce. My 2024 research project revealed a crucial nuance: attachment styles do not directly determine resilience levels, but they strongly shape the coping strategies adolescents use under stress.
By Daria Barabash5 months ago in Psyche
The Paradox of Choice: Why Having More Options Makes Us Unhappier. AI-Generated.
Introduction: Imagine standing in a supermarket aisle with hundreds of cereal boxes lined up in front of you. Different flavors, sizes, health claims, and price tags scream for your attention. At first glance, it feels empowering you have the freedom to choose. But as you reach for a box, a strange feeling creeps in: What if I’m making the wrong choice? What if the one I didn’t pick was better?
By Muhammad Hussain5 months ago in Psyche
Nourish to Flourish: The Role of Nutritional Psychiatry in Supporting Mental Health. AI-Generated.
Mental health is deeply connected to how we eat, sleep, and live our daily lives. In recent years, a growing field known as nutritional psychiatry has been gaining attention for its potential to improve conditions like anxiety, depression, ADHD, and even schizophrenia. At a time when mental health clinics are expanding their services to include holistic care, understanding the link between food and mood is more important than ever.
By JP Psychiatry5 months ago in Psyche
Breathing Exercises to Instantly Reduce Stress
Stress can hit at any moment—during a meeting, in traffic, or even while scrolling through your phone late at night. When it does, your heart rate climbs, your muscles tense, and your mind races. While stress is an unavoidable part of life, how you respond to it can transform your mental and physical well-being.
By Richard Bailey5 months ago in Psyche
The Last Broadcast
The Last Broadcast When the world ends, who keeps the music playing? The world ended quietly. Not with bombs or firestorms, not with cities collapsing into dust. It ended in stillness. A sickness swept through, a silence followed, and one by one, the voices that had filled the planet vanished.
By waseem khan5 months ago in Psyche
The Stranger Who Writes My Dreams
The Stranger Who Writes My Dreams When your own journal stops belonging to you, how do you know what’s real anymore? I have kept journals since I was twelve. They were my safe place, my record of small victories and humiliations, my own quiet history. No one ever touched them. No one was supposed to.
By waseem khan5 months ago in Psyche
The Link Between Diet and Anxiety: What to Eat and Avoid
Anxiety is often painted as a purely mental struggle, but science tells a deeper story. The brain and body are in constant communication, and the food you eat becomes a major part of that conversation. While medication, therapy, and lifestyle changes all play important roles, your diet can either ease anxiety’s grip or tighten it.
By Richard Bailey5 months ago in Psyche











