Life provides turning points of many kinds, but the most powerful of all may be character-revealing moments.
Psychology Today Magazine
July 2018
Possessions are tied to identity in ways we may not appreciate until we try to purge them from our lives.
Adrian Loya staged a baroquely premeditated murder to exact revenge for an assault that did not, in fact, occur.
If you open up to the pain of loss, you can find joy.
After a decades-long absence and visits with hundreds of cousins, two people mattered most.
Glenn Adamson wants us to join in appreciation for well-crafted objects.
Shaking up stereotypes is a powerful way to get an audience's attention.
For metabolic purposes, and your brain's sake, it's not so much what you eat but when.
Science is waking up to the key role the trace mineral plays in promoting sleep.
Why do unreliable personality quizzes speak to us?
A relationship with one's twin isn't optional; with her or without her, the relationship is always there.
A recent analysis gives an updated look at the broad impact of depression.
What recent findings on autism means for parents and children
Walter Sinnott-Armstrong likes arguing, and he wants everyone else to like it, too.
What makes us more likely to chime in about something we have little knowledge of?
When a well-intended falsehood is revealed, how is the teller judged?
With the ability to read deeply, warns Maryanne Wolf, other mental strengths may be at risk.
Those with a clear self-image may encourage a partner's evolution.