Life's everyday gifts give us joy.
Psychology Today Magazine
January 2005
Psychology's top 10 misguided ideas.
For one woman self-acceptance didn't come with weight loss.
Gordon Rugg cracked a medieval cryptographic mystery with paper, pen and basic reasoning.
Happiness really does start inside.
Weather can be an indicator of mood and behavior.
How boys, girls, and dogs communicate.
Columnist Hara Estroff Marano shares advice on severe shyness, "bad boys," and intimacy.
Do you sleep in your boyfriend's pajamas?
A different kind of test shows how much value college adds.
Another strike against Playstation.
Copying may give kids a conscience.
New books for your nightstand.
Blame evolution for a child's annoying whines.
Shock your sales force into ethical behavior.
One-sided conversations drive us to distraction.
An ancient manuscript could be a hoax.
How can I stop being afraid of dating?
He treats his own kids like royalty, but what about mine?
What should I tell people about my scars?
A Nobel-Prize-winning psychologist finds the joy in everyday life.
The multimillionaire who lost all his money.
An autistic behaviorist who knows the animal mind.
The man who gave away $40 million—and his kidney.
The latest in car accidents, cyberchondria, kids on bikes, toasty offices, and Alzheimer's meds.
A trailblazing activist looks back at her life.
Having more than one child may not add to a parent's happiness.
Casting director Douglas Aibel talks about his double life on screen and on film.
A voyeur's penchant for snooping on strangers.
Caffeine, a nasty habit or health benefit?
The moon won't drive you mad, unless you think it will.
An all-or-nothing mind-set can be self-defeating.
Speech rate and voice pitch can indicate depression.
Bad lifestyle choices can ravage the heart.
Laugh your way to better health.
Fill life with happy feelings and live to be a hundred.
Stymied by politics and Viagra, sex research goes limp.
All-male counseling may ease men into therapy.
Boost mood and memory with beer and bran.