Job hunting is stressful. After many rejections, one can feel crushed, defeated, and deflated. Psychology tools offer helpful ways to respond to painful job rejections and thrive.| Psychology Today
"What's wrong with expecting people to do what is right? Don't I have a right to feel resentful when they don't?" Find out what is wrong with that kind of thinking.| Psychology Today
Ruminating over decisions is a form of anxiety. You want to make the right choice, but you're confused, uncertain, or afraid of making the wrong choice. There's a way out.| Psychology Today
Retirement can pack quite a punch in terms of your sense of identity, purpose and meaning. But don't rush to redesign your life. Take time to listen to it.| Psychology Today
It’s worth exploring how employing “always” and “never” in highly provocative situations may be inevitable—impossible to totally uproot. How should you respond to them?| Psychology Today
We are born to be playful. But many of us lose our playfulness. Why do we lose it and how can we recover it? Here’s why, and here's how —from a book by Bernard DeKoven.| Psychology Today
Almost all of us think we're good listeners, but we're only absorbing around half of what we hear. Luckily, it's possible to improve our listening and, in turn, our relationships.| Psychology Today
When we help others we feel happy. There is a relationship between our well-being and giving our time, money or other resources to a cause that we are passionate about.| Psychology Today
We talk a lot about "sense of self" in psychology and psychiatry. We think of it as a sense of identity or personal traits. But going deeper can help to heal trauma.| Psychology Today
Every suicide is a tragedy, and to some degree a mystery. Suicide often stems from a deep feeling of hopelessness. The inability to see solutions to problems or to cope with challenging life circumstances may lead people to see taking their own lives as the only solution to what is really a temporary situation, and most survivors of suicide attempts go on to live full, rewarding lives.| Psychology Today
The evidence from national and international surveys and tests is clear: On average, boys read less, and less well, than girls. But why? And what can we do about it?| Psychology Today