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Mother's Day Is Also the Birthday of a (my) Mother

There is a particular kind of morning that lives in your memory forever. You are still half asleep and before your eyes even open the farm is already talking to you. The animals stirring. The creak of a screen door swinging open in the early quiet. The smell of coffee and something already cooking coming through the walls like a promise that the day is going to be all right. Some mothers grew up inside that world. The land, the animals, the rhythm of a place that does not wait for anyone to be ready. And they carried it with them when they left. Into their homes. Into their kitchens. Into the way they met the morning before anyone else in the house even stirred. And behind almost every one of those memories, if you look closely enough, is her. Most people grow up thinking Mother's Day is a celebration of what a mother does. The meals that were on the table before anyone else was awake. The rides. The nights she stayed up listening to something that probably sounded small from...

The Rise of Unhappiness in Today’s Youth

     For generations, youth was synonymous with freedom, hope, and the shimmering promise of “someday.” Yet recent global research reveals a startling reversal: unhappiness now peaks in youth and steadily declines with age (Blanchflower, Bryson, & Xu, 2025). The once-familiar U-shaped curve of happiness, where life satisfaction dipped in midlife before rising again, has flipped. In many countries, it is no longer the middle-aged searching for meaning, it is the young, staring into a screen-lit void and wondering why happiness feels so far away. The Reversal of the U-Curve  The “U-shape of happiness” was once considered nearly universal. People tended to start adult life relatively happy, experience a dip around their 40s, then regain life satisfaction as they aged (Blanchflower & Oswald, 2008). But new data spanning 44 countries and multiple years reveal a sobering pattern: young people report the highest rates of despair, loneliness, and stress (Blanchflower et a...

How Couples Keep Desire and Connection Alive

     Intimacy is not a straight line and it sure is not a recipe where you follow steps in perfect order. It is more like driving an old trusted truck down familiar backroads. Some days you ease through every gear. Other days you skip around because the engine is already warm and the road is clear. A lot of folks think intimacy must follow a strict pattern. That is simply not true. These gears are not rules. They are invitations. They show couples different ways to build closeness, not a list of mandatory steps. Sometimes a couple moves through all five gears. Sometimes they start in the middle. Sometimes they jump straight to fourth gear because their hearts are already warm enough to carry them there. And sometimes a partner truly does need the slower build every single time for their nervous system to feel safe and open to connection. All of these patterns are normal. The beauty of intimacy is that it breathes. It adapts. It grows with the couple who tends it. Gear 1: ...

Why We Argue Over Meaning Instead of Asking What Was Meant

You ever been halfway through reacting already frustrated and realize you never actually asked what they meant? It happens faster than most people notice. Someone says something, their tone shifts, their response feels off, and before they even finish speaking, meaning gets assigned. Not confirmed. Assigned. What follows doesn't take effort. It unfolds automatically. Assumption, emotional reaction, defense. The moment we assume intent, we stop listening and start defending a version of reality that may not exist. Once that shift happens, the conversation is no longer about what was said. It becomes about what was decided. Two people can hear the same words and walk away holding completely different meanings, and neither one feels wrong because the brain doesn't experience this as a guess. It experiences it as clarity. It's like writing subtitles for someone else's words and then arguing that your version is the only one that exists. Psychology has language for thi...

Why Your Life Sometimes Feels Like You Are Pretending   

     There is a small but deeply influential kind of pain that wears on a person over time. Folks do not always talk about it, mostly because it is quiet and hard to put into words. It is the uneasy space between how someone feels on the inside and how they act on the outside. Psychologically, this space is known as the incongruence gap . It is a daily strain that shows up when a person lives more from expectation than from truth. You move through the world hitting your marks and doing what you must, but a part of you feels like it is standing behind glass watching someone else do the living.   This gap does not show up all at once. It settles in slowly like a pebble in your boot. At first you think it is nothing, just life being life. But as the days roll forward that pebble makes a sore spot. Each smile you force when you feel worn out, every nod of agreement when your heart is saying something different, every moment you hide your true feelings because you fear someone...

The Patterns We Learn Before We Know We Are Learning

Every child walks into the world wide open. No script. No filter. Just a nervous system trying to figure out what is safe, what is not, and what earns connection. And then life begins teaching. Not in lectures. Not in neatly packaged lessons, but in tone, reaction, silence, reward, withdrawal, expectation, and presence. I have spent time with people carrying patterns they did not know they had. I have seen it up close. And what shows up most often is not what someone was told. It is what they learned from what happened when they existed a certain way. That is a different kind of teaching. And it goes deeper than most folks realize. Conditioning Happens Before You Know It Is Happening A child laughs loudly and gets shushed, or a child laughs loudly and is laughed with. A child cries and is told they are too much, or a child cries and is comforted. A child speaks up and is dismissed, or a child speaks up and is heard. A child makes a mistake and is shamed, or a child makes a mistake ...

Emotional Compression

     Most people assume emotions arrive one at a time. Sadness. Anger. Fear. Relief. In reality, the human nervous system rarely works that neatly. Many experiences produce several emotions at once, sometimes in conflicting directions. When that emotional load becomes too complex to process in the moment, the mind does something remarkably efficient. It compresses the experience.   Emotional compression occurs when multiple emotions are condensed into a simpler feeling so the nervous system can keep functioning. Instead of processing grief, anger, fear, disappointment, and confusion separately, the brain bundles them together into something easier to carry. What shows up on the surface might look like irritability, numbness, exhaustion, or emotional distance. Beneath that single emotion, however, there is often an entire stack of feelings waiting quietly in the background.   The nervous system prioritizes survival over emotional clarity. When life moves fast, when pressur...