support
A solid support system is invaluable for one's recovery from psychiatric illness and mental health issues.
The Power of Presence
When “Good Parenting” Became a Feeling In modern parenting conversations, “good” has increasingly come to mean emotionally warm, verbally affirming, and immediately comforting. A good parent is expected to soothe distress quickly, validate feelings consistently, and minimize discomfort whenever possible. These traits are treated as obvious indicators of healthy parenting, reinforced by cultural messaging, therapeutic language, and social reward structures. When a child feels better in the moment, the parenting decision is assumed to have been correct, and when discomfort persists, the decision is often framed as a failure of care rather than a necessary part of development.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast13 days ago in Psyche
Why Is Anxiety Worse at Night? Causes, Symptoms, and Proven Ways to Sleep Better. AI-Generated.
It is 11:30 PM. The house is quiet, the lights are off, and your body is finally still. But your mind? It is racing. You replay conversations from earlier in the day. You worry about tomorrow’s responsibilities. Your heart beats a little faster, and sleep feels just out of reach.
By JP Psychiatry15 days ago in Psyche
Estrangement from My Parents: 15 Years Later. Content Warning.
2011: The year that I decided that enough was enough. I went home for summer break from Job Corps. For context, home was in Texas and I was attending a Job Corps center in Arkansas, nearing completion of my vocational trade, which was Office Administration. I was nearly four months away from graduating. Days before I was scheduled to head back to Job Corps, I felt like the two people who were supposed to love and support me were now focused on their attention towards my two younger siblings (a brother and sister). That was the last time I saw my family. My relationship with my family had been deteriorating for years, even well before I decided to officially distance myself from them.
By Mark Wesley Pritchard 19 days ago in Psyche
The Soup of Life
What makes me, me? Who, or what, am I? Who are you? If you were to lose your hair because of cancer treatment would that change who "you" are? Are you your leg, your hearing or your looks? Are you your career, your reputation, or your past? Are you your brain, and if so, what part?
By Timothy S. Vennell24 days ago in Psyche
The Friendship Recession: Why Adults Are Struggling To Build Close Relationships. Top Story - March 2026.
This is a universal phenomenon that is affecting both individual and collective psyches. Humans thrive on companionship. The pandemic is solely to blame, however that particular far from auspicious time is not really to blame. The no-friends-trend-turned-friendship-recession, bringing forth the loneliness epidemic was a thing before 2020.
By Justine Crowley25 days ago in Psyche








