social media
Social media dramatically impacts our offline lives and mental well-being; examine its benefits, risks and controversies through scientific studies, real-life anecdotes and more.
Consent in Photos
Some images rattle around your body. You catch it for a second. A fraction of a breath. And in that moment you know that it will stay with you forever. I just saw an image like that. It's an image I didn't agree to see. And I'll bet my life that the man in it didn't agree for it to be taken either.
By Kirstyn Brook3 months ago in Psyche
I Let AI Help Run My Love Life in 2025 — And It Got a Little Too Honest
If you’ve been single in 2025, you already know: the dating apps are starting to feel less like apps and more like ecosystems. Profiles are written by AI, photos are filtered by AI, and now, if you want, your whole “compatibility journey” can be guided by an algorithm that claims to understand you better than you understand yourself.��
By The Insight Ledger 3 months ago in Psyche
I Tried Living Like It Was 2010 Again — And It Quietly Broke Me
Nostalgia is sneaky. It doesn’t just show you the past; it edits it for you. It cuts out the awkward silences, the cheap shampoo, the bad phone cameras, and leaves you with sunsets, inside jokes, and a version of yourself who always seemed a little lighter.
By The Insight Ledger 3 months ago in Psyche
The Digital Divide: How Access to Technology Is Redefining Social Inequality
Introduction: The Promise of Technology vs. the Reality of Access In the 21st century, technology promises to bring people together, bridge distances, open doors to opportunity, and enable us to be more connected, better-informed lives. But while technology has really transformed much of modern life, the reality is that access to the digital machinery and the web remains unequal, creating a broad gap between those who are connected and those who are not. The "digital divide" is not an issue of technology—it is social, and it most heavily impacts marginalized populations and widens existing disparities.
By The Chaos Cabinet3 months ago in Psyche
Bare Branches
As I was driving home from town earlier this month, I suddenly noticed that the trees had no leaves on them. It struck me in surprise, because the last time I had noticed them, the trees were just beginning to turn colors. Time had slipped right past me, and I had flowed right along for the ride, never once paying attention to where I was going - not even lifting my head one time from what I was doing to look at the beauty of my surroundings and my favorite season. Looking back, I realize that the social media/internet break I had planned had turned into a walking fugue state.
By Mother Combs3 months ago in Psyche
How Your Behavior Shapes How People Treat You—and Why Your Life Path Follows You
Whitman Drake Abstract Ideas about “positive thinking” are often rejected because they are framed as motivational platitudes rather than analytically grounded claims. This article advances a different argument. Drawing on pragmatist philosophy, social psychology, expectancy theory, and sociology, it contends that stable cognitive orientations regulate behavior, behavior structures reciprocal social response, and repeated social responses accumulate into recognizable life trajectories. From this perspective, individuals do not primarily design a path and then follow it. Instead, paths emerge through interactional processes that reward, constrain, and reinforce consistent ways of thinking and acting. The article situates positive cognitive orientation not as wishful thinking, but as a mechanism that shapes conduct, reputation, and opportunity over time.
By Whitman Drake3 months ago in Psyche
The Science of Solitude: Why Being Alone Is Beneficial for the Mind
Introduction Being alone in the modern world carries a subtle stigma. We are in an age of hyperconnectivity: smartphones chirp constantly, social media beckons continually, and the cadence of life rarely permits meditative quiet. Being alone is mistakenly equated by many with loneliness, a sense of isolation and disconnection. Solitude and loneliness are quite different. While loneliness is painful and involuntary, solitude is voluntary behavior—a conscious stepping away from external stimuli to re-engage with oneself, reflect, and regenerate.
By The Chaos Cabinet4 months ago in Psyche










