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3 votes
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Psychedelic assisted therapy
8 votes -
Depression has often been blamed on low levels of serotonin in the brain. That answer is insufficient, but alternatives are coming into view and changing our understanding of the disease.
9 votes -
UnitedHealthcare tried to deny coverage to a chronically ill patient. He fought back, exposing the insurer’s inner workings.
15 votes -
British Columbia embarks on bold experiment to decriminalize hard drugs - Possession of small amounts of fentanyl, heroin, cocaine and other hard drugs will be allowed in Canada’s westernmost province
10 votes -
988 Lifeline sees boost in use and funding in first months
5 votes -
Kiwixotherapy: A weird but working therapy for introverts suffering from sleeplessness
4 votes -
Age that kids acquire mobile phones not linked to well-being, says Stanford Medicine study
16 votes -
How to deal with holiday stress, Danish-style
4 votes -
Study: Electroconvulsive therapy more successful for depression than ketamine
6 votes -
TikTok is changing the way we talk about ADHD—for better and worse
2 votes -
Porn use and men's and women's sexual performance: Evidence from a large longitudinal sample
12 votes -
Moving your focus from thoughts to actions for a more fulfilling life
6 votes -
A teen’s journey into the internet’s darkness and back again
5 votes -
Mental health challenges related to neoliberal capitalism in the United States
8 votes -
The mental health treatment obstacle course
7 votes -
Is your smartphone ruining your memory? A special report on the rise of ‘digital amnesia’
12 votes -
Five ways to help someone with depression
7 votes -
Anger and heartbreak on Bus No. 15
4 votes -
The reinvention of a ‘real man’: In cowboy country, a father and husband troubled by suicide reimagines American masculinity, one conversation at a time
7 votes -
How to know if you’re addicted
8 votes -
The data are clear: The boys are not all right
13 votes -
‘You don’t look autistic’: The reality of high-functioning autism
10 votes -
Your room can be as bright as the outdoors
5 votes -
Youth suicide attempts soared during pandemic, CDC report says
8 votes -
Loving someone with depression
9 votes -
Mental health is a political problem
9 votes -
Psychiatrists are uncovering connections between mental health and viruses
7 votes -
What if we could inoculate people against depression and trauma?
7 votes -
Post-SSRI Sexual Dysfunction
14 votes -
The new meth: Different chemically than it was a decade ago, the drug is creating a wave of severe mental illness and worsening America’s homelessness problem
22 votes -
Thousands of people are trying to leave QAnon, but getting out is almost impossible
33 votes -
What is compassion fatigue? Here’s how to retain your humanity even if you’re feeling burned out
8 votes -
How mental health became a social media minefield
13 votes -
Who am I?
I'm constantly torn between things. It's like I never have a strong opinion or stance on things. It's like I don't have an identity or values. This has become difficult to sustain mentally....
I'm constantly torn between things. It's like I never have a strong opinion or stance on things. It's like I don't have an identity or values. This has become difficult to sustain mentally.
Example #1. I despise Instagram because of the way it transformed people's behavior and because of its privacy abuses. For these reasons, I refuse to have an Instagram account and I don't participate in it. At the same time, Instagram is admittedly essential in today's social life, so I feel I am missing out.
Example #2. Sometime in the past, I got interested in climate change. I read books, papers, articles... You name it. I changed my lifestyle to better align with the values I had internalized. I started preaching others about the real threat of climate change, about the need for action by everyone. Now, years later, I don't care about all that any more. I believe doom is inevitable, and that there's nothing we can do about it. So I stopped pretending.
Example #3. I've been an open source enthusiast for quite some time now. This means I run open source software wherever I can. This idea got to the point where I refused to use any software that was not open source, much like a vegan does with food. No WhatsApp, Spotify, Microsoft Office, ...basically any popular software that everybody uses. Over time, I got tired, and stopped caring about open source that much. I'm even thinking about going all-in Apple now (yes, one of the worst enemies of open source you can think of).
You should have a general idea of how it works by now. One day I'm a diehard Linux enthusiast, the next I don't care at all. One day I delete my social media accounts, the next I create them anew. Not literally the next day, but there's always an internal conflict or a straight U-turn with regard to what I believe in, or what I stand for.
Especially examples #2 and #3 could be generalized to any hobby, habit or interest I pick up. They eventually fade out or are replaced by other things. Things I strongly believe in suddenly lose their meaning or value.
I don't know who I am, or what I stand for. What's wrong with me?
I'm not even sure I'm saying something that makes sense. Maybe I'm just conflating totally unrelated issues about myself in one single post.
13 votes -
Men doing more family caregiving could lower their risk of suicide
7 votes -
After the worst school year ever, here's what students want most
7 votes -
Bill Hader discusses his anxiety disorder with a doctor from the Child Mind Institute
7 votes -
The man who confessed to being a serial killer
7 votes -
MDMA-assisted therapy for severe PTSD: A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 study
10 votes -
The FCC wants your thoughts on improving the shorter National Suicide Prevention Lifeline number
4 votes -
Norway is offering drug-free treatment to people with psychosis
17 votes -
This is what it's like for men with eating disorders
10 votes -
High spirits: Heavy metal and mental health
6 votes -
Three digit suicide prevention hotline gets green light from House of Commons
21 votes -
Burned out
8 votes -
How the pandemic forced mental health care to change for the better
6 votes -
Let’s avoid talk of ‘chemical imbalance’: it’s people in distress
10 votes -
Eugene, a town of 170,000 in Oregon, replaced some cops with medics and mental health workers. It's worked for over thirty years
19 votes -
A pair of new studies chart a dramatic increase in stress, anxiety, depression and overall poor mental wellbeing in Australia linked to the COVID-19 lockdown
5 votes