addiction
The realities of addition; the truth about living under, above and beyond the influence of drugs and alcohol.
Inner Child Healing: Release Childhood Trauma and Find Peace. AI-Generated.
Many of us carry echoes from the past that shape our present experiences, often in ways we barely notice. Learning inner child healing allows us to acknowledge these hidden parts of ourselves, release unresolved wounds, and cultivate self-healing practices that foster emotional resilience. Whether trauma shows up as anxiety, difficulty in relationships, or self-doubt, attending to the inner child creates a pathway toward lasting transformation.
By Jose Morris16 days ago in Psyche
The Room with No Mirrors
Arman avoided mirrors whenever he could. Not because he disliked his reflection, but because it confused him. Every mirror showed a slightly different version—more confident at work, more tired at home, more hollow when he was alone. He often wondered which one was real, or whether any of them were.
By Sudais Zakwan18 days ago in Psyche
The Fragile Nature of Memory: How the Mind Rewrites the Past
We often view memory as a recording device. Something happens, and the brain stores it. Later, we recall it unchanged, like opening a file. Psychology presents a different picture. Memory is not fixed; it is fluid, reconstructive, and surprisingly fragile. One interesting aspect of cognitive psychology is memory reconsolidation, which is the process that alters our memories every time we recall them. This instability is not a flaw; it shows how our minds adapt, protect themselves, and reshape our identity over time.
By Kyle Butler18 days ago in Psyche
When Thinking Feels Like Action
There is a particular satisfaction that comes from understanding something clearly after wrestling with it for a long time. The mind settles. Tension releases. Pieces line up. In that moment, it can feel as though real movement has occurred, as though something meaningful has been accomplished. That feeling is not imagined. Cognitive resolution is a real event. The danger appears when that internal resolution is quietly mistaken for external change, and thinking begins to substitute for action rather than prepare the way for it.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast19 days ago in Psyche
What fentanyl users want you to know. Top Story - February 2026.
There are dozens of people at Fusion Studios, the homeless hotel in Denver where I live, who use fentanyl. But even hardcore meth users judge them. The fentanyl users are the most stigmatized group in the building.
By David Heitz20 days ago in Psyche
The Quiet Voice Inside
Maya often felt tired even when she had done nothing physically exhausting. Her body was fine, but her mind was always busy. Thoughts moved quickly—worries about the future, memories from the past, and questions that never seemed to have clear answers. She smiled in front of others, but inside her head, there was constant noise.
By Sudais Zakwan20 days ago in Psyche
How Alcohol Detox Programs Work in North Carolina Near You. AI-Generated.
Alcohol dependence affects both physical health and emotional wellbeing, making it difficult to stop drinking without support. For many individuals, the first step toward recovery is alcohol detox. Detox programs help the body safely adjust to the absence of alcohol while managing withdrawal symptoms in a structured, medically supervised environment.
By Jordan Blake23 days ago in Psyche
Why Ignoring Weed Addiction Signs Can Delay Recovery. AI-Generated.
Marijuana is often viewed as harmless or non-addictive, which can make it easy to overlook when use becomes problematic. However, for some individuals, weed use can evolve into dependence that affects mental health, motivation, relationships, and daily functioning. When early warning signs are ignored, recovery can be delayed, and challenges often become more difficult to address over time.
By Jordan Blake24 days ago in Psyche









