Be lucky - its an easy skill to learn - Telegraph
Rated • 64 reviews • psychology • telegraph.co.uk
Last seen: 2 weeks ago
Isabella is a 54 year old woman from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
I'm a psychotherapist and writer. Intersted in a million things. Excited about helping people reach for the really good lives they are meant to have - because happiness is something that will always spill over. My web site is Counselling in Vancouver.
Rated • 1 review • psychology, writing, children, research • sciencedaily.com
From the page: Language has "multiple levels like a tall building with a different floor plan for each story." - An interesting research article about writing with a pen vs. with a computer.
Rated • 7 reviews • animals, psychology, neuroscience • physorg.com
(PhysOrg.com) -- J. David Smith, Ph.D., a comparative psychologist at the University at Buffalo who has conducted extensive studies in animal cognition, says there is growing evidence that animals share functional parallels with human conscious metacognition -- that is, they may share humans' ability to reflect upon, monitor or regulate their states of mind.
Rated • 3 reviews • stumblers, psychology • stumbleupon.com
Evan is one of my favourite people on the web. A wise man who always presents a unique point of view.
Rated • 1 review • mental health, psychology, blogs • blogspot.com
Observations on blogs written by people who are bipolar:
From the page: "I don't read about people who are saying, "I keep detailed mood charts and I have learned that periods of irritability always follow hypomanias. Or "I get angry because I'm unable to tell people they've hurt my feelings, but I've been working on it." Or "I have difficulties with people because I don't feel good about myself...and I've working with my therapist or counselor on self-esteem issues."
And yet, if people would reread their posts, they would even see patterns in the behavior they've recounted. "
Rated • 1 review • activism, psychology, research • sciencedaily.com
From the page: "Rewards go further than punishment in building human cooperation and benefiting the common good, according to research published this week in the journal Science by researchers at Harvard University and the Stockholm School of Economics. While previous studies have focused almost exclusively on punishment for promoting public cooperation, here rewards are shown to be much more successful."
Rated • 1 review • poetry, psychology • wordpress.com
a lovely little book of poetry by an interesting UK therapist who lives in poland
Rated • 1 review • cognitive science, philosophy, psychology • viswiki.com
critical thinking from the visual wiki. nice presentation of connection to other topics such as bias, first-order logic, magical thinking, etc.
Rated • 2 reviews • psychology, blogs, communication • moritherapy.org
What do you think? Do you enjoy listening to other people's stories, no matter how harrowing? Are you reluctant to talk about your difficulties? And how to you handle people's monologues?