Building emotional intelligence isn’t as hard as you think
It can feel risky to get in touch with our feelings, let alone express them. But one psychologist argues that getting to know our feelings can be one of the best things we ever do.
It can feel risky to get in touch with our feelings, let alone express them. But one psychologist argues that getting to know our feelings can be one of the best things we ever do.
As children, many of us were taught to think positively. According to research, however, this isn't always good advice.
Research reveals three reasons religion and spirituality may be good for our well-being (and a few reasons they might not be).
According to research, hope begins when we set three simple conditions in our lives.
If you’ve ever had a friend lose someone they love, you know how hard it is to figure out what to say. Here are four steps that might help.
Science shows that people's obsession with money runs deeper than you might think.
There may be a good reason that human beings evolved the ability to experience negative emotions: In measured amounts, they can protect us from harm and help us to be successful.
The secret to a good life may be to live like we're dying. Here are five important lessons to help us do just that.
For most of the history of modern psychology, therapists paid a lot more attention to people's deficits than their strengths. But this is changing. Now, some psychologists believe that therapists should pay more attention to clients' strengths.
According to research, the least competent people often think they’re the best, leading to a cycle of poor performance. But there’s a simple antidote.
The great psychiatrist Viktor Frankl actually warned against searching for meaning in life, because not searching for meaning may be the best way to find it.
Even with the rise of the #MeToo movement, victim-blaming remains a tenacious problem. Could the tendency to blame the victim be programmed into the human mind at the most basic level? And how can we undo it?
To understand dreams, we must interpret them, as if they were written in secret code. But, what if there's no code, and we've been reading into a bunch of meaningless images?
Star Wars makes lots of assertions about our darker emotions. But are they accurate?
Though many of us were told by our grade-school teachers to get our heads out of clouds, recent research shows that this may not have been good advice. Certain kinds of daydreaming may actually help us be more successful in life.
Although search engines make finding therapists simpler than ever, it's easy to suffer from information overload. Five questions can help you cut through the confusion.
Some people say psychology isn't a science. Are they right?
As children, many of us were told, "Never give up." But new research shows that giving up on a dream can sometimes be the healthiest option.
When tragedies happen, it's easy to wonder if there's any meaning to suffering.
Some psychologists think the unconscious mind is pure fiction.
It's not true that grief proceeds in five stages. So what is true?
A lot of people doubt that therapy works. Are they right?
In the face of our "post-truth" era of politics, it's hard to know what to believe. According to psychology research, whether we know it or not, most of us harbor false beliefs. Do you?
Are mental illnesses real in the same way that HIV, cancer, or the flu are? Some psychologists say no.