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#Mentalhealth

Articles tagged with "Mentalhealth" - explore health, wellness, and travel insights.

1,143 articles
7 min read

New Evidence Clarifies the Health Benefits and Risks of Cannabis Use for Insomnia, Pain, and Mental Health

news health

Amid rising global interest and legal reforms surrounding cannabis, recent research is painting a complex picture of its true effects on common health problems such as insomnia, chronic pain, and anxiety. A series of large-scale studies from Australia to the United States highlight encouraging long-term improvements in quality of life for patients with stubborn conditions, but also raise serious caution about potential mental health risks such as paranoia, psychosis, and increased risk of psychiatric disorders.

#Thailand #Cannabis #MedicalMarijuana +6 more
6 min read

Psychotherapist Highlights 10 Warning Signs of Narcissism in Viral Awareness Drive

news mental health

A UK-based psychotherapist has captured over 2.7 million viewers on TikTok by distilling the subtle and often confusing signs that may indicate someone in your life is a narcissist—a topic increasingly resonant in an era of social media-fueled misunderstanding about mental health. The therapist, who runs a therapy service and leverages digital platforms for mental health education, lists 10 critical signals that point to narcissism beyond everyday selfishness, sparking both public interest and debate about the actual meaning of narcissistic personality disorder (NPD) and its real-world impact.

#MentalHealth #Narcissism #PersonalityDisorder +6 more
5 min read

Romantic Breakups Begin Their Decline Years Before the Final Split, Global Study Reveals

news psychology

New research has revealed that the end of a romantic relationship is rarely a sudden event, but rather the result of a lengthy, two-stage decline in satisfaction that often starts years before a couple officially parts ways. Published in the prestigious Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, the comprehensive analysis by an international team illuminates how the unraveling of a romantic bond is a slow process punctuated by a “terminal phase” of sharper decline just before the breakup actually happens (PsyPost).

#relationshipresearch #breakups #mentalhealth +5 more
5 min read

Tapping Into Controversy: Can Emotional Freedom Technique Truly Improve Mental Health?

news psychology

A centuries-old healing concept, reborn in modern times as “tapping” or Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT), is stirring both popular appeal and scientific debate. This practice, a blend of acupressure and mindful affirmation, has surged on social media, wellness podcasts, and even book charts, with many users claiming it brings relief from anxiety and other psychological burdens. Yet, while some advocates promise tapping could revolutionize mental well-being, a growing contingent of mental health experts cautions: the scientific evidence remains shaky at best, with many researchers warning Thai readers not to take the hype at face value (nytimes.com).

#MentalHealth #Tapping #EFT +7 more
4 min read

Why Overstimulation Can Make Us Snap: Science Explains the Mean Streak

news mental health

A new wave of psychological research is shedding light on why we often become irritable or even mean when we’re overstimulated—a problem that resonates with thousands across the globe and is highly relevant as life in Thailand grows more fast-paced, urban, and digitally driven. According to a viral phenomenon discussed in a recent HuffPost report, people overwhelmingly share the experience of getting snappy or short-tempered when their senses and minds are bombarded with too much information, chaos, or noise (HuffPost).

#MentalHealth #Overstimulation #Stress +4 more
6 min read

Millennial Midlife Crisis: Why a Generation Feels Stuck in the Middle

news psychology

A new wave of research and reporting reveals that many millennials—now entering their 40s and 50s—are feeling trapped in their professional and personal lives, unable to afford the traditional “midlife crisis” once seen as a rite of passage for previous generations. While prior generations indulged in red sports cars or sabbaticals to seek purpose, millennials face economic and technological pressures that make drastic changes feel nearly impossible. This generational stagnation is drawing concern from mental health experts, economists, and those closely observing how work, money, and meaning intersect in the post-pandemic world (Business Insider).

#Millennials #MidlifeCrisis #ThailandWorkforce +7 more
5 min read

New Study Challenges the Myth: Burnout Isn’t Just a Workplace Problem

news mental health

A groundbreaking new study has upended conventional wisdom about burnout, finding that the overwhelming fatigue and emotional exhaustion many people experience are often rooted in broader life pressures—not just the demands of their jobs. The research, led by a team from the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), could reshape how both employers and individuals approach the problem of burnout, which is historically framed as a workplace issue (ScienceAlert).

#Burnout #MentalHealth #WorkLifeBalance +5 more
5 min read

New Study Links Depression to Antioxidant Deficits in the Brain

news psychology

Groundbreaking neuroscience research published in the journal Psychopharmacology has revealed that individuals living with major depressive disorder show significantly lower levels of the antioxidant glutathione in the occipital cortex of the brain. This finding adds to a growing body of evidence suggesting that oxidative stress—including the subtle imbalance between damaging free radicals and the brain’s protective antioxidants—may be at the heart of depression’s complex biology (PsyPost).

This discovery is particularly meaningful in Thailand, where depression is becoming more widely recognized and discussed, yet biological risk factors remain less understood among the public. Mental health issues, including depression, are prevalent in the country, affecting individuals across various backgrounds, and contribute to personal suffering, economic loss, and significant stigma. Understanding the underlying biology of depression is thus not just academically interesting, but also a potential key to more effective prevention and treatment in Thai society.

#MentalHealth #Depression #Neuroscience +5 more
5 min read

Parental Care or Overprotection? New Research Illuminates How Parenting Styles Shape Young Adult Wellbeing

news parenting

New findings published in the Journal of Psychology reveal that the way parents bond with their children can influence a young adult’s life satisfaction, and that this impact often travels through two powerful emotions: anxiety and anger. The study, led by researchers at an Italian university, shows that overprotective parenting may inadvertently fuel anxiety, while warm, caring parenting seems to promote better anger control—both of which affect how satisfied emerging adults are with their lives. This research shines new light on age-old questions faced by Thai families and educators about how to nurture resilient, well-adjusted future generations (PsyPost).

#parenting #mentalhealth #thailand +6 more
4 min read

Quick-Fix Cortisol Myths Debunked: Latest Research Highlights Effective Ways to Manage Stress

news health

Social media platforms are overflowing with hacks and quick-fix promises to “lower cortisol,” but new research and leading experts warn Thai readers that these trending “cortisol cocktails” and other instant suggestions are unlikely to provide the promised relief—or protect us from the real consequences of chronic stress. As digital wellness advice explodes in popularity, claims about the power of coconut water, special supplements, and essential oils to rebalance the body’s stress hormone have become common. Yet, according to the latest investigations, the science tells a more complex, and at times, cautionary story.

#Cortisol #StressManagement #Mindfulness +7 more
6 min read

Staying Sharp After 50: New Research Reveals the Keys To Lifelong Cognitive Vitality

news psychology

A wave of new scientific evidence is challenging the idea that mental sharpness inevitably fades after 50. Recent research and expert consensus show that staying nimble in mind and memory is less about good luck or genetics and more about choices made each day. For Thais approaching or beyond midlife, understanding and applying these findings could be transformative for personal well-being, longevity, and social contribution.

Staying mentally agile into one’s 50s and beyond is not a matter of fate, according to a recent article in VegOut Magazine, which highlights seven habits observed in people over 50 who maintain exceptional cognitive skills. This popular narrative is now reinforced by robust scientific studies, including a landmark 16-year analysis published in Aging & Mental Health, which tracked more than 10,000 adults over age 50 and found that higher psychological well-being is strongly linked to superior memory performance—even when controlling for depression and other health factors (Neuroscience News, SciTechDaily). These findings arrive at a critical time for Thailand, where the proportion of elderly citizens is rapidly increasing and the national conversation is turning to healthy aging as a social and policy priority.

#Aging #BrainHealth #Thailand +5 more
5 min read

Hope Identified as the Cornerstone Emotion for Meaningful Living, Surpassing Even Happiness

news social sciences

A groundbreaking new study from the University of Missouri has found that hope, not happiness or gratitude, is the key emotional force underpinning a sense of meaning in life. This discovery challenges widely held beliefs about the drivers of well-being and suggests far-reaching implications for mental health and resilience, both globally and here in Thailand.

Traditionally, happiness and gratitude have been at the centre of discussions on how to lead a good and satisfying life. Thai society, with its deep reverence for “sanuk” (enjoyment) and frequent encouragement of “kreng jai” (gratitude and social harmony), echoes these themes. However, the latest research reveals that while these feelings are valuable, it is hope—the forward-looking expectation that things can improve—that gives life its deepest sense of purpose and direction (Earth.com; Show Me Mizzou).

#hope #mentalhealth #wellbeing +6 more
4 min read

New Research Reveals How Parenting Styles Influence Life Satisfaction Through Anxiety and Anger

news parenting

A recent psychological study has unveiled new insights into how the emotional environment created by parents plays a pivotal role in shaping the overall life satisfaction of young adults, with anxiety and anger emerging as crucial mediators in this relationship. The findings—published in the respected Journal of Psychology and summarized by PsyPost—underscore the complex interplay between parenting approaches, children’s emotional regulation, and their subsequent well-being well into adulthood.

For Thai readers, who often place significant cultural emphasis on family harmony, respect, and parental involvement, this research offers a valuable perspective on how the varying degrees of care—or overprotection—during childhood can have long-lasting psychological consequences. The study echoes long-standing Buddhist principles about emotional balance while highlighting the importance of practical parenting choices that foster independent emotional regulation.

#parenting #mentalhealth #lifesatisfaction +6 more
6 min read

Rereading Emails Before Hitting Send? Psychology Reveals Eight Personality Traits Behind the Habit

news psychology

Anyone who has hesitated over the “Send” button and found themselves rereading an email for the fourth, or even the fourteenth time, is far from alone. Recent psychological analysis, as reported in a June 2025 article by VegOut Magazine, shines a revealing light on this common digital-age phenomenon. For Thai professionals in burgeoning service and communication-driven sectors, understanding the deeper personality traits behind this habit holds special relevance for personal productivity, workplace harmony, and well-being.

#psychology #workculture #communicationskills +5 more
4 min read

Why Do We Cry Happy Tears? Neuroscience Unravels the Mystery Behind Joyful Weeping

news neuroscience

Tears are not just for sad times—science now reveals why we also shed them in moments of immense joy. Recent research in neuroscience has uncovered the biological and psychological processes behind “happy tears,” offering fascinating insights into the complex emotional world of humans and why these watery outbursts mark our most meaningful milestones (PsyPost).

For Thai readers, the sight of joyful crying—at weddings, graduations, or family reunions—is a familiar and moving part of life. Yet, few might pause to ask: why does the body respond to intense happiness with an act so closely associated with sadness? Neuroscience explains that crying, whether prompted by sorrow or jubilation, is a response to overwhelming emotion. Both happy and sad tears originate from the same neurological circuits, highlighting the brain’s struggle to process feelings that push us past our usual emotional limits.

#neuroscience #mentalhealth #culture +4 more
6 min read

Closer Ties Through Sweat: Exercising With Teenagers Builds Stronger Bonds

news exercise

Building a better relationship with your teenage children may be as simple as breaking a sweat together, according to emerging research and new discussion in international media. The Wall Street Journal recently highlighted the value of shared physical activity between parents and teens, not only in promoting good health but also in fostering open communication and mutual respect within families [WSJ via MSN]. For Thai parents facing the challenges of a changing social landscape and fast-evolving adolescent culture, this research offers practical ways to strengthen family ties through fitness—a subject deeply relevant as Thailand faces both rising physical inactivity rates and new stresses in parent-teen relationships.

#parenting #teens #exercise +6 more
6 min read

Early Emotional Struggles in Childhood Strongly Predict Teen Anxiety and Depression, Landmark Study Finds

news psychology

A new study published by the University of Edinburgh has found that children who have trouble managing their emotions as early as age seven are significantly more likely to suffer from anxiety and depression as teenagers, illuminating a crucial early link in mental health development. By following nearly 19,000 young people over more than a decade, this research highlights the urgent need for emotional regulation support in early childhood—a message with increasing significance for Thai families and educators as youth mental health becomes an ever-more pressing public health concern (Neuroscience News).

#mentalhealth #childdevelopment #adolescenthealth +6 more
5 min read

Hope, Not Happiness, Proven as the Core Driver of Life’s Meaning

news psychology

A groundbreaking new study from the University of Missouri-Columbia has found that hope—rather than happiness, excitement, or even gratitude—is the most powerful positive emotion predicting the sense of meaning in life. The research, spanning six separate studies and over 2,300 participants, challenges decades of conventional wisdom about what truly underpins psychological well-being and offers actionable insights for fostering resilience, both globally and here in Thailand.

For many years, psychology has positioned hope chiefly as wishful thinking or simply a cognitive tool to help in achieving future goals. However, this new analysis, led by researchers from Mizzou’s Department of Psychological Sciences and supported by a broad international team, reveals that hope functions as a unique, emotional cornerstone capable of enriching life’s meaning beyond fleeting moments of happiness. As shared by the study’s lead researcher, now a postdoctoral scholar at Duke University, “Our research shifts the perspective on hope from merely a cognitive process related to goal attainment to recognizing it as a vital emotional experience that enriches life’s meaning.” (Neuroscience News)

#hope #mentalhealth #wellbeing +6 more
4 min read

Music Reshapes the Brain in Real Time, Pioneering Study Finds

news neuroscience

Listening to music does more than soothe the soul—it actively transforms the way our brain functions on the spot, according to groundbreaking new research from European neuroscientists. The study, released on June 17, 2025, and recently highlighted by Futura Sciences, unveils how musical experiences instantly rewire neural networks, opening new opportunities in education, therapy, and cognitive science across the globe—including Thailand.

Scientists from Aarhus University in Denmark and Oxford University in the UK have developed FREQ-NESS, a cutting-edge neuroimaging technology that allows researchers to track and visualize the brain’s responses to external stimuli, such as music, in unprecedented real time. Unlike traditional techniques that assign fixed brain wave patterns (like alpha or beta) to specific regions, FREQ-NESS follows how neural circuits interconnect and adapt dynamically as we listen to music. Each musical note or rhythm generates unique electrical signals in the brain, activating and synchronizing various regions moment-to-moment.

#MusicTherapy #BrainResearch #Neuroimaging +5 more
5 min read

New Research Reveals Forgiveness Alters Emotional Impact—But Not the Details—of Painful Memories

news psychology

A groundbreaking new study has provided scientific evidence for something many Thais intuitively understand: forgiving someone for a past wrongdoing lifts the emotional burden, but the memory itself remains crystal clear. Published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, the research decisively shows that forgiveness does not erase or blur the details of painful experiences, but instead transforms the emotional response to those memories, offering fresh hope for healing in relationships and communities in Thailand and beyond (PsyPost).

#forgiveness #memory #mentalhealth +7 more
5 min read

Phone “Addiction” May Be an Emotional Hunger: New Research Challenges How We See Our Screen Habits

news psychology

Many Thais worry about spending too much time glued to their smartphones, but a new perspective is gaining ground: perhaps constant phone use isn’t really about addiction, but a signal of deeper unmet emotional needs. Recent analysis and expert commentary, featured in VegOut Magazine on June 20, 2025, argue that it’s time to reframe our view of digital compulsion—not as a moral failing or clinical addiction, but as a reflection of seven core human needs going unfulfilled in daily life (VegOutMag.com).

#MentalHealth #DigitalWellbeing #Thailand +5 more
6 min read

Summer 2025: As Internet Burnout Peaks, Experts Urge Thais to Disconnect and Reconnect with the Real World

news technology

A sweeping wave of digital fatigue and internet burnout has set the tone for summer 2025, as online life feels more overwhelming and less enjoyable than ever before, pushing millions worldwide—and in Thailand—to seek solace offline. Recent essays and fresh research highlight not only a cultural turning point but a crucial mental health inflection: the internet as we knew it is over, and going outside is the new imperative for personal and collective well-being (Slate).

#InternetCulture #MentalHealth #DigitalBurnout +8 more
6 min read

Surprising Science Shows Four Children Is the Least Stressful Family Size, Research Finds

news parenting

A new analysis of family dynamics and parental stress has upended common assumptions about the optimal number of children to raise, revealing that, counterintuitively, four may be the magic number for the least stressful parenting experience, according to a widely shared 2013 survey by TODAY Parents. This finding, echoed by research and commentary from mental health professionals, is especially relevant in Thailand, where changing family structures, economic pressures, and social expectations are reframing the debate on ideal family size.

#ParentingStress #FamilySize #ThaiFamilies +6 more
5 min read

The Subtle Signals of Deepening Romance: Psychologists Reveal How Women Show They're Falling in Love—Slowly but Surely

news psychology

In a digital age saturated with grand gestures and instant connections, experts are shining a spotlight on a different kind of romance: the kind that develops slowly, almost imperceptibly, but with an enduring emotional depth. Groundbreaking insights from psychologists—as discussed in a recent VegOut Magazine article—reveal the nuanced behaviors women exhibit when they’re falling for someone gradually, offering a new roadmap for understanding affection beyond the obvious.

This revelation is particularly relevant in Thailand, where traditional values often intersect with modern relationship expectations. The findings signal a shift in how we interpret intimacy and highlight the importance of patience, attunement, and subtle emotional cues in personal relationships, both romantic and platonic. For young Thais navigating dating in a digital-first world—where swift text replies and public social media interactions are often expected—this research provides a refreshing perspective on authentic connection and the power of subtlety.

#relationshippsychology #emotionalintimacy #ThaiCulture +4 more