addiction
The realities of addition; the truth about living under, above and beyond the influence of drugs and alcohol.
Your Handwriting Reveals
The Science of Graphology and What Your Pen Strokes Say About Your Personality THE INK DOESN'T LIE 🖊️ Every time you put pen to paper you are producing a neurological fingerprint as unique and as revealing as your actual fingerprint, because handwriting is not controlled by the hand but by the brain, and the specific patterns of pressure, spacing, slant, size, and letter formation that characterize your writing reflect deep neurological patterns including your emotional state, your personality traits, your cognitive style, and aspects of your psychological functioning that you may not be consciously aware of, and while the field of graphology has been controversial with mainstream psychology dismissing some of its claims as pseudoscience, a growing body of neuroscientific research is validating specific connections between handwriting characteristics and personality traits that suggest your pen reveals more about you than you realize 📝
By The Curious Writer3 days ago in Psyche
The Memory You Think You Have Is a Lie
YOUR BRAIN IS THE WORLD'S BEST STORYTELLER 📖 The memory you are most certain about, the one you would swear on your life is accurate down to the last detail, the childhood birthday party or the first kiss or the moment you heard devastating news, is almost certainly wrong in ways that would shock you if you could compare your memory to a recording of what actually happened, because human memory does not function like a video camera recording events faithfully for later playback but rather like a novelist who takes real events and rewrites them each time they are recalled, adding details that were not there, removing details that were, shifting timelines, combining separate events into single memories, and incorporating information learned after the event into the memory of the event itself until the story your brain tells you about your past is a sophisticated fiction that feels indistinguishable from truth because your brain is the author, the editor, and the only reader, and it has no incentive to fact-check its own work 🧠
By The Curious Writer4 days ago in Psyche
Your Birth Order
How Being First, Middle, or Last Born Shapes Everything You Do THE INVISIBLE BLUEPRINT 📋 The order in which you were born into your family is one of the most powerful and least recognized influences on your personality, career choices, relationship patterns, and fundamental approach to navigating the world, and while birth order research has been debated and refined since Alfred Adler first proposed its significance in the 1920s, contemporary studies using large datasets and sophisticated statistical methods have confirmed that significant personality differences correlate with birth position even after controlling for family size, socioeconomic status, and other confounding variables, and understanding your birth order personality pattern provides insight into behaviors and preferences that feel innate and unchangeable but that are actually adaptations to the specific social environment created by your position in the family hierarchy 👨👩👧👦
By The Curious Writer5 days ago in Psyche
The Memory Palace
YOUR BRAIN IS A MANSION YOU NEVER USE 🧠✨ Twenty-five hundred years ago ancient Greek orators memorized hours-long speeches without notes or teleprompters using a technique called the method of loci or memory palace that exploits the human brain's extraordinary spatial memory to transform abstract information into vivid mental images placed in familiar physical locations, and this technique is not just a historical curiosity but remains the most powerful memory system ever developed, used by modern memory champions who memorize shuffled decks of cards in under twenty seconds, by medical students memorizing thousands of anatomical terms, by lawyers memorizing case details, and by anyone who wants to transform their mediocre memory into something approaching photographic recall without any genetic advantage or special cognitive ability 🃏
By The Curious Writer6 days ago in Psyche
Your Dreams Are Warning You 💤
THE DREAM THAT SAVED MY LIFE 🌙 The night before the accident I dreamed about driving on a wet highway and watching a red truck drift across the center line toward me in slow motion, and the dream was so vivid and so specific that when I woke up I could remember the exact stretch of road, the exact color of the truck, the exact moment of impact, and the sensation of spinning that followed, and I dismissed it as anxiety because I had a long drive ahead of me that day and my subconscious was probably just processing my standard driving-related nervousness into narrative form as brains do during REM sleep when they organize daily concerns into dream scenarios 😴
By The Curious Writer6 days ago in Psyche
The Power of Presence
When “Good Parenting” Became a Feeling In modern parenting conversations, “good” has increasingly come to mean emotionally warm, verbally affirming, and immediately comforting. A good parent is expected to soothe distress quickly, validate feelings consistently, and minimize discomfort whenever possible. These traits are treated as obvious indicators of healthy parenting, reinforced by cultural messaging, therapeutic language, and social reward structures. When a child feels better in the moment, the parenting decision is assumed to have been correct, and when discomfort persists, the decision is often framed as a failure of care rather than a necessary part of development.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast10 days ago in Psyche


