How I Accidentally Raised My Own Emotional Coaches

Children don’t learn emotional health from lectures. They learn it while watching us look for our phone in the fridge, sigh dramatically at traffic, or whisper “I’m fine” with Olympic-level denial. Emotional health, it turns out, is a silent syllabus—taught not in words, but in moments.Parents often ask, “How do I teach my child to... Continue Reading →

Lonely Isn’t Empty, It’s Just Thinking

Have you ever been surrounded by people—family, friends, notifications buzzing like obedient bees—and still felt unbearably alone? Not the dramatic, rain-soaked movie loneliness. The quieter kind. The kind that sits beside you while you scroll, nod, smile, and say, “I’m fine.” Loneliness isn’t the absence of people. It’s the absence of being felt. Psychology tells... Continue Reading →

What Happens When Your Thoughts Finally Get a Voice?

Have you ever noticed how your mind becomes most dramatic at midnight—replaying conversations, rewriting arguments, and predicting futures that haven’t even applied for existence yet? If thoughts earned salaries, your brain would be overpaid. This is exactly where journaling walks in—not with a whistle like a strict teacher, but with a chair, a cup of... Continue Reading →

Learning to Breathe Before We Speak

Have you ever noticed how one tiny moment can hijack your entire day? A sharp tone from a colleague. A spilled glass of milk. A child beginning a sentence with “Amma…” and before the sentence even reaches the full stop—boom—we explode. That, dear reader, is not personality. That is reaction.I once came across something called... Continue Reading →

Why Your Heart Has Wi-Fi Issues: Attachment Styles, Explained

Ever wondered why some people reply “Seen” and vanish like a magician’s assistant, while others panic if you don’t reply in five minutes and start planning your funeral?Congratulations—you’ve just met attachment styles, the invisible emotional operating systems quietly running our relationships.Attachment styles are not labels to shame ourselves with. Think of them more like the... Continue Reading →

The Invisible Fence

They never taught us this in school,How to be kind and still be whole.So we gave, and gave, and gave again,Calling exhaustion “love” in disguise.Boundaries aren’t walls made out of fear,They are windows we open with care.Curtains drawn when the noise is loud,Space to breathe without guilt or doubt.A kind heart without limits bleeds,Not loudly—slowly,... Continue Reading →

Overthinking: When the Mind Refuses to Take a Tea Break

Overthinking is not thinking deeply.It is thinking repeatedly, like reheating yesterday’s tea again and again, hoping it will somehow taste better this time.Psychologically speaking, overthinking is the brain’s attempt to protect us. Your mind believes that if it keeps running scenarios—What if I said the wrong thing? What if tomorrow goes wrong? What if I... Continue Reading →

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