There's something deeply counterintuitive buried in some recent Gallup figures, and I think it's worth sitting with for a ...
For many people in their sixties, the word 'busy' stops fitting the facts of their lives. What looked like a packed schedule ...
The precisely arranged nightstand isn't a personality quirk. It's a small piece of nervous system infrastructure built by ...
The people who go silent in arguments aren't avoiding conflict. They've learned that real-time words get weaponised, and ...
Imagine this. You're forty minutes into a piece of work. The thinking is finally clicking, the sentences are starting to land ...
The face-down phone isn't a sign of secrecy. For people raised in environments where every notification meant a new demand, ...
Doing that for three hours is genuinely tiring. Not because socializing is hard, but because being present to nothing is hard ...
A reflection on how a simple birthday question exposed the quiet equation between wanting and being a burden — and what it ...
If you've looked around lately, you've probably noticed something. The way people work, and the kinds of jobs they hold, look ...
The most reliable trace of an unpredictable childhood isn't anxiety, it's the unconscious scan that happens in the doorway, ...
At sixty-two, the realization that compulsive helpfulness is not generosity but a decades-old strategy for earning a seat at ...
I caught myself using 'we' to describe decisions that were entirely mine. The phantom committee in my grammar turned out to ...