Articles
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2 weeks ago |
psychologytoday.com | Ian MacRae |Ian Macrae
Cortisol spikes from constant alerts can mimic danger, even when no real threat is present. Chronic overstimulation hijacks focus and impairs memory, sleep, and decision-making. Multitasking and constant input train your brain to expect threats everywhere. There’s a trend online to tack -maxxing onto just about anything. Looksmaxxing is the obvious one.
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2 weeks ago |
qoshe.com | Ian MacRae |Ian Macrae
There’s a trend online to tack -maxxing onto just about anything. Looksmaxxing is the obvious one. It means complete focus on improving one’s physical appearance using skin care, gym routines, lighting tricks, posture hacks, filters, or even surgery. But there’s a newer, less intentional trend that might be even more widespread: cortisolmaxxing. This is when someone unwittingly turns every dial in their environment to “alert mode” and marinates in nonstop stress all day.
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3 weeks ago |
psychologytoday.com | Ian MacRae |Ian Macrae
Why do so many people ignore facts they know aren’t true? Why do small lies get a pass if they serve a bigger idea that feels right? Something fundamental is shifting in how meaning is made and how language is shaping culture. This can be explained both as a shift toward post-literate culture and Iain McGilchrist’s conceptualizations of right- and left-brain hemisphere dominance that can shape people and whole cultures. There may be a deeper shift underway in how truth itself is recognized.
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3 weeks ago |
flipboard.com | Ian MacRae |Ian Macrae
1 day ago"Thank you and now goodbye" Europe's break-up letter to AmericaHere's the opening paragraph from Europe's break-up letter with its insufferably redpilled friend, USA: "Thank you for Andy Warhol. Thank you for the …16 hours ago‘He’s Going to Tank Our Economy’: Trump’s Tariffs Draw Strong Reactions in CongressThose fears were fueling a stronger GOP pushback against Trump than seen in his second term thus far, though those speaking out still represented a minority in their party.
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3 weeks ago |
qoshe.com | Ian MacRae |Ian Macrae
Why do so many people ignore facts they know aren’t true? Why do small lies get a pass if they serve a bigger idea that feels right? Something fundamental is shifting in how meaning is made and how language is shaping culture. This can be explained both as a shift toward post-literate culture and Iain McGilchrist’s conceptualizations of right- and left-brain hemisphere dominance that can shape people and whole cultures. There may be a deeper shift underway in how truth itself is recognized.
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