Search Results for : relationship
Industrial

Job Hopping as Identity Exploration in Young Professionals: A Psychological Perspective

A recent graduate enters a workplace full of enthusiasm and hope. She is restless a year later.  Her resume has been updated. She soon takes on a new role. Friends refer to it as “job hopping,”  but is it solely

Industrial

I’m Not Lazy, I’m Done Pretending: The Psychology Behind Gen Z’s Work Culture Shift

In many modern workplaces, there exists a certain type of so-called “work” where there are people present… attending meetings; completing tasks; and meeting deadlines… all things which create that appear to be “productive”. However, one could argue that while there may

Health Positive

The Body Remembers: How Stress, Trauma, and Emotion Shape Autoimmune Disease

The concept of our body, our most reliable shield, turning against itself, is haunting for many individuals. Autoimmune disorders are one example of that contradiction; they occur when our bodies produce an immune response to an invader in the body,

Awareness

The Neuroscience of Pleasure: Decoding the Brain’s Pleasure Symphony

Human pleasure is usually regarded as a simple physical sensation. What lies below the surface, however, is a complex electrical storm. To understand neuro-receptivity, one must really go into and examine the brain’s design: go beyond physical acts and look

Social

Winnie the Pooh and Neurodivergent Traits: A Psychological Perspective

A bear reaches the far corner of the room only to lose track of his reason for moving. When a small pig trembles at shadows, loud sounds, or even silence, fear shapes most moments. Each morning begins for the donkey

Positive

The Psychology of “Teasing Back”: Reciprocity in Sarcasm 

Picture a Friday evening at a crowded dinner table. A group of lifelong friends are in mid-meal when Julian accidentally knocks over a glass of water, drenching the tablecloth. His friend Maya looks up from her pasta and quips, “Brilliant,

Parenting

Why Do Public Spaces Trigger Parental Overcorrection?

One thing that is very rarely confined to privacy is parenting. Parents are acutely aware that their relationship and interaction with children are observed by others, usually in parks, supermarkets, or public transport. At times like these, getting the child

Education

The Evolution of Psychoanalysis Through Anna Freud

Anna Freud was born on 3 December 1895, the sixth and youngest child of Sigmund Freud and Martha Bernays, the same year that her father co-authored Studies on Hysteria with Josef Breuer (Breuer & Freud, 1895), which is often considered

Awareness

Winnicott and the Power of Play: How Play Shapes the True Self

Donald Woods Winnicott (1896–1971) was a British paediatrician and psychoanalyst whose clinical work with children over a decades-long career led him to a conviction that most of his contemporaries had not properly articulated: that play is not a frivolous childhood

Psychologs eMagazine May 2026

The May 2026 issue of Psychologs Magazine explores the complexities of the human mind, focusing on emotional resilience, identity, and evolving social realities. From developmental mental health and happiness to self-perception, trauma bonds, and unconscious behavioral patterns, this edition highlights