The generation that never went to therapy didn’t avoid it out of strength — they avoided it because the idea that your inner life deserved professional attention was a luxury so foreign to their upbringing it didn’t register as an option at all

The generation that never went to therapy didn't avoid it out of strength — they avoided it because the idea that your inner life deserved professional attention was a luxury so foreign to their upbringing it didn't register as an option at all

My mother had a phrase she used whenever someone in the family was going through something difficult. She’d say: ‘You just have to get on with it.’ Not unkindly. She meant it as encouragement, as practical wisdom passed down from her own mother who had raised five children through genuine hardship without the luxury of … Read more

Psychology says the men who grew up in the 1960s and 70s didn’t learn to be emotionally unavailable — emotional unavailability was simply what settled into the space where a father’s tenderness was supposed to be, and they inherited it the way you inherit a piece of furniture nobody remembers acquiring

Psychology says the men who grew up in the 1960s and 70s didn't learn to be emotionally unavailable — emotional unavailability was simply what settled into the space where a father's tenderness was supposed to be, and they inherited it the way you inherit a piece of furniture nobody remembers acquiring

Tenderness doesn’t disappear; it gets replaced so quietly that no one notices the exchange. How silence became the language of care Most people I grew up around believed those men were simply “like that.” Stoic. Reserved. Built from a different material. The story went that they had learned to keep emotions in check, that restraint … Read more

Research shows that people who were raised in chaotic households often become the calmest person in every room — not because they found peace but because they learned to function without it

Research shows that people who were raised in chaotic households often become the calmest person in every room — not because they found peace but because they learned to function without it

There is a kind of composure that comes from the wrong direction. We generally imagine that calm people grew up around calm — that they were held steadily enough, early enough, that steadiness became their default. This is true for some people. But there is another route to the same appearance, and it runs directly … Read more

People who pause before responding in arguments aren’t being passive — psychology says they are running a process that takes most people decades to develop accidentally

People who pause before responding in arguments aren't being passive — psychology says they are running a process that takes most people decades to develop accidentally

The pause in an argument is one of the most misread gestures in human interaction. The person who goes quiet when provoked, who takes a breath before responding, who doesn’t immediately return fire when fire is offered — we often read this as disengagement, passivity, or worse, a kind of tactical coldness. What is actually … Read more