
Human psychological life depends not only on perception or emotion, but on meaning attribution — the continuous, mostly unconscious process by which the mind assigns importance, relevance, and value to...

Human psychological life depends not only on perception or emotion, but on meaning attribution — the continuous, mostly unconscious process by which the mind assigns importance, relevance, and value to...

One of the most unsettling experiences in severe psychopathology is not the loss of identity itself, but the loss of ownership over identity. In this state, thoughts still occur, emotions...

Emotional extinction is not numbness in the ordinary sense, nor is it the temporary blunting seen in stress or fatigue. It is the progressive disappearance of the capacity to feel...

Human consciousness is not only defined by thought or emotion, but by time. To exist as a self is to experience continuity — a remembered past, a lived present, and...

Annihilation anxiety is not the fear of death as commonly understood. It is the fear of psychological non-existence — the terror that the self may dissolve, disappear, fragment, or cease...

Emptiness, once seen as an affliction, reveals itself at last as a horizon — not a void to be crossed but a depth to be understood. The patient who has...

The human self is typically experienced as a continuous thread—stable across time, coherent across situations, and unified across internal states. Yet in some individuals, the self does not function as...

Memory is often imagined as a passive archive of lived experience — a faithful recording of events, emotions, and sensory impressions. Yet modern psychiatry has revealed a far more unsettling...

Depersonalization is not merely a feeling of strangeness; it is a profound disruption of the first-person structure of consciousness — the sense that experience is happening to me. In this...

Existential depression is not sadness, nor is it the emotional heaviness commonly associated with mood disorders. It is a collapse of the structures that make experience meaningful — a failure...
Role conflict occurs when an individual faces incompatible demands attached to different social roles they occupy. Each person plays multiple roles—such as employee, parent, partner, student, friend—and these roles come with specific expectations and responsibilities. When these expectations clash, they create psychological tension and stress.
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