
Psychiatry traditionally treats time distortion as a secondary symptom—something that appears in depression, mania, trauma, or psychosis. Slowed time in melancholia, accelerated time in mania, or frozen time in trauma...

Psychiatry traditionally treats time distortion as a secondary symptom—something that appears in depression, mania, trauma, or psychosis. Slowed time in melancholia, accelerated time in mania, or frozen time in trauma...
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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