Type A personalities are driven, competitive, and time-urgent. Here are the 10 Type A personality traits that fuel success, the real link to stress, and how to keep your edge without burning out.
What Causes Narcissistic Collapse: The Triggers, the Signs, and What Comes Next
You've watched someone in your life hold everything together with unsettling control. Nothing cracks the surface. Then something shifts. Maybe they didn't get the promotion. Maybe a relationship ended on someone else's terms. Maybe they were called out publicly, and the person who seemed bulletproof suddenly isn't.
What you're witnessing may be a narcissistic collapse, which is the psychological breakdown that happens when a narcissist's inflated self-image can no longer be sustained.
This post focuses specifically on what causes it. If you've already read our overview of what narcissistic collapse is and how long it lasts, this goes one layer deeper: the specific events and dynamics that actually trigger the breakdown. Understanding the triggers can help you make sense of a reaction that feels completely disproportionate. It can also help you recognize when someone around you is close to collapsing, and if needed, prepare yourself accordingly.
Mental Health TikTok: Helpful Insight or Anxiety Trap?
You open TikTok to decompress for a few minutes and, forty-five minutes later, you've watched seventeen videos about attachment styles, taken a mental quiz about whether you have ADHD, and learned the name of a trauma response you've apparently been experiencing your whole life. You close the app feeling more informed, but also somehow more worried than you were before. Sound familiar?
TikTok anxiety is the psychological tension that builds when short-form video content, especially mental health content, triggers self-comparison, overstimulation, or compulsive scrolling in ways that leave you feeling worse rather than better. This blog explores both sides of the TikTok mental health conversation: the ways it can genuinely increase self-awareness, the ways it quietly fuels anxiety, and how to tell the difference in your own life.
What Is Pure O OCD? Understanding Mental Obsessions and Intrusive Thoughts
If you've ever had a thought pop into your head that horrified you, one you'd never act on, one that felt completely out of character, and then spent hours trying to push it out, you know how disorienting that experience can be. For people with OCD, that's not an occasional moment. It's a cycle that can take over large chunks of the day. OCD obsession is an unwanted, repetitive thought, image, or urge that triggers intense anxiety and pulls the mind into a loop of trying to neutralize or escape it.
Most people picture OCD as someone checking the stove or washing their hands. But for many people with OCD, the disorder lives almost entirely in their head, as a flood of unwanted, disturbing intrusive thoughts they’d never act on but can’t stop having. This subtype is often called Pure O OCD, and it’s one of the most misunderstood and underdiagnosed forms of the disorder. This post explains what Pure O looks like, why intrusive thoughts feel so threatening in this kind of OCD, and what genuinely helps.
Are Empaths Real?
Have you ever walked into a room and immediately felt the emotional temperature shift? Maybe you picked up on a friend's sadness before they said a single word, or you left a party feeling completely drained by emotions that weren't even yours. If that sounds familiar, you've probably wondered whether you're an empath, and whether empaths are even real.
An empath is a person with an extraordinary sensitivity to the emotions, energy, and moods of the people around them, experiencing those feelings as if they were their own. It's a term that gets used a lot on social media and in wellness communities, but the question of whether empaths are real is worth answering honestly. The science turns out to be more interesting than either the skeptics or the true believers tend to admit.
In this blog, we'll look at what the research says, how psychology understands high emotional sensitivity, and what it all means for your mental health and relationships.
Top Spots in Jersey City for a Mental Health Day
Taking a mental health day is all about pressing pause and giving yourself the time and space to recharge- something we all need more often than we realize. Jersey City, with its blend of urban energy and tranquil green spaces, offers plenty of perfect spots where you can step away from the daily grind and focus on your well-being. Whether you are seeking a peaceful park, a cozy café to unwind in, or a wellness center to nurture your mind and body, Jersey City has something to help you reset and reconnect with yourself.
In this guide, we will explore some of the best places in Jersey City to spend a restorative mental health day. From scenic waterfront walks to calming yoga studios and quiet spots for meditation, these destinations are ideal for anyone looking to reduce stress, practice self-care, or simply enjoy a moment of calm in the city’s vibrant atmosphere. No matter what kind of mental health day you need, Jersey City has options to support your journey to wellness!
The Impact of the Friendship Recession on Mental Well-being
You work every day in a virtual environment. You scroll endlessly on social media. You are surrounded by people at the gym. So, why do you feel lonely?
Before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic, loneliness was already on the rise. In fact, loneliness was considered a public health concern in 2017. The United States Surgeon General even declared a loneliness epidemic, leading to a friendship recession as well. For more information on the loneliness epidemic, check out our blog “How to Battle the Loneliness Epidemic.”
Balancing Home and College: Navigating Mental Health During Holiday Breaks
The Holidays can be a very exciting time. Around the time of the holidays, there is a lot of joy and giving. People are usually in high spirits and excited for the holiday. For college students, this may look different. This is the time when college students are cramming for exams, overwhelmed and stressed, all leading up to going home for winter break. This can take a significant toll on the mental health of students. After finals and moving back into their parent's house, being back in their hometown can be a significant change. With so much going on, not having the chance to sit down and reflect on these changes can result in feelings of anxiety and depression.
Feeling mentally and physically drained after college semester:
The weeks leading up to going home for winter break can be extremely stressful and mentally taxing. Coming home for winter break can be very exciting but also sad. Although it is the holidays, you are ready to go home and miss your family. Right before going home, you may find yourself staying up late, cramming for your final exams. You may be trying to fit in social time with your friends before you go your separate ways for the break. In just a few short weeks after Thanksgiving break, you may be homesick and feeling burnt out with the end of the semester so close. Jumping back into school after being off for a week and being expected to study and take exams can take a toll on college students. After a long semester and the finish line so close, it can be hard to push yourself to that last stretch.













