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Ambition isn't the opposite of contentment. It's often what people reach for when they were never taught how to recognize enough.

Psychologists have long assumed ambition and contentment sit on opposite ends of a spectrum. The research, and the lives of the chronically driven, suggest something stranger: ambition is often what fills the space where the skill of recognizing enough was never taught.

The post Ambition isn’t the opposite of contentment. It’s often what people reach for when they were never taught how to recognize enough. appeared first on Space Daily.

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My mother grew up in rural Australia in the seventies. She has told me stories about summers that sound, to modern ears, almost implausibly free. Out after breakfast, back for dinner. No phone. No schedule. No adult tracking her movements. Just a neighborhood of kids, a creek, a few square kilometers of countryside, and the […]

The post Psychology says people who grew up in the 1970s with no scheduled activities, no structured playdates, and no parental supervision on weekends didn’t miss out on childhood — they had the last childhood that belonged entirely to them appeared first on Space Daily.

Artemis 2 crew

On April 10, the Orion capsule carrying Reid Wiseman, Christina Koch, Victor Glover and Jeremy Hansen splashed down in the Pacific, completing the first crewed lunar mission in more than 50 years.

The people who keep every conversation light aren't shallow. They learned that depth was the fastest way to lose someone who couldn't meet them there.

People who keep every conversation light aren't shallow — they're calibrated. Somewhere along the way, they learned what depth costs when shared with someone who can't hold it, and built an entire social style around making sure they never paid that cost again.

The post The people who keep every conversation light aren’t shallow. They learned that depth was the fastest way to lose someone who couldn’t meet them there. appeared first on Space Daily.

Self-trust isn't built by making the right decisions. It's built by staying with yourself through the wrong ones without abandoning the person who made them.

Self-trust is not built by getting decisions right. It is built by how you treat the person who made the wrong ones — and whether you stay with them after the evidence comes in.

The post Self-trust isn’t built by making the right decisions. It’s built by staying with yourself through the wrong ones without abandoning the person who made them. appeared first on Space Daily.

The people who keep their childhood bedroom exactly as it was aren't sentimental. They're holding onto evidence that a version of them once existed before the world asked them to be useful.

The preserved childhood bedroom isn't sentimentality or arrested development. It's an archive of a self that existed before usefulness became the organizing principle of adult life — and dismantling it before something else can hold that self often does more harm than letting it stand.

The post The people who keep their childhood bedroom exactly as it was aren’t sentimental. They’re holding onto evidence that a version of them once existed before the world asked them to be useful. appeared first on Space Daily.

I want to tell you the most important finding in happiness research, and I want to warn you in advance that it’s going to sound obvious. It’s going to sound like something your grandmother would have told you. It’s going to sound like it doesn’t need a study or a journal or a university behind […]

The post Psychology says the single biggest predictor of happiness isn’t income, relationships, or health – it’s the ability to be present in an ordinary moment without wishing it were something else appeared first on Space Daily.

The people who over-explain themselves aren't insecure. They grew up with someone who treated every misunderstanding as a character flaw.

Over-explanation isn't a confidence problem. It's a learned response to being raised by someone who treated every misunderstanding as evidence of who you really were — and the habit follows you into every adult conversation.

The post The people who over-explain themselves aren’t insecure. They grew up with someone who treated every misunderstanding as a character flaw. appeared first on Space Daily.

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