Psychology says people who have spent a lifetime sacrificing their own happiness for others aren’t selfless — they’re running a childhood program that taught them love was something you earned by making yourself smaller, and the hardest part is that it wo
Thursday, 30 April 2026 03:05
Have you ever looked around at the people in your life who seem to give endlessly, never asking for anything in return, and wondered how they do it? I used to think these people were saints. The friend who drops everything to help others move apartments. The colleague who stays late to finish everyone else’s […]
The post Psychology says people who have spent a lifetime sacrificing their own happiness for others aren’t selfless — they’re running a childhood program that taught them love was something you earned by making yourself smaller, and the hardest part is that it worked appeared first on Space Daily.
Psychology says the 60s is the decade in which most women have the rare opportunity to become genuinely classy — because almost every external structure that previously defined them (motherhood, partnership, career, beauty as currency) is loosening or end
Thursday, 30 April 2026 02:39
Last week, I found myself standing in my kitchen at 5:30 AM, watching steam rise from my tea, when it struck me that I no longer apologize for taking this hour of morning silence. At 70, this simple act of claiming space for myself feels revolutionary. Not because it’s dramatic or defiant, but because it […]
The post Psychology says the 60s is the decade in which most women have the rare opportunity to become genuinely classy — because almost every external structure that previously defined them (motherhood, partnership, career, beauty as currency) is loosening or ending simultaneously, and the loosening creates the first space in fifty years for an internal self to emerge as the organizing principle of her life appeared first on Space Daily.
Psychology says women who need a glass of wine to unwind at the end of the day aren’t weak or dependent — they’ve never been taught the difference between actually decompressing and just chemically interrupting the stress they never learned to process any
Thursday, 30 April 2026 01:52
Picture this: You’ve just finished another demanding day, and as you kick off your shoes, your hand automatically reaches for that evening comfort. The guilt creeps in before you even indulge. Society whispers that you should be stronger, that needing external comfort makes you dependent, maybe even weak. But what if I told you that […]
The post Psychology says women who need a glass of wine to unwind at the end of the day aren’t weak or dependent — they’ve never been taught the difference between actually decompressing and just chemically interrupting the stress they never learned to process any other way appeared first on Space Daily.
Psychology says people who always keep their phone on silent aren’t antisocial — they’ve quietly decided that their own mental state matters more than other people’s expectation of immediate access, and that decision changes every relationship they have
Thursday, 30 April 2026 01:39
When was the last time you actually heard your phone ring? If you’re like me, it’s been a while. Not because no one’s calling, but because somewhere along the way, you made a choice. A quiet, deliberate choice that says your peace of mind matters more than being instantly available to everyone, all the time. […]
The post Psychology says people who always keep their phone on silent aren’t antisocial — they’ve quietly decided that their own mental state matters more than other people’s expectation of immediate access, and that decision changes every relationship they have appeared first on Space Daily.
Psychology says people who keep old voicemails from people who have died aren’t grieving wrong, they’re keeping a small door open to a voice the world has otherwise agreed to stop using
Thursday, 30 April 2026 00:29
Saved voicemails from people who have died aren't a sign of grief gone wrong. They're a recognized form of continuing bonds — a small, private rebuttal to the secondary erasure that follows every death.
The post Psychology says people who keep old voicemails from people who have died aren’t grieving wrong, they’re keeping a small door open to a voice the world has otherwise agreed to stop using appeared first on Space Daily.
Canadian Space Agency cancels Spire satellite contract
Wednesday, 29 April 2026 23:43
The Canadian Space Agency has canceled a contract it awarded last year to Spire Global to construct a fleet of wildfire-monitoring smallsats.
Why hasn’t the universe produced more civilizations? The answer might be that Earth is freakishly lucky
Wednesday, 29 April 2026 22:59
I published an article recently on Space Daily arguing that we will probably find alien life in the next 50 years. I still think the case for that is strong. But there is a competing argument I have not given enough credit, and it deserves its own honest hearing. It is the possibility that Earth […]
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Psychology says the parent who keeps every drawing, every report card, and every handprint isn’t sentimental, they’re trying to prove to themselves that the years actually happened, because most days felt like they were happening to someone else
Wednesday, 29 April 2026 22:07
The parent who keeps every drawing and report card isn't just sentimental. They're often building physical evidence that the blurred years of caregiving actually happened to them, and that they were truly present for them.
The post Psychology says the parent who keeps every drawing, every report card, and every handprint isn’t sentimental, they’re trying to prove to themselves that the years actually happened, because most days felt like they were happening to someone else appeared first on Space Daily.
Psychology says the men who are genuinely deeply unhappy in their 40s and 50s rarely look unhappy from the outside, they look fine, functional, even successful, and what they’re actually carrying is the quiet Tuesday evening grief of realising the life th
Wednesday, 29 April 2026 21:58
You probably know one. Maybe more than one. He shows up to things. He does his job well. He is there at the school pickup and the Saturday barbecue and the Monday morning meeting. He responds to messages, fulfils his obligations, does not give anyone particular cause for concern. He is, by the ordinary metrics […]
The post Psychology says the men who are genuinely deeply unhappy in their 40s and 50s rarely look unhappy from the outside, they look fine, functional, even successful, and what they’re actually carrying is the quiet Tuesday evening grief of realising the life they built was assembled from other people’s expectations they never thought to question appeared first on Space Daily.
ISS module cracking still unresolved despite stopping air leaks
Wednesday, 29 April 2026 21:09
While leaks in a Russian section of the International Space Station have stopped, engineers still don’t understand how the cracks formed.
May 13: Software Integration and Strategic Missile Defense
Wednesday, 29 April 2026 21:06
Space Force selects firms to build counter-surveillance payloads for satellites
Wednesday, 29 April 2026 20:21
Psychology says the people who remember every birthday, anniversary, and small detail aren’t naturally thoughtful, they learned early that being forgotten was the worst feeling in the world and decided nobody around them would feel it
Wednesday, 29 April 2026 20:07
The person who never forgets a birthday is not naturally more thoughtful. They are running a private system built in childhood, designed to ensure no one around them ever feels what they once felt: invisible on a day that was supposed to be theirs.
The post Psychology says the people who remember every birthday, anniversary, and small detail aren’t naturally thoughtful, they learned early that being forgotten was the worst feeling in the world and decided nobody around them would feel it appeared first on Space Daily.
Psychology says the people called overthinkers are often the most intelligent ones in the room, and what looks like indecision from the outside isn’t anxiety, it’s a mind that learned early to run the second-order consequences before answering, and decade
Wednesday, 29 April 2026 18:45
The word “overthinker” is almost always delivered as a gentle diagnosis. The implication is that something has gone slightly wrong upstairs. That the person would be better off if they could just relax the processing a little, trust their instincts, pull the trigger faster. Everyone around them seems to manage it fine. What’s the problem? […]
The post Psychology says the people called overthinkers are often the most intelligent ones in the room, and what looks like indecision from the outside isn’t anxiety, it’s a mind that learned early to run the second-order consequences before answering, and decades later it’s still doing the work everyone else outsourced to gut feel appeared first on Space Daily.
Psychology says the people called overthinkers are often the most intelligent ones in the room, and what looks like indecision from the outside isn’t anxiety, it’s a mind that learned early to run the second-order consequences before answering, and decade
Wednesday, 29 April 2026 18:45
The word “overthinker” is almost always delivered as a gentle diagnosis. The implication is that something has gone slightly wrong upstairs. That the person would be better off if they could just relax the processing a little, trust their instincts, pull the trigger faster. Everyone around them seems to manage it fine. What’s the problem? […]
The post Psychology says the people called overthinkers are often the most intelligent ones in the room, and what looks like indecision from the outside isn’t anxiety, it’s a mind that learned early to run the second-order consequences before answering, and decades later it’s still doing the work everyone else outsourced to gut feel appeared first on Space Daily.

