• The Phone Paradox: Do Smartphones Steal Our Social Lives… or Just Our TV Time?
    May 7 2026
    A Washington Post piece recently spotlighted college students launching screen-free zones to combat “social illiteracy”—that feeling that constant phone use has eroded basic face-to-face skills like reading body language or sustaining eye contact without distraction.
    An X reply pushed back: Phones don’t replace real relationships; they mostly displace old TV and video time. Is that backed by data, or just coping?
    Today, we’ll examine the science, including that key 2025 Australian study, broader research from Jean Twenge and others, what’s happening with Gen Z socializing right now, and where trends point next. The truth is nuanced—phones reshaped time use without fully erasing in-person life, but quality matters. Let’s unpack it.
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    6 mins
  • “Why We’re Nicer to Strangers Than Family: The Ancient Philosophy and Modern Psychology of Politenes
    May 4 2026
    Why are we often kinder and more considerate to strangers than to our own family members? This episode explores the psychodynamic reasons behind this common paradox, drawing on ancient philosophy from Confucius and Aristotle alongside modern attachment theory and emotional labor research. Listeners gain practical insights for bringing greater awareness and respect into their closest relationships.
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    5 mins
  • ADHD Breakthrough or Bust: Science vs. Hype in the Treatment Debate
    May 3 2026
    Navigate the complex landscape of neurobiology as we analyze a controversial new study that challenges long-held beliefs about ADHD medications and supplemental interventions. This episode bridges the gap between clinical data and lived experience, examining how "tiny" research findings can disrupt the trillion-dollar pharmaceutical industry and what the gold-standard longitudinal studies actually reveal about brain function. Optimized for mental health professionals and curious minds alike, we provide an evidence-based roadmap to help you distinguish between viral health trends and genuine neuro-scientific breakthroughs.
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    5 mins
  • Coding Compassion: The Rise of the Algorithm-Based Therapist
    Apr 28 2026
    If an AI can make you feel heard, does it matter if it doesn't actually "feel" anything at all? This episode dives into the "uncanny valley" of digital mental health, examining the ethics of AI therapy apps and the privacy concerns of sharing your psyche with a corporation. We ask the uncomfortable question: In an increasingly lonely world, is a simulated connection better than no connection at all?
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    6 mins
  • Beyond the Label: Treating the Person, Not the Diagnosis
    Apr 27 2026
    Modern psychology is facing a paradigm shift: the biology of the brain is more fluid than our diagnostic manuals suggest. This episode looks at the practical implications of "Shared Biology" for therapy and wellness. If the same neurotransmitter pathways are involved in both ADHD and early-stage psychosis, how does that change our approach to medication, mindfulness, and cognitive-behavioral interventions? We explore the move toward "Precision Psychology" and how understanding your unique biological signature can lead to more effective, personalized healing.
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    3 mins
  • Decode ADHD: Using Genetics to End the Med-Go-Round
    Apr 26 2026
    Why do ADHD medications hit every kid differently? The answer is hidden in their genetic code, influencing everything from absorption rates to brain sensitivity. We examine how genetic insights can help families bypass months of trial and error to find the right dose and drug the first time.
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    2 mins
  • The Fatherhood Blueprint: Growing Alongside Your Child
    Apr 21 2026
    Fatherhood is not a static role, but a dynamic evolution that requires dads to reinvent themselves at every birthday and milestone. We dive into the psychological shifts that occur as fathers move from being the center of a child's world to a trusted advisor on the sidelines. This discussion provides practical advice for fathers looking to balance authority with friendship during the pivotal years of a child’s development.
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    4 mins
  • The Screen Trap: What a Massive Experiment Reveals About Our Digital Habits
    Apr 19 2026
    A large Stanford randomized trial paid over 35,000 users to deactivate Facebook or Instagram for six weeks, revealing small but measurable gains in happiness and reductions in depression and anxiety—especially notable for women under 25 on Instagram.
The findings highlight how engineered digital environments subtly affect mood without dramatic offline substitutions, inviting deeper reflection on attention, comparison, and habit.
We explore the nuances of effect sizes, subgroup differences, and what an upcoming year-long screen-free personal experiment might teach us about mental recalibration in the digital age.
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    4 mins