The Three Good Things Exercise: A 5-Minute Practice With 6-Month Effects

The Five-Minute Practice That Outperforms Most Self-Help: A specific written exercise, performed for five minutes per night across exactly one week, produces measurable improvements in mood and depressive symptoms that persist at six-month follow-up. The intervention has no side effects, costs nothing, and is teachable to anyone in 60 seconds. It is called the Three … Read more

Why Cults Use Sleep Deprivation: A Calculated Cognitive Compromise

The Tactic Hidden in Plain Sight: One of the most reliable tools used by high-control groups to recruit and retain members is not psychological brilliance, charismatic leadership, or sophisticated argument. It is a simple physiological intervention that systematically degrades the cognitive faculties used to evaluate manipulation: sleep deprivation. The pattern appears in cult recruitment retreats, … Read more

The Strength of Weak Ties: Why Distant Acquaintances Drive Most New Jobs

The Network Paradox: Your closest friends are statistically the worst source of your next job, your next investment opportunity, and your next billion-dollar idea. In the architecture of modern wealth, the people who change your life are almost always the ones whose surnames you cannot quite remember. For decades, conventional wisdom held that career success … Read more

The Default Effect: Why Opt-Out Donor Systems Save Lives and Pensions

The Silent Architecture: Every choice you have not yet made has already been made for you. The most consequential decisions in modern society — whether your organs will be donated, whether you will retire in dignity, whether millions will die uninsured — are not decided by individual deliberation. They are decided by a single pre-ticked … Read more

Loss Aversion: Why Losing $100 Hurts More Than Winning $200 Feels Good

The Wealth Asymmetry: The pain of losing $100 is not equal and opposite to the pleasure of winning $200. In the neural accounting that quietly drives your investment behaviour, your job choices, and your willingness to start over, losses are weighted roughly twice as heavily as gains. This single asymmetry is the most expensive cognitive … Read more

The Glymphatic Flush: How Deep Sleep Clears Beta-Amyloid From Your Brain

The Toxic Backlog: Your brain produces an enormous quantity of metabolic waste every day — including the same beta-amyloid plaques implicated in Alzheimer’s disease. It has exactly one window to clean itself out, and you spend most of that window scrolling. The system that empties your neural rubbish bin was only discovered in 2013, and … Read more

The Dark Triad: Why Narcissism, Machiavellianism and Psychopathy Cluster Together

The Charisma Tax: The most magnetic people in the boardroom, on the first date, in the start-up pitch deck — are not statistically the most competent. They are the most likely to share a personality profile that costs the people around them their savings, their reputations, and occasionally their lives. This profile has a name, … Read more

Chronotype Genetics: Why ‘Just Wake Up Earlier’ Is a Biological Insult

The Genetic Wake-Up Call: When productivity influencers tell you to “just wake up at 5 a.m.,” they are not giving you advice — they are issuing an instruction your DNA may be physiologically incapable of following. The morning-versus-evening preference written into your chronotype is roughly 40 percent heritable, and the price of fighting it is … Read more

The Gut-Brain Axis: Why 90 Percent of Serotonin Lives in Your Intestines

The Second Brain: Your intestines manufacture more of the chemicals that govern your mood than your brain does. Approximately 90 percent of the body’s serotonin — the neurotransmitter most associated with depression, sleep, and emotional stability — is produced not by neurons in your skull but by enterochromaffin cells in your gut wall. The implications … Read more