breakups
When it comes to breakups, pain is inevitable, but Humans thinks that suffering is optional.
Love Between Two Enemies Part Two
Lines Drawn in Blood --- PART TWO – LINES DRAWN IN BLOOD Some wars were loud. They came with shouting, gunfire, headlines splashed across newspapers. Others were quieter—waged in boardrooms, whispered threats, contracts signed in ink that carried more poison than blood.
By Ahmed aldeabella2 months ago in Humans
How Breakups Affect Mental Health And Emotional Healing Over Time
Separations with each other are accompanied by strong emotional responses that may be overwhelming at first. Grief, shock, anger, bewilderment, and loneliness are all feelings that are often triggered as people experience the grief of losing a close emotional attachment. Sudden loss of emotional contact interferes with everyday life and emotional stability and produces distress which impacts on sleep, appetite, and concentration. To most people, the separation causes instability, which causes their anxieties to increase or even lose their emotions as the mind tries to cope with the transformation.
By Robert Smith2 months ago in Humans
Strengthening Mental Health By Cultivating Honest And Supportive Relationships Daily
Mental health as well as emotional wellbeing is reliant on human relationships. Veridical and amicable relationships create a feeling of belonging, safety, and emotional stability that safeguards psychological stability. Once trust and openness are established during the relationships, they feel freer to express feelings and open up on weaknesses. This emotional protection lowers the level of internal stress and promotes healthier emotional control. With time, regular positive experiences will stabilize mood, anxiety, and would contribute to a more resistant mental state.
By Robert Smith2 months ago in Humans
Managing Mental Health While Navigating Difficult Relationship Challenges Successfully Today
The challenges in relationships may trickle down to the mental health of a person particularly as long as the conflict, misunderstanding, or emotional distance continues. These difficulties frequently result in the stress response, and one becomes anxious, sad, frustrated, or emotionally exhausted. It is difficult to rest and feel safe when the relationships seem to be not stable, and the mind is always on the alert. This emotional pressure may also eventually influence sleep, concentration and emotional homeostasis, which eventually depletes mental health.
By Robert Smith2 months ago in Humans
Balancing Personal Mental Health Needs Within Romantic Relationships Successfully Today
Mental health balancing in a romantic relationship starts with the fact that every partner has his or her own emotional needs. The aspect of mental health is individual that can be influenced by life experiences, stress and ability to handle emotions. Being aware of your triggers, boundaries, and emotional patterns enables you to express yourself better and reduce burnout at work as well as in personal relationships. As people become aware of their mental health demands, they will be in a better position to take care of themselves without necessarily having to depend on their partner to be controlled emotionally. This self-consciousness forms a more healthy base of the relationship as it enhances accountability in individual wellbeing as well as mutual emotional bonding.
By Mark Hipster2 months ago in Humans
Ways Healthy Relationships Reduce Anxiety And Improve Mental Health Naturally
Emotional security forms through healthy relationships and this is very important in alleviating anxiety. When people become emotionally secure, the nervous system can rest instead of being on alert. The fact that a person is trustworthy, helpful, and empathetic will decrease the fear of being rejected or antagonistic. This feeling of security enables the mind to relax reducing the stress levels in the daily lives. It is also emotional security which promotes openness and thus can easily reveal worries before they turn into excessive stress or even obsessive worrying thoughts.
By Mark Hipster2 months ago in Humans
The moment you truly like yourself
The moment you truly like yourself is not the moment you feel better. It’s the moment something stops asking for permission inside you. I didn’t reach it through insight or courage. I reached it through fracture. Through realizing that fear wasn’t the problem—it was the symptom of a distance I kept maintaining from myself.
By Randolphe Tanoguem2 months ago in Humans
Love Divided
I was scrolling through my emails recently when I noticed an interesting article posted by users on Quora entitled ”why do Men struggle mentally in relationships” normally like most people I take a quick glance and the email is confined to the bin, however something about this post captured my intrigue so I decided to take a look further, also to unashamedly see if I could draw comparisons to my own life and experiences. Then, out of surprise, I found a comment which threw me off guard, a topic rarely even discussed out in the open. The comment highlighted how racial differences can become the defining factor in mixed relationships which cause mental health issues.
By Malachai Hough2 months ago in Humans
Essence, Embodiment, and Relational Reality
The Failure of Reduction and the Need for Synthesis There is a persistent failure in many modern attempts to explain what a human being is. Some frameworks reduce the person entirely to matter, insisting that identity, consciousness, morality, and meaning are nothing more than emergent properties of physical processes. Other frameworks move in the opposite direction, detaching spirit from reason and grounding belief in intuition alone, often at the cost of coherence or accountability. Both approaches fail because both misunderstand essence. One denies that essence exists at all. The other treats it as something vague and undefinable.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast2 months ago in Humans









