When one fitful night turns into full-blown insomnia.

Psychology Today Magazine
November 2003
How did The Sims—with its tract homes and bickering families—get it so right?
Andrew Weil, the father of natural living.
Celebrity poet Sylvia Plath and the adolescent psyche.
The twelve neuroses of Christmas.
Traditional holiday meals are good for the brain.
How to help children adjust to a new home.
How to open up to your family about depression.
Tidbits on school-age depression, fear and pain.
The brain chemical for believers.
How to hold on to empathy.
Sonata and Ambien are two new drugs helping people get to sleep. Cognitive behavioral therapy is another method.
Get your snooze schedule back on track.
Fun, because it's real.
Poetry that transcends time, but not age.
When natural health trumps Western medicine.
Why can't this man get a date?
Why psychology deserves a prize.
How product placement really works.
America's love affair with Jesus.
Capturing images of the strange and disquieting.
Internet access can improve scholastic achievement.
Why love and hate relationships are so difficult.
Does flirting through instant messaging count as cheating?
How bad breakups can lead to depression.
How music lessons may strengthen verbal skills.
Cranberry may reduce the chance of stroke.
How positive thinking affects your health.
The old saying goes—money can't buy you happiness.
Why we switch lines at the grocery store.
High-fat, low-carb diet to treat seizures is safe.
Every winter a wave of articles come out, perpetuating misinformation.
How gender balance influences salary.
The effect of altruistic acts is surprisingly powerful.
Confronting type 2 diabetes.
Should kids get marks for personal health?
An inspiration for more than four decades.
Did she kiss Mr. Right goodbye?
Antioxidants abound in holiday meals.
How the blues impairs the body's ability to stay healthy.
Driving through the woods increases patience.
Advice on difficult questions about depression and the family
Unhappy mothers may breed violent children.
Winter blues can cast a shadow on creativity.