Why we're conditioned to blame our partners for our unhappiness.
Psychology Today Magazine
March 2010
The anorexia began innocently enough, until eating became the point of living. Precisely because it was so special, it had to be made more perfect by hunger.
A sociologist reconsiders his kids' outrageous names--and mines the data for clues to the consequences.
Inhospitable environments have a lot to teach us about stress, coping with adversity, and getting along with each other.
When honesty is the only policy
Could your name pull you toward a particular profession?
How to heal family wounds.
How to forgive an addict.
What to do when he's not listening.
PT debunks more conventional wisdom.
Book reviews on teaching tots self control, taking control of the work environment and finding marital bliss.
Belief in sleep meds may inhibit sleep.
Broad thinking brings broad grins.
How are kids affected by a family's change of fortune?
When sorcery emasculates
Tidbits from inspiration to secret trysts.
Adam Lambert rocks androgyny.
Finding the perfect pallor
Alain de Botton insists on asking the rude questions in the back of our minds.
When the first food may be the best food.
The upsides of exercising en masse
Does clutter seek its own level?
The way to one's stomach can be through the ears.
A deejay mixes highbrow and low.
People can echolocate like bats.
It's got too many goodies to be cast solely as garnish.
Finding targets to blame
Bipolar symptoms can lessen with age.
Is love always obvious?
Why we seek out hurtful information
Who fantasizes about what—and why