Pip: Liberty Psychological Association has been quietly building what it calls the most comprehensive online library for mental health, psychology, and parapsychology in the world — and this week's posts suggest they mean it.
Mara: Shervan K Shahhian covers a lot of ground here — college anxiety, the language we use around diagnosis, how ghosting works psychologically, and a cluster of posts on mental imagery, perspective, and the helping professions. Let's start with what's driving stress on campus.
College Anxiety And Student Stress
Pip: College gets framed as the best years of your life, but the posts here make a case that the environment itself may be structurally designed to produce anxiety.
Mara: The post on why anxiety could be common among college students puts it directly: "anxiety in college students may not be just a problem — it's often a signal: of overload, of uncertainty, or of misalignment between expectations and reality."
Pip: So the feeling isn't the malfunction — it's the readout. That reframe matters because it shifts the question from "how do I make this stop" to "what is this telling me."
Mara: The post walks through seven contributing factors, from financial strain and sleep disruption to what it calls attentional hijacking through social media. Evidence-based responses include mindfulness, cognitive restructuring, and sleep regulation — straightforward interventions, but the post is careful to ground each one.
Pip: Which connects neatly to how we talk about the people experiencing all this.
Language And Stigma In Mental Health
Mara: The question here is whether the words we use around diagnosis shape how we see the person — and the post on schizophrenia framing argues they do.
Pip: The post draws a clean line: "saying 'They are schizophrenic' may define the person by the diagnosis, while 'They have schizophrenia' separates the person from the condition."
Mara: What that means in practice is that word choice either fuses identity with illness or holds them apart — and that gap has real consequences for stigma and self-perception.
Pip: The companion post on labeling in mental health broadens this out considerably. It covers diagnostic labeling, cognitive labeling, and self-labeling — including how internalizing a label like "I'm broken" can calcify into a fixed identity rather than describing a current struggle.
Mara: Both posts land on the same point: labels can guide treatment and improve communication, but used carelessly, they reduce a whole person to a category. Context and individual preference — including the fact that some people reclaim identity-first language — matter throughout.
Pip: From how we label people to how people simply disappear on each other.
Communication Breakdowns And Social Perception
Pip: Ghosting is the post's subject, and it turns out there's more psychological architecture underneath a non-reply than most people assume.
Mara: The post on ghosting frames it clearly: "the behavior is often more about the ghoster's coping style than the worth of the person being ghosted." Avoidant attachment, conflict avoidance, shame, and digital dehumanization all feature as drivers.
Pip: The practical upshot is that silence is usually an answer — chasing it rarely produces closure.
Mara: A companion post on ghost movement explores a different angle: the perceptual experience of seeing something move when nothing did. It covers peripheral vision errors, hypervigilance, and pattern recognition in ambiguous environments — and also touches on phantom sensation in a neurological context and deceptive motion in martial arts.
Pip: Perception filling in gaps where information runs out — which is really what both posts are about, in different registers. Speaking of filling in gaps, the next segment goes deep.
Imagery, Perspective, And Helping Roles
Pip: Three posts here tackle how the mind simulates, reframes, and supports — starting with a form of mental practice most people have never named.
Mara: Kinesthetic imagery is the anchor. The post defines it as mental imagery where you feel a movement rather than just see it: "you internally simulate the sensations — muscle tension, balance, timing, weight, and motion." Athletes, the post notes, describe it as a ghost movement happening inside the body.
Pip: So the mind rehearses the body without the body moving — and because it activates actual motor planning pathways, the practice transfers.
Mara: The post lists applications from sports performance and skill acquisition to rehabilitation and reducing performance anxiety. The protocol it offers is simple: close your eyes, slow down, stay inside the sensation rather than watching from the outside.
Pip: That inside-versus-outside distinction is doing a lot of work. It's also essentially what perspective control is about — which vantage point you're operating from.
Mara: The perspective control post makes that explicit. It describes the ability to deliberately shift how you interpret a situation — not changing facts, but changing the lens. Core techniques include stepping into an observer stance, shifting time horizon, and reframing threat as challenge.
Pip: The post is careful to note that perspective control is adaptive interpretation, not self-deception — it works alongside accurate perception, not instead of it.
Mara: The third post in this group steps back to look at who does this kind of work professionally. The helping professions post maps the full landscape — psychology, medicine, education, social services, and coaching — describing each as emphasizing a different dimension of human experience, with significant overlap in practice.
Pip: The throughline across all three is deliberate engagement with how the mind works — whether that's simulating movement, choosing a viewpoint, or building a career around supporting someone else's functioning.
Mara: Anxiety as signal, language as structure, silence as communication, imagery as practice — these posts are all really asking how much of our experience is shaped by the frames we bring to it.
Pip: Which is either reassuring or a lot of responsibility, depending on your perspective. More next time.