🧠 NEUROSCIENCE: HOW THE BRAIN OF A CHRONIC LIAR WORKS

1. Reduced Gray Matter in the Prefrontal Cortex Research using MRI scans (e.g., Yang et al., British Journal of Psychiatry, 2005) found that habitual liars have less gray matter in the prefrontal cortex — the brain’s honesty and moral reasoning hub.👉 This means poorer impulse control, ethical judgment, and empathy regulation. 2. Overactive Reward Circuitry The nucleus accumbens and ventral tegmental area (VTA) — the brain’s reward… Read More 🧠 NEUROSCIENCE: HOW THE BRAIN OF A CHRONIC LIAR WORKS

🧠 Neuroscience: The Brain Under Threat

When someone lies — especially when the truth threatens their self-image — their brain enters a defensive survival mode. So, lies aren’t always planned — they can be neural self-preservation in action. 🧩 Psychology: Protecting the Ego From a psychological point of view, contradiction and story-changing often come from ego defense mechanisms: Mechanism What it means How it shows up Cognitive dissonance… Read More 🧠 Neuroscience: The Brain Under Threat

🧠 When Control Masquerades as Negotiation

The Neuroscience of Coercive Control After Divorce A year ago, I filed for divorce after thirty-two years together — twenty of them married. All I asked for was the bare minimum: the 50% that Spanish law entitles me to.I didn’t ask for hidden pensions, secret savings, or anything he’d spent years concealing.Just equality. Nothing more. His… Read More 🧠 When Control Masquerades as Negotiation

Freedom After Chaos: The Neuroscience of Peace in Solitude

Walking along the seafront, ice cream in hand, dog by my side — I watch the world in motion.Couples passing by with tired eyes.People at dinner tables scrolling through glowing screens.Lovers bickering between mouthfuls of food.And I realize — I don’t miss any of it. Not the tension, not the performance, not the quiet loneliness… Read More Freedom After Chaos: The Neuroscience of Peace in Solitude

Finding the Right Man: A Neuroscientific and Psychological Perspective

When it comes to love, it’s easy to get caught in the glitter of grand gestures, social approval, or fleeting attraction. But the man who truly matters is rarely the one who dazzles in public — he’s the one who builds safety, trust, and connection in the quiet, everyday moments. Modern psychology and neuroscience help… Read More Finding the Right Man: A Neuroscientific and Psychological Perspective

Detecting Hidden Violent Tendencies: What Psychologists Look For

Even when someone seems calm in public, experts can spot warning signs behind closed doors. These signs are subtle and often show up in behavior, speech, or even social media activity. 1. Neuroscience Clues 2. Psychological Red Flags 3. Behavioral Indicators in Interviews 4. Social Media Signals 5. Structured Assessments Psychologists may use validated tools to evaluate risk:… Read More Detecting Hidden Violent Tendencies: What Psychologists Look For

🧠 The Pathological Fusion of Love and Control

Understanding the Neuroscience of Possessive Abuse At first glance, people who commit intimate-partner violence often claim they acted out of love — that they “couldn’t bear to lose” their partner. But psychologists and neuroscientists know that what drives them isn’t love; it’s a pathological fusion of attachment and control — a wiring error deep within the emotional… Read More 🧠 The Pathological Fusion of Love and Control