Applied Psychology

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Like any other psychology sub, except only post psychology things that are immediately usable. For example, see the posts in this sub.

You can edit titles to make the how to apply this psychology to your life more obvious.

Related:

https://lemmy.ca/c/lpt

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by ZafiraHUN@mander.xyz to c/appliedpsychology@mander.xyz
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I have experienced these 'blips' in the past and was deeply troubled by them, as I thought that they could indicate something serious going on.

While I don't suggest anyone to disregard any symptom that they consider to be potentially serious (read as: consult your doctor if you suspect something could be wrong), I have noticed throughout my life many different types of 'glitches' such as this one that turn out to be benign and common.

To me, learning about these effects is a form of applied psychology in the sense that understanding that these feelings are normal and usually benign can help prevent health anxiety.

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Due to vasodilation of the eye

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A critical well-sourced discussion about several of the statements presented in a book about sleep and health.

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When I'm mentally exhausted, like after work, I've noticed it's very easy to just collapse onto my bed and sleep.

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I've heard that a few people sleep better with this

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I'll try it out and see if it works for me

Reddit:

When you’re in bed with your eyes closed, roll them back as far as you can (it’s kind of a weird feeling to me). Hold them like that for several seconds, relax, repeat. The reason something so simple works is because your eyes roll back naturally when you’re really asleep in this fashion. Doing it deliberately signals the brain to release melatonin, which is one of our “sleep hormones” (and popular as a supplement to take at bedtime to help sleep). So there you have it. I just saved you 12 bucks. :D

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cross-posted from: https://mander.xyz/post/364730

Scishow psych is the only one I know of

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUdettijNYvLAm4AixZv4RA

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I couldn't understand the paper more, but it looks like it increases serotonin in our brains?

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So imo, you should also research the advice your dr gives you in case the wikipedia page was vandalized when she was reading it.

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Which means next day you'll be more tired

Alcohol is a sedative, which is sorta like knocking someone out via like fainting, rather then sleeping

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Caffeine + bright light (105 min) isn't significantly more effective than bright light alone (85 mins) or caffeine alone (85 mins)

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