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ABC Model and Tolerance Window: Understanding, Observing, and Regulating Your Emotional Responses
Article written in collaboration with @martinaorlando_psicologa Introduction: Why do we react like this? Understanding your emotional reactions is one of the most complex challenges in everyday life. Many people experience moments of hyperactivation or hyposatisfaction without being able to explain what "triggered” that response. In psychology, two theoretical and practical tools prove particularly useful for giving order to what happens inside us: the ABC model , initially p
Jan 215 min read


The Window of Tolerance: Understanding and Expanding Emotional Regulation Capacity
Article written in collaboration with @ martinaorlando_psicologa Introduction Emotional regulation represents one of the most central skills for psychological well-being. Over the past few decades, several neuroscientific models have helped clarify how humans manage stress, emotions, and relationships. Among these, the Window of Tolerance is today one of the most used concepts in contemporary psychotherapy to explain how the nervous system works in conditions of equilibrium o
Jan 95 min read


Lucid Dreams: Between Awareness, Emotional Regulation, and Scientific Research
Article written in collaboration with @_psicoparole What Are Lucid Dreams Lucid dreams are a phenomenon in which individuals become aware, while dreaming, that the experience they are living is in fact a dream. This particular form of awareness has been described in the scientific literature as a hybrid state combining cognitive processes typical of wakefulness with the vivid imagery of REM sleep. The first systematic experimental work on lucidity dates back to Stephen LaBerg
Dec 21, 20254 min read


The Persistence of Memory by Salvador Dalí (1931): A Journey Through Psychological Time, Neuroscience, and the Subconscious
Psychological Time: Elasticity, Perception, and Subjective Experience In his iconic painting The Persistence of Memory (1931), Salvador Dalí explores the fluid nature of time through his famous “soft watches.” This visual distortion corresponds closely to what cognitive psychology describes as psychological time , the time as it is perceived , not measured. Research on temporal perception shows that humans do not experience time as a stable, uniform line but as a highly vari
Dec 4, 20254 min read
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