Monthly Archives: April 2025

Psychology’s Small Stories and the Call of the Other: An Interview with David Goodman

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Ayurdhi Dhar interviews David Goodman about his vision for a psychology grounded in care for the other, the risks of psychotherapeutic standardization, and why humility—and even embarrassment—may be vital to human flourishing.
Pile of Scrabble letter blocks on wood background.

Lost in Psychobabble? Cut Through the Jargon for Real Mental Clarity

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The key to healing is to recognize that you are not dealing with a broken brain, but unlearning survival habits that no longer serve you.
Flat illustration of an anxios person holding their head with their hands.

A Reflection on “Unshrunk: A Story of Psychiatric Treatment Resistance”

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The act of diagnosis is so influential on a person’s sense of self that its limitations need to be repeated again and again and again.

The Curious Case of Empty Asylums and the Birth of Psychiatry

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Psychiatry has cut, burned, shocked, drugged, and subdued its way through history—leaving behind compliance, not cures.
Man on a white background reads the instructions for medicines. Male looks at the list and composition of the drug. The concept of home self-medication and the study of the properties of drugs

False Information in UK Package Inserts for Antidepressants About a Chemical Imbalance

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To state something that is blatantly false is not a “paradigm,” it is a lie, plain and simple.
Closeup of a researcher's blue-gloved hands counting money

Confessions of an Advertising Writer: How I Helped Pharma Sell Antidepressants

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As a former pharmaceutical ad writer, I not only witnessed the explosive growth in antidepressant drugs, I contributed to it.
Signpost showing many different directions

De-Meaning Psychotherapy: The New Psychiatric Critic

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I reject psychiatry. But I also reject the critic. In the final analysis psychiatric abolition must be a deeply personal act.