OmLumi

Omniaware · Omnihumane · Omniluminous

Articles View all
MIND SCIENCE
Does Meditation Rewire Your Brain? What the Neuroscience Actually Shows
You have probably seen a headline claiming meditation rewires your brain in eight weeks, and another one a year later saying it does not change the brain at all. Both came from real studies. The confusion is not the science going wrong. It is that rewiring means very different things depending on what you measure and when.
MIND SCIENCE
How Does Meditation Reduce Pain? The Neuroscience, Explained
Meditation does not block pain signals. It changes how the brain constructs the experience of suffering from those signals. Here is what the research actually shows.
PSYCHOLOGY
Is Everyone Anxious Now, or Have We Changed What Anxiety Means?
Anxiety diagnoses have increased by over 25% globally since 2020. That number is cited constantly, almost always as evidence of a crisis. It may well be one. But embedded in that statistic is a question that rarely gets asked directly: are more people genuinely ill, or have we quietly moved the line for what counts as illness?
PSYCHOLOGY
Am I Depressed or Just Lazy? Why Can't I Make Myself Do Anything?
You have not answered emails in three days. The dishes are piling up. You know what needs doing and you cannot make yourself start. Before you conclude that the problem is laziness, consider the clinical picture: the inability to initiate tasks is one of the most consistently reported symptoms of depression, and it has nothing to do with willpower or character.
Guides View all
PSYCHOLOGY
What Is Asperger's Syndrome and High-Intellect Neurodivergent Profiles?
Asperger's syndrome was removed from the DSM in 2013 and merged into autism spectrum disorder. Many people still use the term, and for good reason: the profiles it described are real, even if the label changed. This guide explains what happened to the diagnosis, why high-intellect neurodivergent presentations are so often missed, and where concepts like twice-exceptional, savant syndrome, NVLD, and PDA sit in the current picture.
PSYCHOLOGY
Dissociation Explained: Clinical Diagnosis vs Everyday Experience
The word dissociation appears in clinical psychiatry, trauma therapy, psychology research, and everyday conversation, often with very different meanings. Clinically, it refers to a disruption in the normal integration of consciousness, memory, identity, emotion, or perception. In everyday use, it often describes zoning out, spacing out, or feeling mentally disconnected. This guide explains what dissociation means at each level, sets out the five dissociative disorders in DSM-5, and examines how dissociation manifests in trauma, PTSD, and high-stress roles such as healthcare work.
PSYCHOLOGY
Empath and HSP Explained: What the Science Actually Says
The word empath is widely used but has no clinical definition. The nearest scientific equivalent is the highly sensitive person, a validated research construct describing roughly 15 to 20 percent of the population. This guide explains the difference, traces the path from high sensitivity to empathic distress, and looks at why healthcare and helping-profession workers with these traits are at elevated risk of burnout.
PSYCHOLOGY
Millennial Mental Health: The Psychology of a Generation Under Pressure
Millennials (born 1981 to 1996) came of age during the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression, graduated into record student debt, experienced a global pandemic at their financial peak, and face housing markets that have priced out a generation. This guide looks at what the research says about the mental health consequences of growing up through structural crisis and why the psychological responses are rational, not signs of weakness.