Emotional loneliness is a bigger risk factor than depression, heart disease, diabetes & stroke for cognitive decline

Emotional loneliness is a bigger risk factor than depression, heart disease, diabetes & stroke for cognitive decline according to research by Dr Catherine Whitehouse. She says society needs to talk openly about the value of emotional connection #MasseyGrad https://t.co/Li2VgokDs7 pic.twitter.com/EtwOuuUlpq — Massey University (@MasseyUni) December 10, 2019

Getting stuck in the negatives (and how to get unstuck)

Alison Ledgerwood joined the Department of Psychology at UC Davis in 2008 after completing her PhD in social psychology at New York University. She is interested in understanding how people think, and how they can think better. Her research, which is funded by the National Science Foundation, investigates how certain ways of thinking about an…

Confidentiality Policy

Better Blokes has adopted the Male Survivors Aotearoa Confidentilaity Policy. The purpose of the Policy is to ensure that any personal information relating to peer-workers and the male survivors they support or MSA trustees or advisors, which is private and not public knowledge or information that an individual has not consented to and/or would not…

The #MeToo Movement

http://bit.ly/2tEggPQ The origins of ‘Me Too’ date back to the late 1990s when activist Tarana Burke worked as a youth camp director. On her organisation’s website, Burke tells the origin story of ‘Me Too’, when a thirteen-year-old girl sought her out to share her experience of sexual abuse. Burke notes her difficulty in hearing the…

Why do we believe things that aren’t true? | Philip Fernbach | TEDxMileHigh

It seems like we’re living in an epidemic of false belief. Clearly the other side just doesn’t have all the facts, right? Or are they really that stupid? In this fascinating and hilarious talk, cognitive scientist Philip Fernbach peels back the layers of what we really know and reveals some surprising truths about the human…

We cannot achieve a gender-equitable world by ignoring half of its occupants

http://bit.ly/2SdR6BC “We cannot achieve a gender-equitable world by ignoring half of its occupants,” the report states. “It is crucial that boys and men be included in efforts to promote gender equality and empowerment.” For the past six years, a consortium of 15 countries led by the Bloomberg School of Public Health and World Health Organization…