Quote of the Day
803200269460619264
Gaslighting: Signs and Tips to Manage
“Gaslighting often involves a loss of personal identity. Over time, you may begin to feel like you’ve changed beyond recognition or become numb and hollow. Living in a constant state of nervousness and worry can leave you with little energy for self-care or your own interests. Yet making time to meet your physical and emotional needs can help you reclaim your energy and hold on to your sense of self. As a result, you may even find it easier to navigate and challenge attempts to gaslight you.”
803167683627663360
“Deceiving yourself shouldn’t make logical sense. After all, lying involves telling someone something you know to be untrue. When you are both the liar and one lied to, this means you have to both know the truth and not know the truth. In practice, that means willfully disregarding key knowledge to arrive at a conclusion that is more convenient than what the facts appear to suggest.”
803167727444459520
“Wanting to be someone else is a waste of who you are.”
– Kurt Cobain
803099849422716928
803059226284032000
“Don’t support the phonies, support the real.”
— 2Pac
803036051548618752
The Male Ego: Definition, Causes, Tips, and More
“The male ego can in some cases be tied to how and where a man sees his place in the world and whether he’s living up to expectations — his and those of society.
Cultural stereotypes for men can be intricately tied to both the inflation and deflation of the male ego. Some men measure themselves by the answers to the following questions:
Am I strong enough? Am I wealthy enough? Do I meet the traditional definition of masculinity? Do I attract women? Do I control things or people? Do people recognize me for these things and am I respected and revered for them?”
803035681773568000
“Insecure people put others down to raise themselves up.”
— Habeeb Akande
803035735321116672
Why Do People Bully? The Scientific Reasons
“In a recent Ditch the Label study, we spoke to 7,347 people about bullying. We asked respondents to define bullying and then later asked if, based on their own definition, they had ever bullied anybody. 14% of our overall sample, so that’s 1,239 people, said yes. What we then did was something that had never been done on this scale before; we asked them intimate questions about their lives, exploring things like stress and trauma, home lives, relationships and how they feel about themselves.”
803034539057397760
The dopamine, the deceitful dopamine, gives them a false sense of value.
— Soroosh Shahrivar
803034351954690048
“The difference between an artist who finds sales and someone like Vincent van Gogh, who never did, is that van Gogh quietly changed the world—while others simply passed through it.”
803034176202964992
In our culture, external validation is valued over internal satisfaction.
803003073892106240
Future of Art
The future of art is likely to be less about what tools are used and more about why someone chooses to make something at all.
Technology will keep expanding the surface of art. Digital tools, AI, mixed reality, and new display formats will make creating and sharing work easier and faster. But ease has a side effect: when almost anyone can generate images instantly, the value shifts away from novelty and toward intention. What begins to matter is not how impressive the output looks, but whether it carries a point of view.
Art will continue moving away from markets and institutions as the main judges of meaning. Many artists will work quietly, outside galleries, posting, archiving, or simply making without an audience in mind. This doesn’t reduce art’s importance; it returns it to something closer to personal necessity. As Marcel Duchamp once said, “Art is not what you see, but what you make others see” — Marcel Duchamp.
Handmade and slow processes will not disappear. In fact, they may feel more meaningful precisely because they resist speed. Painting, drawing, and physical materials will coexist with digital work, not in competition but as different ways of thinking. Choosing a medium will be an ethical or emotional decision, not a technical one.
Meaning, not perfection, will become the center. Viewers will be less impressed by polish and more attentive to honesty. Work that feels lived-in, uncertain, or incomplete may resonate more than finished statements. In a noisy world, quiet clarity becomes powerful.
Ultimately, the future of art is human. No matter how advanced tools become, art will still be a way to sit with questions, to notice small things, and to leave traces of thought behind. As long as people feel the need to reflect, resist, or simply pay attention, art will continue, just in forms we haven’t fully named yet.
By ChatGPT
