Games

Game to Challenge Negative Interpretations

Flip the Script: A Game to Challenge Negative Interpretations

Your boss asks to see you in his office. Instant Thought: “I’m getting fired.” Your partner doesn’t text back for 2 hours. Instant Thought: “They are cheating on me.” Why does our brain always jump to the worst-case scenario? This is the Negativity Bias. It kept our ancestors alive (it’s better to mistake a stick […]

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Working Memory Training

Sharpen Your Mind: How Working Memory Training Can Boost Your Mood

Depression and Anxiety make us feel stupid. You walk into a room and forget why. You read the same paragraph three times. You struggle to follow a conversation. This isn’t because you are losing intelligence; it’s because your Working Memory is choked. Working Memory is like the RAM in your computer—it’s the mental scratchpad where

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Gamified Approach to Compassion

Building the Muscle of Self-Love: A Gamified Approach to Compassion

We are often our own worst enemies. If a friend failed a test, you would say, “It’s okay, you’ll get it next time.” But if you fail a test, you tell yourself, “I’m such an idiot. I always mess things up.” This is the Self-Compassion Gap. We treat ourselves with a harshness we would never

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Gamifying Relationship Repair Strategies

Fixing the Bond: Gamifying Relationship Repair Strategies

Dr. John Gottman, the world’s leading relationship researcher, studied thousands of couples in his “Love Lab.” He found something surprising. Happy couples fight just as much as unhappy couples. They argue about money, chores, and in-laws. The difference isn’t the fight. It’s the Repair. A “Repair Attempt” is any statement or action—silly or serious—that prevents

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Mastering Turn-Taking Skills

The Rhythm of Conversation: Mastering Turn-Taking Skills

Conversation isn’t just about words; it’s about Timing. It’s like jazz. If you come in too early, you interrupt the solo. If you come in too late, the energy dies. Some of us are “Interrupters” (often driven by ADHD or excitement)—we jump in before the sentence is finished because we are terrified we’ll forget our

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Spotting Positive Cues in Daily Life

Advanced Social Perception: Spotting Positive Cues in Daily Life

In the first version of Social Lens, we looked at single faces. But the real world is messier than that. You walk into a cafeteria, a meeting room, or a party. There is noise. There are 20 people moving around. Your anxiety screams, “Everyone is judging me!” But statistically, that is impossible. In any group,

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Retrain Your Social Brain with 'Social Lens'

Do You See Rejection? Retrain Your Social Brain with ‘Social Lens’

You send a text to a friend. They reply with just “Okay.” What is your immediate reaction? A) They are busy. B) They are mad at me. I did something wrong. They hate me. If you chose B, you likely have what psychologists call a Negative Interpretation Bias. Social Anxiety isn’t just about being shy.

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Waiting is Hard Practice Delayed Gratification with Delay Sprint

Waiting is Hard: Practice Delayed Gratification with Delay Sprint

If I offered you $100 right now, or $110 in a year, you’d probably take the $100. Who wants to wait a whole year for ten bucks? But what if I offered you $100 now, or $200 tomorrow? Suddenly, the math changes. Most people would wait. This constant internal negotiation is called Temporal Discounting. It’s

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Mastering Your Environment A Fast-Paced Stimulus Control Game

Mastering Your Environment: A Fast-Paced Stimulus Control Game

We tend to blame our character for our bad habits. “I’m just lazy.” “I have no discipline.” But often, the problem isn’t you. It’s your room. If you sleep with your phone on your pillow, you will check it. If you keep cookies on the counter, you will eat them. This isn’t weakness; it’s biology.

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Unlearn Addictive Triggers with Cue Extinction

Breaking the Link: How to Unlearn Addictive Triggers with Cue Extinction

Addiction isn’t just about the substance. It’s about the Cues. If you always smoked a cigarette with your morning coffee, eventually, the smell of coffee alone is enough to make your hands shake. If you always scrolled social media while lying in bed, the feeling of your pillow instantly triggers the urge to grab your

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GoNo-Go Chef Challenge

Reaction Time & Restraint: The Go/No-Go Chef Challenge

Have you ever said something rude, and then immediately covered your mouth? Have you ever hit “Send” on an email and instantly regretted it? That split-second failure is a failure of Response Inhibition. Your brain has a gas pedal (Go) and a brake pedal (No-Go). For many of us—especially those with ADHD or high stress—the

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