Silicon Canals

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08.06.2026 − 14.06.2026
Silicon Canals
Silicon Canals Editorial Team @ Silicon Canals 1 place · 06/12/2026 09:32 EDT

Most people don’t realise the loneliest stretch of adulthood often arrives in the early 50s, when the children have left, the parents are still here but smaller, and nobody in the house is being raised anymore

The empty-nest narrative ends too soon. The lonelier stretch comes after — in the early 50s, when nobody in the house is being raised anymore and the cognitive patterns of the next thirty years are quietly being set. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Lachlan Brown @ Silicon Canals · 02/09/2026 19:00 EDT

8 signs you appreciate art, music, and culture on a deeper level than most people

While others rush through galleries and concerts checking boxes, you're the one who loses track of time staring at a single brushstroke or hearing entire stories in three notes of music—and there's a profound reason why your brain processes creativity so differently. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
James Brennan @ Silicon Canals · 02/09/2026 17:00 EDT

8  signs you’re living below your potential (even though everyone thinks you’re doing fine)

You're checking all the boxes of success—steady job, nice apartment, impressed friends—yet something feels deeply off, like you're sleepwalking through a life meant for someone with half your abilities. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Sarah Mitchell @ Silicon Canals · 02/09/2026 15:00 EDT

Psychology says people who prefer texting to calling display these 9 rare personality strengths

While society often dismisses texters as antisocial or emotionally distant, groundbreaking psychological research reveals that your preference for written messages over phone calls may actually signal rare cognitive abilities and emotional strengths that most people completely miss. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
James Brennan @ Silicon Canals · 02/09/2026 13:00 EDT

The art of walking away: 8 signs it’s time to quit something everyone expects you to finish

After burning through eighteen months and more investor money than I care to admit, I discovered that the real failure isn't quitting—it's refusing to admit when something is already dead. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Lachlan Brown @ Silicon Canals · 02/09/2026 11:00 EDT

9 things the sharpest 80-year-olds did in their 60s that declining ones skipped

While most people assume cognitive decline is inevitable, researchers discovered that the sharpest 80-year-olds made surprisingly unconventional choices in their 60s that had nothing to do with crossword puzzles or brain games. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Sarah Mitchell @ Silicon Canals · 02/09/2026 09:00 EDT

If you instinctively hold elevator doors for people running to catch it, psychology says you display these 7 signs of emotional intelligence

That simple act of holding the elevator door open reveals a complex web of psychological traits that separate emotionally intelligent people from those who let the doors slide shut. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Sarah Mitchell @ Silicon Canals · 02/09/2026 07:00 EDT

8 spending habits that keep you looking rich but actually broke, according to financial advisors

Financial advisors reveal the shocking truth about why your seemingly successful friends are secretly living paycheck to paycheck, trapped in a cycle of designer bags, luxury car payments, and Instagram-worthy vacations they can't actually afford. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Christian Kelly @ Silicon Canals · 02/09/2026 05:00 EDT

Psychology says lower middle class retirees face these 8 challenges that wealthy retirees quietly avoid

While wealthy retirees sail into their golden years with multiple safety nets, psychology research reveals that lower middle-class retirees quietly battle a hidden epidemic of financial anxiety, identity loss, and the crushing fear of becoming a burden—challenges their affluent peers will never have to face. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Sarah Mitchell @ Silicon Canals 3 place · 02/09/2026 03:15 EDT

People who built things for a living usually see the world differently from people who worked behind a desk, and psychology says the difference matters more than you’d think

Research reveals that the type of work we do—whether crafting with our hands or strategizing behind screens—literally rewires our brains, creating vastly different approaches to problem-solving, stress, and even how we define a meaningful life. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
James Brennan @ Silicon Canals · 02/09/2026 03:00 EDT

7 things confident people never do on social media that insecure people post constantly

From humble-brags and vague complaints to relationship drama and endless motivational quotes, the most active social media users are often compensating for something deeper—while truly confident people are too busy living their lives to document every moment of them. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Sarah Mitchell @ Silicon Canals · 02/09/2026 01:00 EDT

7 signs someone is a narcissist pretending to be humble, according to psychologists

Behind their self-deprecating jokes and modest denials lies a carefully orchestrated performance—these masters of false humility have weaponized modesty itself to feed their endless need for admiration. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Sarah Mitchell @ Silicon Canals · 02/08/2026 23:00 EDT

7 things emotionally intelligent people never do in public (even when they’re upset)

While most of us have witnessed (or been) that person melting down in public, emotionally intelligent individuals follow an invisible playbook that keeps them composed even when their internal world is on fire. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Sarah Mitchell @ Silicon Canals · 02/08/2026 21:00 EDT

If you prefer these 8 “boring” activities over going out, you’re probably more intelligent than average

While society celebrates the extroverted party-goer, science reveals that those who genuinely prefer solitary puzzles, silent walks, and marathon reading sessions aren't antisocial—they're feeding their brains the complex stimulation that higher intelligence demands. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Christian Kelly @ Silicon Canals · 02/08/2026 19:00 EDT

I grew up in the 70s and didn’t realize these 8 childhood experiences were unusual until I talked to younger generations

From building secret dens in the woods to watching TV channels sign off at midnight with the national anthem, my "normal" 1970s childhood turns out to be an alien world to anyone born after the internet. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Lachlan Brown @ Silicon Canals · 02/08/2026 17:00 EDT

I tracked what actually made me happy after 60 and these 9 things surprised me completely

After six months of meticulously tracking every moment of genuine joy, I discovered that everything I'd been chasing for decades barely mattered — while the "time-wasting" activities I'd always dismissed turned out to be the real keys to happiness. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
James Brennan @ Silicon Canals · 02/08/2026 15:00 EDT

Quote of the Day: “Too many people spend money they haven’t earned to buy things they don’t want to impress people they don’t like”

This timeless wisdom about our spending habits reveals a truth so uncomfortable that most of us have lived it without realizing we were the stars of our own financial horror story. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Sarah Mitchell @ Silicon Canals · 02/08/2026 13:00 EDT

People who say thank you to service workers often have these 7 traits that are increasingly becoming rare

In a world where genuine human connection is becoming as rare as a handwritten letter, those who still look service workers in the eye and say "thank you" possess character traits that psychologists say are vanishing from modern society. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Sarah Mitchell @ Silicon Canals · 02/08/2026 11:00 EDT

Psychology says people who grew up without digital reminders often maintain these 9 internal memory systems

Before smartphones rewired our brains, an entire generation developed nine distinct mental superpowers that modern psychology is only now beginning to understand—and they might explain why your parents can still navigate without GPS while remembering every phone number they've ever dialed. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
James Brennan @ Silicon Canals · 02/08/2026 09:00 EDT

If you still take notes during phone calls, you’re unknowingly training your mind in these 7 ways

While everyone else frantically types away during calls, those still scribbling handwritten notes are secretly rewiring their brains for sharper focus, deeper listening, and memory that actually sticks—and neuroscience explains why this "outdated" habit might be your biggest competitive advantage. Read more ›

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Silicon Canals
Sarah Mitchell @ Silicon Canals · 02/08/2026 07:00 EDT

Psychology says older adults who value punctuality strongly often grew up with these 8 long lost values

The handwritten letters in my grandmother's desk drawer, each dated with military precision, revealed a secret about why she and her generation treated being five minutes early like a moral imperative—one that modern psychology is only now beginning to decode. Read more ›

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16.06.2026 11:32
Last update: 11:25 EDT.
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