Articles are where Psychdom publishes longer reads on psychology and relationships. Expect clear language, practical reflection, and evidence-informed ideas you can actually use.
How to Get Over Limerence When You Have Anxious Attachment
Limerence is an involuntary, consuming obsession with another person. Anxious attachment is the reason some people cannot get out of it. Understanding the connection is the beginning of the exit.
Enneagram Type 9: The Peacemaker
Enneagram Type 9s make everyone around them feel at ease. The quietly urgent question is whether anyone is doing the same for them — and whether they have even let themselves ask.
Enneagram Type 8: The Challenger
Enneagram Type 8s take up space, protect the people they love, and will not be controlled by anyone. The intensity is real. So is the tenderness they keep almost entirely out of sight.
Enneagram Type 7: The Enthusiast
Enneagram Type 7s are the most fun person in the room and the most restless. The hunger for experience is real. So is what they are running from.
Enneagram Type 6: The Loyalist
Enneagram Type 6s are the people who show up every time, who plan for every contingency, and who are quietly afraid almost constantly. The remarkable thing is how rarely that stops them.
Enneagram Type 5: The Investigator
Enneagram Type 5s retreat from the world to understand it, and then occasionally produce something that changes it entirely. Here is what drives The Investigator, what isolates them, and what they look like when they finally let someone in.
Enneagram Type 4: The Individualist Explained
Enneagram Type 4s feel everything more intensely than seems fair, and they would not give it up for anything. Here is what drives The Individualist, what undoes them, and what they look like when they finally come home to themselves.
Enneagram Type 3: The Achiever
Enneagram Type 3s are the ones who make it look effortless. But underneath the polish and the wins is a question they have been trying to answer since childhood: am I worth anything if I stop performing?
Enneagram Type 2: The Helper
Enneagram Type 2s are the people everyone leans on. But beneath all that warmth and giving is a need so quietly desperate it takes most Twos years to name it.
Enneagram Type 1: The Reformer
Enneagram Type 1s don't just want to do the right thing — they feel compelled to. Here's what drives The Perfectionist, what breaks them, and what they look like when they finally let go.
The Psychology of Meghan Markle’s Reinvention
Meghan Markle’s Sydney retreat is the perfect peg for a bigger cultural question: what happens when an older model of polished celebrity aspiration collides with a much more cynical public? This piece looks at Meghan, Harry, attachment theory, shame, status and the psychology of a marriage that increasingly feels less enchanted than strained.
Is It Love or Limerence? How to Tell the Difference
When feelings are obsessive, idealized, and strangely dependent on uncertainty, it can be hard to tell whether you are in love or in limerence. This guide breaks down the difference in plain English and helps you see what may really be driving the fixation.
Why Is MBTI So Popular if the Science Is Disputed?
MBTI is easy to mock and even easier to keep using. This article looks at the real history, the scientific criticism, and the deeper reason the framework became so culturally sticky anyway.
The Psychology of Margo’s Got Money Troubles: OnlyFans, Motherhood and Being Judged
A spoiler-heavy psychological reading of Rufi Thorpe's Margo's Got Money Troubles, from OnlyFans and money stress to motherhood, stigma, and the brutal politics of being judged. This is less a story about scandal than a story about what happens when female survival stops looking respectable.
Enneagram Types Explained Quickly
Curious about the Enneagram but do not want a long, abstract explanation? This quick guide breaks down each Enneagram type in plain English, with a short summary of each type’s core pattern, strengths, and blind spots.
The Psychology of: Flowers in the Attic
A psychological reading of Flowers in the Attic through trauma, family shame, coercive control, family systems, and maternal betrayal. Beneath the novel’s Gothic surface lies a study of childhood terror and the emotional distortions that take root in captivity.
Anxious Attachment vs Neuroticism: What’s the Difference?
Anxious attachment and high neuroticism can look almost identical in the moment. This guide explains the difference in plain English, shows where they overlap, and helps you figure out which lens fits better.
Celebrity Synastry: Lily Allen and David Harbour
Aries meets Taurus in a pairing that can feel electric and steady at once. Here is what Lily Allen and David Harbour’s synastry highlights about pacing, conflict cycles, and repair.
Big Five Personality Test: What Your OCEAN Score Means
You took the Big Five test. Now what? Here is how to read your OCEAN scores in plain English — what each trait actually means, what high and low scores reveal, and how your profile shows up in relationships and under stress.
Your Enneagram Stress Pattern in Love
Stress does not make you a different person. It makes you more protected. This guide shows how Enneagram stress patterns show up in love, why the same fights repeat, and the simple repair scripts that help you calm down and reconnect.