News

Retroactive jealousy, or a fixation with your partner’s exes, can hurt your relationship and mental health. Here are expert tips to overcome your insecurities.
Why do we feel jealous? A clinical psychologist explains the causes, common triggers, and easy ways to manage jealousy before ...
Retroactive jealousy is feeling envious of your partner’s past. It’s normal, but it can be harmful. Prioritize shifting your focus and being present in your current relationship.
You’re not petty for feeling jealous. Research shows humans experience it before they can crawl. Here’s what jealousy is telling you and five ways to handle it.
Understanding the intricate origins of jealousy is pivotal. Frequently, it arises from deep-seated insecurities, a fear of losing your affection, or past experiences that have left emotional wounds.
In fact, when it comes to jealousy, you could say she jumped out of the frying pan and into the fire. “I made every mistake possible when I shifted my own relational paradigm from monogamy to ...
Romantic Jealousy: This is perhaps the most familiar form of jealousy. It arises when we fear the loss of our romantic partner’s attention or affection. Insecurities, perceived threats, and past ...
Your jealousy is not allowing you to live the kind of life and create the kind of relationship you've always wanted. It might even be endangering your relationship and your well-being.
Jealousy has a way of turning small details into full-blown conspiracies. Suddenly your partner still following their ex on Instagram is undeniable proof they’re not over them.
You’re not petty for feeling jealous. Research shows humans experience it before they can crawl. Here’s what jealousy is telling you and five ways to handle it.
Except when we actually dig into it, jealousy is there to protect us.” Hamilton, who is an author and a relationship coach, has been studying jealousy for years.