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Psychology
Why We Think the Rich Will Get Richer and the Poor Will Get Poorer: Understanding Regressive Bias
Seventeen-year-old Aditya loved cricket statistics. After every match, he’d predict how players would perform in the next game. His pattern was consistent: if a batsman scored 150 runs in one…
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Psychology
Why “New” Slang Words Have Actually Existed for Decades: The Recency Illusion
Mrs. Kapoor, an English teacher with twenty-five years of experience, was correcting essays when she came across a student using the word “literally” in an unexpected way: “I was literally…
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Psychology
Why Good Ideas Suddenly Seem Bad When They Come From People We Don’t Like
During the Class 10 student council elections at Delhi Public School, two candidatesโAditya and Rohanโwere competing for class president. They’d been rivals since Class 6, constantly trying to outdo each…
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Psychology
Why Being Told “Don’t Do That” Makes You Want to Do It Even More: Understanding Reactance
Fifteen-year-old Priya had never cared much about her older brother’s room. For years, she’d walked past it without a second thought. Then one day, her brother Arjun put a new…
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Psychology
Why We Play It Safe With Gains But Gamble to Avoid Losses: The Pseudocertainty Effect
Seventeen-year-old Rahul faced two scholarship offers for his college education. The first scholarship was guaranteed: โน2 lakh per year, confirmed for all four yearsโa certain โน8 lakh total. The second…
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Psychology
Why We Buy Gym Memberships We Never Use: The Projection Bias Trap
Sixteen-year-old Kavya made a classic mistake. She went grocery shopping on an empty stomach after fasting during Navratri. Walking through the aisles, everything looked delicious. She filled her cart with…
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Psychology
Why Every New Technology Seems Like It Will Change Everything (Until It Doesn’t)
In 2019, St. Joseph’s School in Mumbai made headlines by investing โน50 lakhs to provide tablets to every student in Classes 6-10. The principal announced enthusiastically: “This is revolutionary! Tablets…
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Psychology
Why We Convince Ourselves That Expensive Mistakes Were Actually Great Decisions
Seventeen-year-old Aditya had saved for eight months to buy a new smartphone. He’d researched extensively, comparing specs, reading reviews, and watching endless YouTube videos. Finally, he spent โน45,000 on a…
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Psychology
Why Your “One Hour” Project Always Takes Five: The Planning Fallacy That Fools Us All
Fifteen-year-old Rohan had four weeks to complete his Class 10 science project. On the first day, he sat down to plan. “Let me see,” he thought. “Research will take two…
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Psychology
Why Some People Always Expect the Worst: Understanding Pessimism Bias
Seventeen-year-old Ananya had always been an excellent student, consistently scoring above ninety percent in her exams. But as her Class 12 board exams approached, she became convinced she would fail…
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Psychology
Why We See Faces in Clouds and Hear Voices in Random Noise: The Brain’s Pattern-Finding Obsession
In a small town in Karnataka, a roadside food stall became an overnight pilgrimage site. A woman preparing dosa noticed that oil droplets on her tawa had formed a pattern…
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Psychology
Why Being 99% Sure Often Means Being 40% Wrong: The Overconfidence Trap
Aditya had won every school quiz competition for two years straight. His general knowledge was impressive, his recall was quick, and his confidence was unshakeable. When the district-level quiz finals…
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Psychology
Why We Judge Decisions by Results, Not by the Wisdom Behind Them: Understanding Outcome Bias
During the 2019 Cricket World Cup semi-final, New Zealand captain Kane Williamson won the toss and chose to field first against India. His reasoning was soundโthe pitch had moisture, conditions…
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Psychology
Why We Bury Our Heads in the Sand When Problems Appear: The Ostrich Effect
Seventeen-year-old Vikram had always been a good student, but in Class 11, he started struggling with physics. His first test score was disappointingโjust 45%. “I’ll do better next time,” he…
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Psychology
Why 90% of Drivers Think They’re Above Average: The Optimism Bias Trap
Sixteen-year-old Rohan had his Class 10 board exams in two months. His friends were creating study schedules, joining coaching classes, and spending evenings with their books. Rohan, however, remained relaxed.…
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