The difficulty of challenging our self-deceptions
We all need to challenge our in-built confirmation bias, the future - and our happiness - depends on it.
Kerri is a columnist, social commentator, mother of three, and author of 'The Little Book of Anxiety' and 'When My Husband Does the Dishes...'
We all need to challenge our in-built confirmation bias, the future - and our happiness - depends on it.
When people come back from the dead to eat your brains and make you go crazy.
It took Kerri Sackville three years to get the fridge door fixed, but who’s counting?
To paraphrase my great mate Jane Austen, a single woman in possession of a few more good years must be in search of a husband.
Let this imagined exchange highlight the precise agony of online dating.
As a person with anxiety, I should agonise over decision-making. In fact, I'm the opposite, writes Kerri Sackville.
There's nothing reality TV likes more than a vulnerable, sobbing woman.
We don't like it when people move away from their publicly stated opinions, writes Kerri Sackville.
Those of you out there who have left long term relationships will know: It is one of the hardest things in the world to do. The execution of a separation involves so many layers of disconnection – emotional, practical, domestic, often legal. It can take months to regain a semblance of equilibrium, and much, much longer to fully recover.
Women have the right to reject romantic partners. We have the absolute right to walk away from people.
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