Since 2002, Psychologgy.com has explored the science of human behaviour — with an extra G for Guidance.
The extra G in Psychologgy stands for Guidance — the bridge between psychological knowledge and real human transformation.
It represents our belief that psychology should not remain locked inside textbooks, journals, and classrooms. It should guide people, institutions, professionals, learners, and societies toward better understanding, better care, and better decisions.
Read the full storyFor more than twenty years, Psychologgy.com has carried the spirit of psychology as a living discipline — not a trend, but a steady commitment to the science and the humanity of the mind.
Our story since 2002From everyday life to healing, history to research — each area has its own home, with what it holds and how to begin. Choose where to start.
A guided reading of the modern literature on stress, recovery, and post-traumatic growth — translated from journals into practical understanding.
A short history of the laboratory that started it all.
What anxiety is, why it exists, and how care works.
A curated reading list for the curious mind.
Psychologgy.com is built to help people understand behaviour, emotions, mental health, learning, relationships, society, and the future of human development.
Because psychology is not just about reading minds — it is about guiding lives, building healthier societies, and shaping a more compassionate future.
How intelligent systems learn from — and support — the human mind.
Care that reaches people wherever they are, responsibly and safely.
New methods, open science, and evidence that stands up to scrutiny.
Design that respects attention, wellbeing, and dignity.
Aligning psychology with the wellbeing of every community.
Turning understanding into fairer, kinder, healthier societies.
Not only in clinics and classrooms. Choose a corner of life, and we will meet you there — gently.
Dignified accounts of struggle, care, and recovery — shared with consent, told with respect, and never for spectacle.
Read the storiesRecovery was not a turning point. It was choosing to stay, one morning at a time.
Writing to him gave the long quiet somewhere to go.