If you find yourself packing four suitcases for a weekend trip "just in case" it snows in July, you might be experiencing this type of future-oriented, worry-heavy emotional state - though your therapist might just call it overthinking.
What is Anxiety?
This 6-letter word refers to the psychological organ you are trying to treat, though sometimes it feels like it's just a chaotic browser tab with 50 windows open at the same time.
What is the Mind?
This virtue is famously tested in a classic psychology study where children are left alone in a room and told they can have two treats if they can just resist eating one.
What is Patience? (Acceptable: Self-control / Delayed gratification)
Leaving someone "on read" triggers actual rejection centers in the brain, but teens often practice this behavioral coping mechanism where they wait exactly 14 minutes to reply so they don't look "desperate."
What is Playing hard to get?
Practicing this virtue by keeping a journal of things you appreciate has been shown to improve sleep and boost happiness, proving that mom was right about sending those thank-you notes.
What is Gratitude? (Acceptable: Thankfulness)
The psychologist who created psychoanalysis:
Sigmund Freud
While pop culture often uses this 3-letter acronym to describe someone who just really likes a clean room, it actually stands for a serious anxiety disorder involving obsessions and compulsions.
What is OCD (Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder)?
Practicing this virtue can be exhausting, considering psychology studies show the average person tells 1 to 2 lies a day - meaning your friend's "I'm 5 minutes away" text is mathematically a lie.
What is Honesty? (Acceptable: Truthfulness)
Because the teenage brain's prefrontal cortex is still developing, a breakup after a 3-day relationship can feel like a devastating, life-altering tragedy rather than what it is: a Tuesday.
What is Heartbreak? (Acceptable: Drama / Overreacting)
This virtue doesn't mean you lack fear; psychologically, it means your prefrontal cortex successfully overrode your amygdala’s screaming demand to run away and hide.
What is Courage? (Acceptable: Bravery)
This defense mechanism involves taking your own unacceptable feelings and pretending someone else has them - like insisting your coworker hates you, when secretly, you just can't stand their chewing.
Answer: What is Projection?
Named for the two extreme "poles" of mood, this disorder involves riding an emotional rollercoaster between intense, high-energy mania and very low depression.
What is Bipolar Disorder?
This selfless virtue involves helping others with no expectation of a reward, which actually releases "feel-good" chemicals in your own brain, making it the ultimate win-win.
What is Altruism? (Acceptable: Kindness / Generosity)
This classic psychological conflict occurs when your best friend gets a partner and suddenly you are relegated to holding their backpacks at the mall, testing your emotional regulation.
What is Jealousy? (Acceptable: Being a third wheel)
This virtue involves consciously letting go of resentment. It's notoriously difficult because human brains love to nurse a grudge like it's a prized pet.
What is Forgiveness?
Ivan Pavlov famously used this specific type of stimulus, like a bell, to make dogs drool. Today, it’s the exact sound your phone makes that instantly spikes your cortisol levels.
What is a Conditioned Stimulus?
Therapists love to help you explore this specific painful emotion, which occurs when you secretly want what someone else has - like their perfect vacation, or their ability to sleep 8 hours a night.
What is Jealousy (or Envy)?
To practice this understanding virtue, your brain utilizes "mirror neurons" to literally feel what someone else is going through, whether they are grieving a loss or stubbing their toe.
What is Empathy?
Psychologists use the term "halo effect" to explain why a teenager might believe their new crush is a flawless, poetic genius, completely ignoring the fact that they still can't fold their own laundry.
What is Infatuation? (Acceptable: Puppy love)
Psychologists use this "R-word" to describe the virtue of mental toughness - the ability to adapt to hardship and bounce back, rather than crumbling like a cheap lawn chair.
What is Resilience?
What resource do psychologists use to make diagnoses in clinical practice?
DSM-5
According to Freud, the human psyche is structured into these three parts:
id, ego, superego
People high in this modest virtue are less likely to brag, though psychology warns it can sometimes morph into "false modesty"—like complaining about how hard it is to park your brand-new sports car.
What is Humility? (Acceptable: Modesty)
This modern, obsessive human behavior involves scrolling through your crush’s ex’s cousin’s Instagram from 2019 to gather data - a technique your therapist might call "hyper-vigilance," but you call "research."
What is Stalking? (Acceptable: Cyberstalking / Deep-scrolling)
Upholding this virtue is a constant psychological battle against "confirmation bias," because our brains naturally prefer to ignore facts that prove us wrong.
What is Fairness? (Acceptable: Justice / Objectivity)