The rise of PTSD
It has never been easier to talk about trauma. But does society’s openness have costs as well as benefits? Jesse Singal explores the best way to deal with distress
It has never been easier to talk about trauma. But does society’s openness have costs as well as benefits? Jesse Singal explores the best way to deal with distress
Many people feel like they are just waiting to be found out. Clancy Martin investigates the modern epidemic of impostor syndrome
An Insta-friendly assisted-dying “pod” is on standby to deliver its first patient to the afterlife. Mark Smith drops in for tea with its inventor
Half a century on from the summer of love, marijuana is big business and mindfulness a workplace routine. Nat Segnit asks how the movement found itself at the heart of capitalism
She is 24 and Instagram is her life, even though she sometimes wishes it wasn’t. But what happens when she meets a guy who doesn’t feel the same way about social media?
Aisha left her family to go and work for a stranger halfway across the world. Her employer, Moni Mohsin, tells her extraordinary story
Maggie Fergusson seeks out those beside themselves at being by themselves
In our June/July issue, Emily Bobrow examined a controversial idea: that having sons keeps couples together. Here two men with daughters reply
Data suggest that couples who have sons are more likely to stay together than those who don't. In this podcast, Emily Bobrow discusses whether fathers find it harder to parent daughters and whether having sons makes women more likely to stay in unhappy marriages
Data suggest that couples who have sons are more likely to stay together than those that don’t. Emily Bobrow looks into why this might be