Dr. Pamela Ramirez, MD QueenNoble

341 posts

Dr. Pamela Ramirez, MD QueenNoble banner
Dr. Pamela Ramirez, MD QueenNoble

Dr. Pamela Ramirez, MD QueenNoble

@QueenNoble_

Dr. Pamela Ramirez, PsyD, PhD, MD, is a psychologist, psychiatrist, a PhD in human behavior, a book author and writer, and an established artist.

New York, NY Katılım Eylül 2017
74 Takip Edilen33 Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Dr. Pamela Ramirez, MD QueenNoble
This International Women’s Month is a reminder that honoring women is not just about words or a single month. It is about creating a world where girls grow up knowing their voices matter, their ideas matter, their safety matters, and their dreams matter. #women
Dr. Pamela Ramirez, MD QueenNoble tweet media
English
0
0
0
4
Dr. Pamela Ramirez, MD QueenNoble
Post sciprofiles.com/post/72251 via @SciProfiles Unleash the Brain Chemicals Like Powers Unlock Your Superhuman Power Dr. Pamela Ramirez, PsyD, MD Science has unveiled easy, tried ways of naturally releasing these brain chemicals. Easy habits, changes in routine, and new thought patterns can flip the brain’s internal switches, opening the way for focus, calm, motivation, or energy just in time. This book is your guide to those switches. You’ll learn how to: -How to Supercharge Your Dopamine and Use It Like a Superhuman -5 Power Moves to Increase Serotonin and Unlock Your Best Mood -How to Increase Oxytocin and Decrease Stress -How to Release Your Body’s Built-in Stress Relievers -5 Power Moves to Maximize Focus, Memory, and Problem-Solving -5 Sneaky Tricks to Increase Norepinephrine for Greater Focus and Aliveness -Incorporate them to create your own superhuman productivity flow state #MentalHealthMatters #science #psychology
Dr. Pamela Ramirez, MD QueenNoble tweet media
English
0
0
1
48
Dr. Pamela Ramirez, MD QueenNoble
I Never Thought a 6-Year-Old Would Ask This: One basic question asked by a child is enough to destroy the bedrock of what grown-ups believe they already understand By: Dr. Pamela Ramirez, PsyD, MD When my 6-year-old daughter asked me, “If there is Earth and outer space in our universe, then what’s outside the universe? “ she wasn’t quizzing me on astronomy. She was asking about existence itself. This article explores how a child’s question can awaken forgotten parts of our consciousness, reconnect us to curiosity, and reveal the psychological bridge between science and the human mind. I’ll cover the answer I gave her below. The Question That Shook My Certainty Kids can pose questions that grown-ups no longer have the guts to ask. My daughter’s voice rang out in the still room as she gazed at the night sky. “If space has no ending, what is there beyond it?” Her eyes were wide open, but not with fear, just with curiosity. In that instant, I understood she was articulating what each human mind had ever queried before existence educated us to not seek any more. The question she asked me is one of the deepest questions anyone can ask, and honestly, even the most sophisticated scientists, philosophers, and religious thinkers acknowledge we don’t know yet. But there are a few interesting viewpoints that can assist you in considering what could exist after the universe, and here is what I explained to her: 1. The Scientific View: Nothing or Everything Expanding Forever In contemporary cosmology, everything that exists is the universe: all space, time, matter, and energy. So technically, there’s nothing outside it because “outside” suggests a space beyond space itself. But some scientists suggest the multiverse theory, the theory that our universe is just one bubble in a huge cosmic foam. If that’s correct, “after” or “outside” our universe might be another universe, subject to entirely different laws of physics. 2. The Philosophical Perspective: Beyond Space and Time Philosophically, the question “what’s after the universe?” may not be pointing to a location but to the state of being. After you take away time and space, what is left behind may be pure consciousness or boundless potential. Some philosophers propose that the universe could be the “body” of something larger, such as an ocean with infinite waves. Every universe could just be one wave rising and falling in the infinite. 3. The Spiritual Perspective: Return to Source Most spiritual faiths maintain that the universe is not infinite matter but infinite mind. According to this perspective, everything ultimately returns to the “Source”. God, the Absolute, or universal consciousness, as some call it. What follows the universe, then, is not annihilation but reunion with the intelligence that brought it into being. 4. The Psychological Perspective: The Human Mind Reflects the Universe From a psychological and philosophical standpoint, the question “what is next after the universe?” reflects a human desire for meaning beyond the horizon. The mind chafes against infinite ideas because it’s programmed for patterns and closure. But it is that same discomfort that fuels creativity, innovation, and spiritual expansion. By questioning what is outside of everything, we stir up the same curiosity that propels science ahead and infuses art with life. 5. The Honest Answer: The Question Itself Is the Door Occasionally, the objective isn’t to arrive at an answer but to remain in wonder. The instant we inquire about what exists after the universe, we’re already outgrowing it intellectually, affectively, and spiritually. Curiosity itself could be the “after.” The universe may exist within our consciousness as much as we exist within the universe. Why Our Brains Fear The Infinite Psychologically, the brain rebels against the infinite because it lives on patterns and closure. Not knowing triggers the limbic system, the same region of the brain associated with threat detection. But when the mind is taught to read vastness not as chaos but as possibility, the prefrontal cortex intervenes, soothing emotional overreaction. Science refers to this as “cognitive reframing,” but philosophy refers to it as awakening. When we cease resisting what we can’t define, we shift from survival mentality to conscious expansion. The unknown ceases to be frightening. It’s a reflection of our own inner space. The Science Of Wonder Research in neuropsychology demonstrates that curiosity triggers dopamine pathways, enhancing memory, concentration, and mood. But more than brain chemistry, there’s something profoundly spiritual about curiosity. It expands what we know as real. When we use our sense of awe, we rewire how we see time, fear, and meaning. Children do this by nature. They inquire, investigate, fantasize, and recreate whole universes in their heads. Adults, weighed down by control and timetables, tend to stifle that same neuroplasticity. But each inquiry, such as my daughter’s, is a neurological burst of energy, a time when new circuits can establish themselves, both scientifically and spiritually. What Lies Beyond Outer Space Perhaps nothing. Perhaps everything. Perhaps what’s beyond the universe isn’t a location but a dimension of consciousness we’ve yet to approach. What’s more important than the answer is the question. Questioning is the mind’s meditation. It keeps us alive within. I gazed at my daughter one evening and told her, “Perhaps beyond the universe is another question for us.” She smiled and nodded as if she already understood. That’s when I realized that mental health isn’t merely about surviving or equilibrium. It’s about learning how to marvel once more. The day we cease questioning what lies beyond the universe is the day we cease growing within ourselves. Photo by Arnaud Mariat on Unsplash #universe #philosophy #science #story #life
Dr. Pamela Ramirez, MD QueenNoble tweet media
English
0
0
0
27
Dr. Pamela Ramirez, MD QueenNoble
False News: The Era of Concealed Truth In Medias What to do when you don’t know what to believe anymore A psychiatrist explores how truth, confusion, and media manipulation impact mental health and what it takes to build real resilience in the digital age. Learn the science of calm, clarity, and cognitive strength. medium.com/activated-thin… #NEWS #media
Dr. Pamela Ramirez, MD QueenNoble tweet media
English
0
0
0
12