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ഞാൻ ഒരു മാനേജർ ന്റെ അവസ്ഥ കഷ്ടം ആന്ന്, പഠിക്കണ മക്കൾ ഒക്കെ ഉണ്ട് പാവം... ന്നൊരു കൊളീഗ് നോട് പറഞ്ഞപ്പോ, ലൈൻ ല് 20k താഴെ ഉള്ള 12hr+ ജോലി ചെയ്യണ ആൾക്കാരൊക്കെ ഉണ്ടെന്ന് പറഞ്ഞു..
Sam@litlmissunflowr
സീനിയർ മാനേജർലെ ഒരു 60% നെ പിരിച്ചു വിട്ടു.. അടുത്ത ഞാൻ ആയിരിക്കും.
മലയാളം

@Com_Pattisaar @ThadiMeesha Entem undayilla. Njan pinne poyi add cheythu
English

@ThadiMeesha @soberjilli Ente perum listil undayirunnilla, check cheithit cherkkan apply cheithirunnu, 23 aan last date paranjath. 19 nu apply cheithirunnu, pakshe latest circular prakaram 15 vare apply cheithavare mathre consider cheyyu enn, bakki result vann kazhinj
Eesti

എന്തടിസ്ഥാനത്തിലാണ് പേര് കട്ട് ആക്കുന്നത്? ഇന്നേ വരെ കേരളം വിട്ടുപോലും പുറത്തേക്ക് പോകാത്ത, ഇതിനു മുന്നത്തെ എല്ലാ ഇലക്ഷനിലും വോട്ട് ചെയ്ത ആളാണ് :(
Messi@ThadiMeesha
ഇത്രേം വർഷം എന്റൊപ്പം വോട്ടയ്യാൻ കമ്പനിക്ക് വന്നോണ്ടിരുന്ന ഫ്രണ്ടിന്റെ പേര് ഇത്തവണ ലിസ്റ്റിൽ ഇല്ല 🥲
മലയാളം
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If you said yes to this, your brain runs on a completely different chemical than the person who asked. Extroverts get a chemical high from being around people. Introverts get that same high from being alone. And a brain scan can see which one you are.
Two chemicals matter here. Dopamine is the one that fires when you socialize and chase new experiences. Extroverts have a more active dopamine reward system, so being around people gives them a rush. Introverts are more sensitive to dopamine. The same party that charges up an extrovert can fry an introvert's circuits, like three espressos when you only needed one.
Introverts lean on a quieter chemical called acetylcholine. Same job as dopamine, makes you feel good, but it rewards the opposite behavior. Reading. Sitting with a hard problem for hours. When an introvert is alone and locked in, acetylcholine floods their pleasure centers. An afternoon at home with zero plans is their brain collecting the same reward an extrovert gets at a packed bar.
The physical wiring is different too. A 2010 study in the Journal of Neuroscience found introverts have thicker gray matter in the part of the brain that handles complex thinking and decision-making. Dr. Marti Olsen Laney's brain imaging work suggests information travels a longer path through an introvert's brain, routing through areas for empathy, memory, and self-reflection before a response forms. Extroverts take a shorter path through quick-reaction sensory areas. That's why introverts pause before answering and extroverts think out loud.
In 2001, neurologist Marcus Raichle discovered something weird. When you stop paying attention to the outside world, your brain doesn't go quiet. A whole different system switches on. He called it the default mode network. It handles daydreaming, replaying old memories, processing emotions, and planning ahead. Solitude is where this system does its best work. Stanford research found that walking by yourself boosts creative output by up to 60%.
Your brain treats chosen solitude and unwanted loneliness as completely different events, though. A 2003 UCLA study published in Science had people play a simple virtual ball-tossing game inside a brain scanner. When the other players stopped throwing them the ball, the brain's pain center lit up, the same region that fires when you stub your toe. Psychologist Naomi Eisenberger, who ran the study, traced it to evolution. Being separated from your group for most of human history meant you'd die.
Chronic loneliness does measurable damage. A 2020 Nature Communications study scanning about 40,000 people found it physically rewires brain connectivity, raises dementia risk by about 40%, floods the body with stress hormones, and wrecks sleep.
About 30-50% of the population is wired for solitude. Their brains run on acetylcholine rather than dopamine, and they build thicker gray matter in their thinking and planning regions. Enjoying a full day at home with no one around is just your brain collecting the reward it was built for.
luke✰@lukestaydipped
Serious question, do yall genuinely enjoy staying home all day, completely alone, without seeing anyone??
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