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What if Your Future Is Mapped by Your Words - The Good Men Project

Psychology study finds language changes when approaching a breakup

Without any end in sight : Digital journaling project records Americans mental shifts during pandemic

The Pandemic Journaling Project includes more than 6,500 entires from some 750 people. (Photos by Philip Keith and Desiree Rios | The New York Times) Katherine Mason (at left), an anthropologist at Brown University, established the Pandemic Journaling Project with Sarah Willen (at right), an anthropologist at the University of Connecticut. By Benedict Carey | The New York Times   | Feb. 17, 2021, 2:10 p.m. Right now. Right now feels like every other minute of the day, of the week, of the month. Right now feels like forever. … Right now feels so long and without any end in sight, without a change.” — Teacher and mother of four, in her 30s, from Massachusetts.

Right Now Feels So Long and Without Any End in Sight

‘Right Now Feels So Long and Without Any End in Sight’ More than 700 people have been keeping digital diaries as part of Pandemic Journaling Project. It may be the most complete record of our shifting moods in this isolating year. Credit.Andrea D Aquino Feb. 15, 2021 “Right now. Right now feels like every other minute of the day, of the week, of the month. Right now feels like forever. … Right now feels so long and without any end in sight, without a change.” — Teacher and mother of four, in her 30s, from Massachusetts. Those thoughts, typed into a digital journal on May 30, could stand as an anthem for this tragic pandemic year, a cry recognized around the world without explanation or context.

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