Articles

lets talk about few hidden behaviors that shape who we think we are ( subconsious traps )

  Take a deep, slow breath, and let's begin our soft descent into the hidden behaviors that shape who we think we are. Mimicking without knowing, you never sat down and decided to become someone else. Yet slowly, invisibly, parts of you were overwritten. Not by force, but by exposure, by repetition, by the quiet pull of fitting in. And the most unnerving part is that it didn't feel like theft. It felt like adaptation. You mirrored the way others laughed, softened your voice in certain rooms, adjusted your posture without thinking, borrowed phrases from people you admired, wore emotions in the patterns you saw around you. And over time, the edges of your original self blurred until even you weren't sure which parts were authentically yours and which had been stitched together by the world around you. This isn't a flaw. It's how the human brain works. Psychologists call it social mimicry. a deeply embedded survival mechanism powered by mirror neurons that allow you t...