How MVHS students are tackling the problem of eating disorders during a pandemic through the creation of a simple journal style app. By: ANgelina Alex Roopa Having to social distance because of the widespread fear of COVID-19 and unable to enjoy the “high school experience,” many of us were discontent with the pandemic and all … Continue reading The Road to Recovery During a Pandemic: Addressing Eating Disorders
Give Lucid Dreaming a Try
The science behind lucid dreaming and its positive impacts on metacognition and mental health
Avoiding Alzheimer’s
Can this neurodegenerative disorder can be fixed anytime soon? By Hira Sundar Imagine a world where you can’t trust even yourself — where everything is not as it seems — so you stay hypervigilant to combat the stress that torments your unsleeping mind. Imagine a world, dark and dim, where all you know is that … Continue reading Avoiding Alzheimer’s
Why Music Can be Orange and Make You Cry
By Ramya Chamkeri To Pharrell Williams, his song “Happy” has always been a jumble of reds and yellows and pinks. "[W]ell ... it's not red, it's more like orange,” Pharrell said. “But then it's a little pink, a little rainbow-y, because of the minor chords or whatever." His condition is called synesthesia, which according to Live … Continue reading Why Music Can be Orange and Make You Cry
Synesthesia: When Monday Sounds Bitter and Friday Smells Orange
By Shreya Parjan A bite of magenta, a whiff of chartreuse. Sensory whirlwinds where numbers breathe colors and violin music brushes softly across the ankles. Beyond mere poetic portrayals of commonplace occurrences, such transcendent, seemingly hallucinatory sensory experiences are all too real for individuals with synesthesia. From Ancient Greek syn, “together,” and aisthēsis, “sensation,” synesthesia is a … Continue reading Synesthesia: When Monday Sounds Bitter and Friday Smells Orange