Tag: gratitude

  • Thankful and Hopeful in Life

    Thankful and Hopeful in Life

    “You are not your pain. You are your power to rise above it.” – D. L. Dantes

    Introduction

    Life tests us in ways we do not expect. There are seasons when the weight of responsibility, disappointment, and uncertainty begins to distort how we see everything around us. In those moments, it is easy to believe that life itself has turned against us. What we often fail to notice is that hardship does not only come from what happens to us. It also comes from the meaning we attach to what happens, and from the way our own mind repeats the wound until it feels heavier than the event itself.

    Over time, I have come to understand that resilience does not begin when life becomes easier. It begins when we learn to see more clearly. A difficult moment can still be painful, and a burden can still be real, but perception determines whether the burden becomes a lesson or a prison. That is why gratitude and hope matter so much. They do not deny the reality of suffering. They help us refuse to become permanently shaped by it.

    Pain Begins in Perception

    One of the hardest truths in life is that not every struggle is created by the world outside of us. Much of what crushes us is intensified by the story we keep telling ourselves about what the hardship means. A setback can feel like failure. A rejection can feel like worthlessness. A period of uncertainty can feel like the collapse of purpose. Yet in many cases, the event is only part of the pain. The rest is created by the interpretation we allow to grow inside us unchecked.

    This does not mean pain is imaginary, and it does not mean people should simply think positively and move on. It means that inner discipline matters. Self-awareness matters. Reflection matters. If I do not examine my thoughts, then my thoughts begin to rule me. If I do not challenge the meaning I assign to a difficult season, I may carry a burden that has already ended. The mind can turn a hard chapter into a permanent identity. That is why growth begins when we learn to separate the event from the conclusion we drew from it.

    Adversity Can Become a Teacher

    There were moments in my own life when I looked at hardship only as interruption. I saw it as something standing between me and the person I was trying to become. With time, I began to see a different possibility. Some struggles are not only obstacles. Some struggles are instructors. They expose what is weak in us, what is immature in us, and what still needs to be developed if we are going to become more disciplined, more grounded, and more honest with ourselves.

    Resilience is built in this way. It is not something a person is born holding in perfect form. It is strengthened through repeated decisions. We become resilient when we continue to think clearly in pain, when we refuse to let bitterness become our personality, and when we choose to learn from the very experiences we once wanted to escape. Adversity is not good simply because it hurts. It becomes useful when it produces clarity, character, and a deeper understanding of who we are and who we still need to become.

    Gratitude Gives Suffering Direction

    Gratitude is often misunderstood. Many people treat it like a polite emotion reserved only for good days, answered prayers, or visible blessings. But gratitude becomes most powerful when life is difficult. It is easy to be thankful when the path is smooth. It is much harder, and much more transformative, to remain thankful when life feels uncertain. In those moments, gratitude becomes an act of inner strength. It reminds us that pain is not the whole story and that hardship has not erased everything worth valuing.

    When I practice gratitude in difficult seasons, I do not become blind to the struggle. I become less controlled by it. Gratitude helps me recover perspective. It reminds me that I am still learning, still breathing, still capable of rebuilding, still capable of becoming more than the moment that tried to break me. Hope begins there. Hope does not mean pretending everything is fine. It means recognizing that this chapter is not final. A grateful mind can still grieve, still struggle, and still carry weight, but it does so without surrendering its future.

    The strongest people are not those who never hurt. They are those who learn how to turn hurt into wisdom. Life will continue to test us, and there will always be moments that force us to confront ourselves in uncomfortable ways. Yet if we learn to carry gratitude through hardship, and if we refuse to let pain define our identity, then even our darkest seasons can become part of our transformation. To remain thankful and hopeful in life is not weakness. It is a disciplined refusal to let suffering have the final word.

    By D. L. Dantes, The Resilient Philosopher

  • The Greatest Gift Was Never the Thing

    The Greatest Gift Was Never the Thing

    The Resilient Philosopher | D. L. Dantes

    “The greatest gifts are rarely the ones you can wrap. They are the ones that change how you see life when you thought you were already seeing clearly.” – D. L. Dantes

    I Grew Up Without “Special Days,” So Every Gift Was a Surprise

    I’ve received great gifts throughout my life, and to pinpoint one would serve injustice to the last one. Growing up, I didn’t wait for special occasions for gifts because I was raised in a Jehovah’s Witness household that didn’t celebrate many of the usual days people associate with gift giving. Gifts didn’t arrive on a calendar. They arrived out of nowhere, which made them feel honest. Because I never expected them, I never built entitlement around them, and I learned to receive without turning it into a demand.

    My parents gave me great gifts, but the greatest part was not the object. It was the message underneath it: you matter, even when there is no occasion demanding proof. Later in life, I got to enjoy seeing the smile on my kids whenever I celebrated with them, their birthdays, my birthday, their mother’s birthday, and the birthdays of other family members. I kept those moments private because I never saw the need to share them with others. I enjoyed them as they were: intimate, small, and real, and that might be one of the greatest gifts in life, experiencing time with your family on special occasions privately, without performing the moment for an audience.

    The Birth of My Children Gave Me a New Standard for Meaning

    Being present at the birth of my son and both of my daughters gave me a new outlook on life. It made positivity feel less like a motivational slogan and more like a responsibility. When you don’t know your own mental health, life can feel normal simply because you don’t know what normal is supposed to be, and your interpretation of normal can vary by your surroundings, your habits, and what you learned to tolerate.

    But the first time I took medication for depression, something shifted. I understood the importance of mental health in a way I couldn’t fully understand before, not as an argument for medication or against it, but as a recognition that clarity matters. Depression can be temporary, it can recur, and it does not necessarily mean it is chronic. Even when it is chronic, people can find meaningful improvement through treatment, including therapy modalities like cognitive behavioral therapy. What matters is that a person has support, a plan, and the ability, or willingness, to change patterns that contributed to the circumstances of the fall.

    For me, medication helped, and I took medication for many years. Because I am bipolar as well, stability required more than willpower. It required learning my baseline, learning my warning signs, and building support systems with people who could alert me when my mood shifted in ways I might not notice in real time. Eventually, I reached a level where therapy and life structure became strong enough to help me manage depression beyond the earlier stage of survival.

    Stoicism Did Not Cure Me, But It Trained Me to Endure Without Lying to Myself

    One of the things that helped me with depression was studying Stoic philosophy. Not because Stoicism turns pain into nothing, but because it challenges the part of me that wants to make pain into destiny. Stoicism, at its best, doesn’t ask me to deny emotion. It asks me to stop surrendering my agency to emotion, and to take inventory of what is real instead of what is loud.

    It trained me to ask better questions: What is happening, objectively. What is my interpretation of it. What can I influence today. What must I accept without turning it into self hatred. That distinction mattered because it helped me separate suffering from identity, and it kept me from turning temporary darkness into permanent conclusions.

    Sharing My Ideas Became a Form of Healing

    One of the reasons I started working in leadership, promoting leadership, and teaching leadership is because I slowly noticed the benefits of sharing my ideas. Over time, that became my philosophy, my way of life, and my way of viewing life. I have never felt better mentally, physically, and emotionally because I get to share not only the beauty of life, but also the human side of life, where we are affected by daily issues and still have to keep going.

    It’s easy to feel depressed and interpret it as weakness, and the longer you carry that inside, the heavier life becomes. Eventually the emotional carriage breaks through, and that is when bad decisions can happen. That is why mental health awareness matters. If it’s not for you, it might be for a loved one. If not, it might be for a friend, and you might save a life without even realizing it by simply acknowledging people. A simple hello can break the ice into a conversation, soften a person’s day, and interrupt a spiral. Many people fall into depression not because they want attention, but because they feel unseen, like they are nothing, beyond nothing, and that mentality hits hardest when a person is most vulnerable.

    The Work Helped Me Name the Gift I Could Not Hold

    Doing the work I do through The Resilient Philosopher, writing books, and producing the podcast has helped me express my ideas, read them back, analyze them, and shape them into something useful. It has sharpened my view on life and deepened my commitment to finishing school, completing my bachelor’s degree in psychology, and pursuing the possibility of a master’s degree in industrial organizational psychology.

    Because this is not just about me feeling better. It is about understanding how people function, how organizations shape behavior, how systems influence mental health, and how leadership can become stewardship instead of performance.

    The Greatest Gift Was Life, But Love Taught Me What Life Was For

    We must accept that the greatest gift we can ever have is life, and for me that truth became more meaningful the longer I’ve been without my mother. The greatest memories I have of my mother were not lessons she lectured. They were her smile, a smile that still makes me feel better when I’m down.

    So I guess, in the end, the greatest gift that I’ve ever received has been the love of my mother and the love that I get from my children because it reminds me of her. Their smile. Their voice. And there’s not a day that goes by that I don’t miss her.

  • The Discipline of Gratitude: Why True Leaders Never Forget to Say Thank You

    The Discipline of Gratitude: Why True Leaders Never Forget to Say Thank You

    Daily writing prompt
    How do you express your gratitude?

    By D. León Dantes | The Resilient Philosopher | Vision LEON LLC


    Introduction

    Gratitude is more than polite habit—it is a philosophy that shapes how we lead, how we relate, and how we grow. In The Resilient Philosopher: The Prism of Reality (2025), I wrote:

    “Gratitude is the recognition that you did not arrive here alone.”

    In this article, I share why expressing gratitude is not just a social nicety, but a leadership practice that sustains relationships, fuels resilience, and grounds us in purpose.


    The Mirror of Appreciation

    When you pause to thank someone, you acknowledge their role in your life. You make visible what is often invisible: their sacrifices, encouragement, or patience.

    In Mastering the Self: The Resilient Mind Vol. 2 (2025), I called this The Mirror of Appreciation—a practice that reflects not only the value of others, but the humility of recognizing your own dependence on their support.

    Ways to hold up this mirror daily:

    • Speak gratitude aloud rather than assuming others already know
    • Be specific—share what someone’s actions meant to you
    • Write your gratitude in messages or notes they can revisit
    • Show appreciation through reciprocal support

    Leadership without gratitude becomes transactional. Leadership with gratitude becomes transformational.


    Gratitude as a Discipline

    Gratitude is easy when everything flows smoothly. The true discipline is expressing it during stress, conflict, or uncertainty.

    In Leadership Lessons from the Edge of Mental Health (2025), I explored how leaders often neglect appreciation because they mistake urgency for importance. But when you pause to acknowledge others, you create a culture of belonging and shared purpose.

    Practicing gratitude as a discipline means:

    • Thanking people even when results fall short
    • Expressing appreciation before correction
    • Recognizing effort, not just outcomes

    The Spiritual Dimension of Gratitude

    As a spiritualist, I see gratitude as an offering to something larger than myself. Whether you call it God, the universe, or collective consciousness, giving thanks becomes a way of aligning with a force beyond the ego.

    The Prism of Reality describes gratitude as the bridge between presence and legacy. When we honor those who help us, we create a legacy of respect that outlives any project or title.


    The Gratitude Reflection Exercise

    If you want to integrate this philosophy into your daily life, try this simple practice:

    Every evening, ask yourself:

    1. Who showed up for me today in small or large ways?
    2. What did I take for granted that deserves acknowledgment?
    3. How can I express gratitude in a tangible form tomorrow?

    By doing this, you train your mind to recognize the support structures that make your success possible.


    Conclusion: Gratitude as Leadership

    Gratitude is not weakness. It is strength. It is the discipline of staying connected to your humanity while pursuing growth.

    When you lead with gratitude, you create ripples of trust, loyalty, and resilience. You remind people that their efforts matter and that no contribution is too small to celebrate.

    As I wrote in The Resilient Philosopher:

    “Gratitude is the quiet force that holds communities together when ambition alone would tear them apart.”

    Stay resilient. Stay thankful. And never underestimate the power of a sincere thank you.


    Call to Action

    If this reflection resonates with you, I invite you to share it, subscribe, and become part of a community committed to conscious leadership.

    For more insights, you can find The Resilient Philosopher: The Prism of Reality and my other books on Amazon.


    References

    Dantes, D. L. (2025). The Resilient Philosopher: The Prism of Reality. Vision LEON LLC.
    Dantes, D. L. (2025). Mastering the Self: The Resilient Mind Vol. 2. Vision LEON LLC.
    Dantes, D. L. (2025). Leadership Lessons from the Edge of Mental Health. Vision LEON LLC.


    📌 Author & Resources

    D. León Dantes
    Author | Philosopher | Leadership Coach
    Founder of Vision LEON LLC
    Host of The Resilient Philosopher Podcast

    📘 Leadership Lessons from the Edge of Mental Health – Buy on Amazon

    📘 Leadership Lessons from the Edge of Mental Health – Listen on Audible

    📘 Mastering the Self: The Resilient Mind Vol. 2 – Buy on Amazon
    📘 The Resilient Philosopher: The Prism of Reality – Buy on Amazon

    📚 Amazon Author Page – D. León Dantes

    🎙️ The Resilient Philosopher Podcast – Listen on Spotify
    📰 The Resilient Philosopher Chronicles – Subscribe on Substack

    📬 LinkedIn Presence:
    Newsletter: The Resilient Philosopher
    The Resilient Philosopher – LinkedIn Page
    Showcase: D. León Dantes

  • Honoring Veterans and Families: A Year-Round Commitment

    Honoring Veterans and Families: A Year-Round Commitment

    The Resilient Philosopher

    Introduction

    There are moments in life when gratitude becomes more than a feeling. It becomes a quiet responsibility. A daily practice. A reminder that the freedoms we enjoy were shaped by hands that carried the weight of service so the rest of us could breathe freely. At Vision LEON LLC, I believe this recognition should never be limited to one holiday. Honoring veterans and military families is a timeless responsibility that belongs to every season.

    This reflection was written for every day of the year, because their sacrifice lives in every moment we live.


    The Quiet Strength That Protects A Nation

    When I think about the men and women who have served in the United States Armed Forces, I think about strength that does not need an audience. I think about courage that grows in the dark, far from praise or applause. I think about commitment that carries itself with humility and purpose.

    Their service reminds me of a truth I explore through The Resilient Philosopher. Real service is not loud. It is lived. It is felt. It is carried inside the spirit long after the uniform is folded and put away.

    And behind every veteran stands a family whose sacrifices often go unseen. These families live through long deployments, unanswered questions, and the silent ache of distance. They show a resilience that shapes the heartbeat of our nation. Their strength is not a secondary form of service. It is a pillar of its own.


    The Legacy Of Service And The Weight Of Freedom

    Freedom is not maintained by one moment in history. It is sustained by continuous acts of courage.
    From the front line to the home front, veterans and their families have carried a burden that many will never fully understand.

    To honor them is to recognize that freedom is not an abstract idea. It is a living legacy. It is shaped, protected, and preserved by those who endured what most of us never will.

    Every day presents an opportunity to show gratitude. Every day is a reminder that we are free not because the world is peaceful, but because someone was willing to stand between danger and the rest of us.


    Reflection Into Action: Honor Through Commitment

    Honoring veterans must become more than memory. It must become motion. Reflection must become action. Gratitude must become practice.

    Here are simple ways we can carry that responsibility:

    1. Thank a veteran personally.

    Not as a performance, but as a meaningful exchange between two human beings.

    2. Support veteran owned businesses.

    Economic empowerment strengthens dignity and community.

    3. Advocate for mental health resources.

    The battles some veterans face after service are often heavier than the ones they faced in uniform.

    4. Teach the next generation the truth about service.

    Service should never be glorified. Service should be honored. There is a difference.

    When gratitude becomes action, we elevate the meaning of service beyond a holiday. We make it a part of our culture. Our leadership. Our humanity.


    A Message To Veterans And Military Families: We See You

    At Vision LEON LLC, I build leadership around one core belief. Leadership must uplift. Service must empower. Gratitude must become a lived expression of our character.

    Every flag raised in freedom is held up by your sacrifice. Every breath of liberty we take is touched by your endurance. Every moment of peace we enjoy carries the echo of your courage.

    To every veteran and to every military family:
    We see you.
    We honor you.
    We thank you.
    Today. Tomorrow. And always.


    About Vision LEON LLC

    Vision LEON LLC is based in Tennessee. Through leadership, mental resilience, and servant leadership principles, we create content, training, books, and digital resources dedicated to strengthening individuals and communities. Our mission is to empower future generations with tools that uplift the mind, strengthen the spirit, and awaken the leader within.

  • Why Don’t We Smile Anymore? A Reflection from a Café Table

    Why Don’t We Smile Anymore? A Reflection from a Café Table

    By D. Leon Dantes
    The Resilient Philosopher | Vision LEON LLC

    Earlier today, I sat quietly at a café, sipping my coffee and watching the flow of people entering and leaving. Between thirty and fifty strangers passed through, yet only a handful smiled. Their faces were tired, burdened, hurried, or simply indifferent. Not one radiated the joy we often associate with being alive. And that led me to ask a deeply human question:

    Why don’t we smile anymore?

    Are we so worn by existence that we’ve forgotten the simplest act of gratitude—a smile?

    The Smile as a Symbol of Gratitude

    I’m not suggesting we fake happiness or deny the pain that life often brings. Nor am I minimizing the reality of mental health struggles. But in that moment, sitting among dozens of unsmiling strangers, a philosophical truth returned to me:

    Being alive is already a gift. A painful, imperfect, but beautiful gift.

    If life is so miserable, then why do we still fight to stay alive?

    The answer lies somewhere between biology and belief. We continue because something inside us still hopes. Still clings. Still sees purpose. But along the way, we forget that we don’t have to wait for a “perfect day” to smile. We don’t need a big win, a raise, a romantic moment, or a sunny vacation to earn joy. The mere fact that we are—that we breathe, feel, and grow—is already worthy of a smile.

    Emotional and Spiritual Growth Begins with Acceptance

    In The Resilient Philosopher: The Prism of Reality, I wrote that suffering is not the enemy of peace—it’s its teacher. Life will always bring challenges. It will always test our character, our relationships, and our dreams. But it also brings opportunity:

    • The chance to evolve emotionally.
    • The call to expand spiritually.
    • The sacred moment where we accept what is and begin to transform from within.

    Acceptance is not surrender—it’s the awakening of wisdom. And wisdom brings peace. Peace that isn’t dependent on external validation but rooted in an inner state of balance. And peace, when genuinely felt, invites a smile—not as performance, but as presence.

    If You Can Smile in Darkness, You Will Shine in Light

    I don’t wish to live in a delusional world where everyone smiles while their world crumbles inside. That’s not authenticity—it’s emotional denial. But I do believe in this truth:

    If we don’t learn to smile during hard times, we won’t know how to enjoy the good ones.

    If we can’t smile while walking through the storm, we’ll miss the sunrise. Resilience is not just surviving—it’s finding something beautiful even in the ugly.

    The Resilient Philosopher reminds us: Everything can be nothing, but nothing can’t be everything. If we reduce our lives to obligations, failures, and routines, we begin to disappear into nothing. But if we find meaning in our breath, our growth, and even our brokenness—everything becomes something.

    A Simple Challenge: Smile, Even If It Hurts

    Try this today:

    • Smile at the barista.
    • Smile at the stranger who looks lost in thought.
    • Smile at your own reflection, even if you don’t believe it yet.

    You’re alive. You’ve made it this far. That alone is reason enough to smile.

    Even if life doesn’t feel beautiful right now—smile as a declaration, not of denial, but of defiance. Defiance against despair. Against numbness. Against forgetting who you are.

    Final Thought

    Smiling isn’t just a reflection of happiness—it’s an act of gratitude. And gratitude is the beginning of all wisdom. So next time you’re sitting in a café, look around. And if no one’s smiling, be the first.

    You might just remind someone that life, even when hard, is still worth living.


    📚 Recommended Reading

    • The Resilient Philosopher: The Prism of Reality
    • Leadership Lessons from the Edge of Mental Health
    • Mastering the Self: The Resilient Mind Vol. 2

    🎙️ Listen to The Resilient Philosopher podcast for more reflections on leadership, emotional resilience, and the human experience.


    📌 Author & Resources

    D. León Dantes
    Author | Philosopher | Leadership Coach
    Founder of Vision LEON LLC
    Host of The Resilient Philosopher Podcast

    📘 Leadership Lessons from the Edge of Mental Health – Buy on Amazon

    📘 Leadership Lessons from the Edge of Mental Health – Listen on Audible

    📘 Mastering the Self: The Resilient Mind Vol. 2 – Buy on Amazon
    📘 The Resilient Philosopher: The Prism of Reality – Buy on Amazon

    📚 Amazon Author Page – D. León Dantes

    🎙️ The Resilient Philosopher Podcast – Listen on Spotify
    📰 The Resilient Philosopher Chronicles – Subscribe on Substack

    📬 LinkedIn Presence:
    Newsletter: The Resilient Philosopher
    The Resilient Philosopher – LinkedIn Page
    Showcase: D. León Dantes

  • Sanity Is a Spectrum: The New Psychology of Mental Health and Leadership

    Sanity Is a Spectrum: The New Psychology of Mental Health and Leadership

    By D. León Dantes | Vision LEON LLC | The Resilient Philosopher

    In 2025, psychology confirms what I’ve explored in The Resilient Philosopher and Leadership Lessons from the Edge of Mental Health: sanity is not a fixed label—it is a position on a spectrum of functionality. New studies have dismantled the myth that some people are simply “sane” while others are “broken.” The truth is, we are all operating with symptoms. The difference is in how we manage, lead, and relate to our inner chaos.


    1. The Scientific Shift: What the Research Now Proves

    Sanity Is Functionality, Not a Diagnosis

    A 2025 Danish study of 71,000 newborns revealed that vitamin D deficiency at birth increases the likelihood of schizophrenia, autism, and ADHD.

    Another study identified over 250 genes associated with OCD, many of which overlap with anxiety, anorexia, and depression.

    These findings prove that mental conditions are deeply biological, overlapping, and part of every human blueprint. What we once viewed as “abnormal” may just be another configuration of the human mind.

    “Mental health is not the absence of struggle—it is the discipline of navigating it with responsibility.”
    D. León Dantes, The Resilient Philosopher: The Prism of Reality (2025)


    2. Epigenetics, Environment, and the Power of Self-Leadership

    Studies in behavioral epigenetics show that trauma, abuse, and chronic stress alter how genes express themselves. Mental health isn’t just genetic—it’s responsive to experience.

    A new study also shows that a 30-day probiotic regimen can modestly improve daily mood, suggesting that gut health and emotional health are deeply intertwined.

    “The mind is a biological organism—but resilience is a chosen practice.”
    Leadership Lessons from the Edge of Mental Health: The Resilient Mind Vol. 1 (Dantes, 2024)


    3. Compassion Replaces Comparison: A New Framework for Leadership

    If everyone is somewhere on the spectrum, then judgment is self-deception. Looking down on another’s mental health struggle is often a projection of our own fears, our own fragments.

    Psychological leadership means recognizing that to be high-functioning is not to be cured—it is to be conscious.

    In digital health, 88% of users in one study had never sought therapy before. Most text-based therapy sessions occurred between 7 PM–5 AM—demonstrating a shift in when and how people seek emotional help.


    4. The Economics of Mental Diversity

    A new global study introduced the Global Personality Diversity Index, showing that personality diversity directly correlates with GDP performance. Countries with higher psychological diversity also demonstrated higher economic resilience.

    Likewise, gratitude in adolescents has been linked to lower rates of depression—a finding that supports the power of emotional intelligence and positive psychology.


    5. My Personal Reflection: The Lie of Being ‘Sane’

    To call yourself sane is to declare war on self-awareness. True sanity isn’t declared—it’s practiced.

    “You are not here to prove your stability. You are here to live honestly with your instability. That’s what makes you resilient.”
    The Resilient Philosopher

    When we stop chasing the label of “normal,” we begin the real work: integrating pain, discipline, compassion, and emotional intelligence.


    Explore These Works for Deeper Insight

    To navigate this new psychological reality, I invite you to read and share my books:

    Leadership Lessons from the Edge of Mental Health: The Resilient Mind Vol. 1

    Learn how trauma, stress, and leadership intersect—and how to lead yourself through breakdowns.

    The Resilient Philosopher: The Prism of Reality

    A philosophical guide to modern identity, resilience, and emotional sovereignty.

    And subscribe to my podcast:

    The Resilient Philosopher Podcast

    New episodes every Tuesday—on psychology, mental health, and leadership in a collapsing world.


    A Note from the Author

    As a philosopher who has lived through the chaos of the mind and emerged into disciplined clarity, I understand the importance of speaking on mental health with both courage and caution. This article integrates emerging research from the psychological community as of May 2025, alongside my lived experience and leadership framework.

    Every referenced study has been fact-checked and contextualized to avoid oversimplifying complex mental health topics. I acknowledge that while research highlights patterns and correlations, individual experiences are unique, and no spectrum model can fully define the human condition.

    This article does not serve as medical advice or diagnosis. Instead, it is a philosophical reflection rooted in resilience, psychology, and lived leadership. If you or someone you know is struggling, I urge you to seek guidance from licensed professionals.

    Leadership begins with awareness—and awareness begins by recognizing that we are all in this together.
    D. León Dantes


    References

    1. McGrath, J. J., et al. (2025). Convergent evidence linking neonatal vitamin D status and risk of mental disorders. The Lancet Psychiatry.
    2. International Obsessive Compulsive Disorder Foundation Genetics Collaborative. (2025). Genome-wide analyses identify 30 loci associated with obsessive-compulsive disorder. Nature Genetics.
    3. Johnson, K. V. A., & Steenbergen, L. (2025). Probiotics reduce negative mood over time: the value of daily self-reports in detecting effects. npj Mental Health Research.
    4. Huang, C., et al. (2025). The effect of the trajectories of adolescents’ gratitude on depression: The mediating role of self-esteem. The Journal of Positive Psychology.
    5. Arslan, R. C., et al. (2025). The economics of global personality diversity. arXiv preprint arXiv:2503.19388.