The people who ask ‘are you mad at me?’ weren’t anxious children. They were children who learned to read a room before they learned to read a book.

The people who ask ‘are you mad at me?’ weren’t anxious children. They were children who learned to read a room before they learned to read a book.

Summary

The adults who ask 'are you mad at me?' too often are usually carrying a childhood skill they were never thanked for. Research on hypervigilance, attachment, an...

Description

The adults who ask 'are you mad at me?' too often are usually carrying a childhood skill they were never thanked for. Research on hypervigilance, attachment, an...

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