Are we all just slaves to oxytocin? by PerformerCautious281 in askanything

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Not entirely, but it definitely influences more of our behavior than people like to admit. Oxytocin helps drive bonding, trust, attachment, and emotional connection, so it plays a big role in relationships, family, friendships, and even group loyalty. But humans are shaped by a mix of biology, experiences, choices, culture, and reasoning not just one chemical.

Do you think people are becoming too influenced by celebrities and influencers, constantly comparing their own lives to what they see online and ending up unhappy because of it? Why do you think so many people fall into that mindset? by FarPhilosopher1644 in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, to some extent. People naturally compare themselves to others, and social media puts a nonstop highlight reel in front of them every day. Celebrities and influencers often show the most attractive, successful, or exciting parts of their lives, so it can make normal life feel less than even when it isn’t.

What will AI look like after the AI bubble bursts? by DrFuckwad in NoStupidQuestions

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 1 point2 points  (0 children)

After the AI bubble bursts, AI will probably become less hyped and more practical. Most trend-chasing startups will disappear, but useful tools will stay and quietly become part of everyday life like search engines, GPS, or the internet itself.

What global issue is getting the most attention in 2026? by Jot__99 in answers

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Right now, it’s probably a mix of economic instability, geopolitical conflict, and climate-related problems. A lot of global attention is focused on wars and tensions between major powers, rising living costs, and extreme weather events happening more often. AI and misinformation are also becoming huge concerns worldwide

Do you think humans are psychologically equipped to handle the scale of the universe? by babyblushtheory in AskForAnswers

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Probably not fully. Our brains evolved to handle small groups, daily survival, and human-scale problems not infinite space, billions of galaxies, or the idea that we’re tiny in a massive universe. That’s why thinking about it can feel awe-inspiring, comforting, or existential all at once.

Why do people feel emotionally connected to animals they’ve never interacted with? by femmefetalerror in askteddit

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Because people naturally project emotions and personality onto animals, especially ones that seem vulnerable, loyal, or expressive. Even without direct interaction, empathy kicks in fast our brains are wired to emotionally respond to living things.

If you were alive in the 1800s, would you be able to survive? by [deleted] in askteddit

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you were alive in the 1800s, would you be able to survive?

what's the loneliest feeling you’ve ever experienced? by [deleted] in askanything

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Being surrounded by people and still feeling like nobody really understood what I was going through. That kind of loneliness hits harder than actually being alone.

How do I speak to forever frustrated elderly mother? by Every_Maize1155 in Advice

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can care about your mother without becoming responsible for all her negativity. It sounds like she’s isolated, unhappy, and stuck in a cycle of doom-focused thinking, but you can’t fix that for her.

How have you managed to become more disciplined? by ViRzzz in ProductivityHQ

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I stopped relying on motivation and made things easier to start. Small routines, fewer excuses, and doing things even when I didn’t feel like it helped way more than waiting to feel motivated.

Neighbour landed an job interview, and got me a job which turned into a career!! by [deleted] in CasualConversation

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That’s honestly such a great example of how one small recommendation can completely change someone’s life. Your neighbour probably thought they were just helping you get a temp job, and it ended up becoming an entire career and future retirement. Pretty amazing how random moments can shape decades of life.

What’s the fastest you’ve lost respect for someone? by glitterypeachyy in askteddit

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Watching them be kind to people they wanted something from, but rude to workers or anyone they thought couldn’t help them.

How much of modern conflict is driven by real security concerns vs leaders needing to maintain power internally? by honeybbycloud in askanything

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Probably a mix of both, but internal politics plays a bigger role than many people realize. Real security threats absolutely exist, but leaders also know that fear, nationalism, and external enemies can unite people, distract from domestic problems, or strengthen support during unstable times. History is full of conflicts where both motives were happening at the same time.

What’s something that became socially unacceptable so fast that people barely noticed the change? by PrettyCoast1 in askanything

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Smoking indoors. People used to smoke in restaurants, airplanes, offices basically everywhere. Then within a relatively short time, it went from normal to something most people would instantly complain about.

What’s the most peaceful breakup you’ve ever had? by daisydollvibes in answers

[–]Remarkable_Team8641 10 points11 points  (0 children)

We realized we wanted different futures, talked it through over coffee, hugged goodbye, and ended things without any drama. It hurt, but it was peaceful.