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Death by a Thousand Images
Death by a Thousand Images argues that trauma can be delivered visually through repetition. One image may not wound deeply, but thousands of distorted, degrading, fear-based, or comparison-driven images can erode coherence, dull dissonance, and retrain the nervous system through accumulation.
Mint Achanaiyakul
6 hours ago9 min read


Discovery of Microtrauma as Perceptual Distortion
Discovery of Microtrauma as Perceptual Distortion traces how subtle visual and symbolic wrongness revealed a form of trauma too small to register as catastrophe but too repetitive to remain harmless. It argues that repeated perceptual contradiction can dull dissonance, erode coherence, and retrain the nervous system to normalize distortion.
Mint Achanaiyakul
4 days ago5 min read


The Micro-Trauma Effect — How Repetition Erodes Consciousness
The Micro-Trauma Effect explains how repetition, contradiction, and symbolic injury can gradually erode emotional coherence without a single catastrophic event. Within Psychomedia, it reframes media repetition as a slow conditioning system that dulls dissonance, normalizes contradiction, and trains the nervous system to endure distortion rather than resolve it.
Mint Achanaiyakul
May 185 min read


Psychomedia 101: TAS Model
Psychomedia 101: TAS Model introduces the Trauma-Adaptive Spectrum as a public-facing explainer of how ADHD, OCD, and bipolar disorder can be understood as neighboring adaptive states shaped by trauma, language, reward, and media.
Mint Achanaiyakul
May 116 min read


The Trauma-Adaptive Spectrum Model
The Trauma-Adaptive Spectrum Model argues that ADHD, OCD, and bipolar disorder may be better understood as trauma-shaped adaptive states within one broader continuum of dysregulated prediction, reward, and control. By integrating trauma neurobiology, linguistic conditioning, and media psychology, TAS reframes mental illness as adaptation to chronic uncertainty and unsafe communication.
Mint Achanaiyakul
May 413 min read


Psychomedia Just Launched — and Why It Might Change Everything
Psychomedia isn’t a theory. It’s a field. It exists because the nervous system is being trained every day by media patterns it never consented to rehearse. Psychomedia is the psychology of media, trauma, and control — revealing how repetition becomes reflex, symbol becomes association, and narrative becomes belief.
Mint Achanaiyakul
Jan 272 min read


The Field of Psychomedia
Psychomedia unifies psychology and media into one field: the study of how language, image, and sound program the nervous system over time. It maps conditioning, trauma, and control as learnable patterns — and coherence as the path back.
Mint Achanaiyakul
Oct 27, 20254 min read
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