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Unseen Powers The Hidden Psychology Behind Human Behavior
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https://youtu.be/JNydCu7F1kM
Every decision we make feels like our own — but hidden forces are constantly shaping our thoughts and actions.
From subtle social pressure to deep-rooted psychological instincts, discover how unseen powers influence your everyday behavior without you even realizing it.
Explore the science of the subconscious mind, manipulation, and motivation in this eye-opening journey into human psychology.

Subscribe to News Plus Globe for more fascinating insights into the mysteries of the human mind.
#HumanBehavior #Psychology #MindScience #BehavioralPsychology #SubconsciousMind #MindControl #HiddenForces #SelfAwareness #Neuroscience #NewsPlusGlobe
Transcript
00:00Every day you wake up thinking you're in control, that you choose what to say, what to feel,
00:08what to believe, but the truth is, you're not as free as you think, because beneath your
00:13conscious mind, there are invisible forces, quiet, powerful, ancient, shaping everything
00:18you do. They decide who you trust, who you love, who you hate, what you chase, what you fear.
00:24They are not gods or fate, they are psychological currents, running silently beneath the surface
00:30of your thoughts, and every single human being is being moved by them.
00:38Psychologists once believed humans were rational, creatures of logic and reason, but science
00:42proved otherwise, we don't act from reason, we act from influence, we act from emotion,
00:47we act from the unseen programs written into our subconscious minds.
00:50And the first of these invisible forces is, conditioning. From birth, your brain has been
00:59trained to seek approval, to avoid pain, to follow the patterns that once kept you safe,
01:04even when they now keep you small, you think you're choosing, but you're following invisible
01:09rewards. Every time your phone pings, your brain releases dopamine, a small chemical hit that tells
01:16you, check again, that's not a choice, that's a leash made of pleasure, and it's not just technology,
01:22it's people, it's culture, it's every like, every smile, every nod that tells your brain,
01:30this is who you need to be to belong.
01:36Conditioning makes you predictable, it tells you to chase comfort, not truth, to repeat what feels
01:41familiar, not what feels right. Cognitive biases. Our brains, while incredibly complex, rely on
01:48shortcuts to process the vast amount of information we encounter every day. These shortcuts, or biases,
01:54help us make quick decisions, but they also skew our perception of reality. For instance, the
02:00confirmation bias leads us to favor information that supports our existing beliefs, blinding us to
02:05contrary evidence. These biases shape our views and actions without us even noticing, but what if I told
02:11you that the most significant forces shaping our behavior are often invisible, lurking beneath the
02:16surface of our conscious minds? It's a provocative idea, one that challenges our notions of autonomy
02:22and free will, but it's also deeply rooted in psychological science. If you're like most people,
02:28you think your individual tastes and opinions drive your choices and behaviors, you wear a certain
02:33jacket because you liked how it looked, you picked a particular career because you found it interesting,
02:37the notion that our choices are driven by our own personal thoughts and opinions is patently
02:42obvious, right? Wrong. Without our realizing it, other people's behavior has a huge influence on
02:48everything we do at every moment of our lives, from the mundane to the momentous. Even strangers have an
02:56impact on our judgments and decisions, our attitudes toward a welfare policy shift if we're told it is
03:01supported by Democrats versus Republicans, even though the policy is the same. But social influence doesn't
03:08just lead us to do the same things as others. In some cases, we imitate others around us, but in other
03:14cases, we avoid particular choices or behaviors because other people are doing them. We stop listening
03:20to a band because they go mainstream. We skip buying the minivan because we don't want to look like a
03:25soccer mom. By understanding how social influence works, we can decide when to resist and when to
03:30embrace it, and learn how we can use this knowledge to exercise more control over our own behavior.
03:36In Invisible Influence, Jonah Berger is consistently entertaining, applying science to real life in
03:41surprising ways and explaining research through narrative.
03:47The second force is social conformity. You think your opinions are your own, but the mind is built to
03:53mirror. In a group, humans synchronize, posture, tone, belief. We copy because isolation once meant
03:59death. To survive, you had to belong. Even now, your brain feels physical pain when you're socially
04:05rejected. That's why you agree when you want to say no. That's why you smile when you want to scream.
04:10That's why you hide your truth to protect your place in the tribe.
04:13You call it being polite, but it's fear-wearing manners.
04:22The third invisible force ego. You think your ego is vanity, but it's survival. It's the psychological
04:28armor your mind builds to protect you from shame. The ego will do anything to maintain its image,
04:33deny mistakes, blame others, rewrite memories, just to keep your story intact. You think you're being
04:39honest with yourself, but you're not. Every day you make approximately 35,000 decisions,
04:45what to wear, when to speak up in a meeting, whether to order takeout or cook dinner. Each choice feels
04:50like a conscious, deliberate act of free will. But what if powerful, invisible forces are silently
04:55orchestrating your decisions from behind the scenes? But what if I told you that the most significant
05:00forces shaping our behavior are often invisible, lurking beneath the surface of our conscious minds?
05:05It's a provocative idea, one that challenges our notions of autonomy and free will, but it's also
05:10deeply rooted in psychological science. That is exactly the case. Recent research in cognitive
05:15psychology, behavioral economics, and neuroscience has uncovered shocking evidence that our choices are
05:20far less autonomous than we believe. These hidden influences operate beneath our awareness,
05:26yet dramatically shape our daily lives.
05:28Your ego edits reality to protect your self-esteem, and the cost. You stop growing,
05:36because growth requires admitting you were wrong, and honestly, the ego just can't survive that.
05:42The communities and societies we grow up in lay down a set of unwritten rules that guide our actions.
05:47From a young age, we learn to navigate these norms, often subconsciously adjusting our behavior
05:52to fit in or to meet expectations. It's why you might dress a certain way at a wedding,
05:56or lower your voice in a library. These actions are not always conscious choices,
06:01but responses to the invisible social cues around us.
06:07Then there's cognitive bias, the quiet puppeteer behind every belief you defend.
06:12Your brain filters information not for truth, but really, for comfort. When you see something that
06:17challenges your worldview, your mind rejects it automatically. Confirmation bias, anchoring bias,
06:23self-serving bias, all designed to bend the world to match your story.
06:30You're not seeing reality, you're seeing your version of it, one carefully shaped by what your
06:34mind wants to be true. And then there's emotional memory. Every feeling you've ever had left a trace.
06:43When someone reminds you of a person who hurt you, your body reacts, faster than thought.
06:48It's not intuition, it's association. Your subconscious connects patterns, colors, tones, smells,
06:55gestures, naup, and debaterntinen. Trigestera triggers emotion before your conscious mind even
07:01knows why. That's why trauma repeats itself. That's why you keep attracting the same kind of people.
07:07That's why you get stuck in loops. Your emotions are not random. They're programmed responses.
07:12All these forces, conditioning, conformity, ego, bias, emotion, they move through you every day,
07:22unseen, unquestioned, and because they're invisible, you mistake them for yourself.
07:30But they're not you. They're scripts written by evolution, by culture, by experience. You just play
07:36the role. Until, you start to wake up. Awareness is the moment you stop being the puppet and, you know,
07:45actually see the strings. It's not easy. It means confronting just how much of your life has been
07:50lived on autopilot. But, awareness doesn't control you. It frees you. Because honestly, the second you
07:59see the force, it loses its power. That's how you begin to take your mind back. Every pause before reacting.
08:05Every question instead of just making an assumption. Every moment you say,
08:09this isn't me. This is my conditioning. That's freedom. That's consciousness.
08:17Human behavior looks simple from the outside. But inside, it's a web of biology, psychology,
08:23history, emotion. You can't control the invisible forces completely. But you can see them.
08:29You can understand them. And once you do, you can choose something greater.
08:35That's what awareness really is. Not perfection. But permission. Permission to stop reacting.
08:41And start directing. Because when you see the forces, you stop being moved by them. You start moving
08:47yourself. You are not just a product of your mind. You are the awareness behind it. And the more you
08:55understand what controls you, the more control you truly have. Mind scripted. Understand your mind.
09:04And you understand the world.
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