The clinical application of five-dimensional principles to mental health, proposing that many psychological disorders are actually branch-selection problems. Depression isn't a chemical imbalance; it's being stuck in probability branches where everything seems hopeless. Anxiety isn't excessive worry; it's hyperawareness of all the terrible branches that exist alongside this one. And imposter syndrome? That's just accurate perception of the branches where you actually are a fraud, combined with confusion about which branch you're currently occupying. Spacetime-probability psychology doesn't try to change your thoughts; it tries to help you shift to better probability branches, using techniques like "branch visualization," "probability anchoring," and "therapeutic branch-switching." The success rate is difficult to measure, as patients tend to remember only the branches where therapy worked.
Spacetime-Probability Psychology Example: "His spacetime-probability therapist diagnosed his anxiety as 'chronic branch-bleed'—he was too aware of all the terrible possibilities in adjacent probability branches. The treatment involved 'branch-focusing exercises' to help him stay anchored in less-terrifying coordinates. After six months, he was less anxious but deeply paranoid about the version of himself that was still anxious in another branch. The therapist considered this progress."
by Abzugal February 14, 2026
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