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Your Coaches

In MyCuraJOY, coachs are our resident 3D embodied agents with advanced Natural Language Processing capabilities that converse with participants and teach via the Socratic method.  Each coach contains a wealth of social-emotional learning content, cognitive behavior techniques, but each has different personalities, appearances, gender, race, and age, and life stories.

Participants’ interactions with coachs are personalized based on their age, communication style, chief concerns, quest performance, and mood.

coachs offer users unlimited support and therapeutic conversations 24/7 online, via text and via major social media platforms.

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  • Yes, When
    Yes, When

    If your child struggles when you tell them “no”, try saying “yes, when” instead. For example, your kid might ask for junk food or more time on Minecraft. Instead of saying “no,” which triggers immediate negative behavior and a stressful power struggle, tell them when they can fulfill their request. “Yes, you can have more…

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  • 7 Ways to Boost Emotional Well-being
    7 Ways to Boost Emotional Well-being

    This article was written by Tchiki Davis, Ph.D. and originally posted at Psychology Today. Boosting emotional well-being is not about stopping or avoiding emotions. Emotions are a normal and necessary part of life. Emotional well-being comes from enhancing emotional awareness, emotion regulation, and emotional recovery. That means increasing emotional well-being is entirely possible. Here are some ways to…

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  • Why Asian Americans Don’t Seek Help for Mental Illness
    Why Asian Americans Don’t Seek Help for Mental Illness

    This article was originally written and posted by McLean Hospital. Mental health stigma affects all ethnicities, cultures, and nationalities, but Asian Americans may be more impacted than most. The National Latino and Asian American Study reported that while 18% of the general U.S. population sought mental health services and resources, only 8.6% of Asian Americans did so.…

    Read more >> about Why Asian Americans Don’t Seek Help for Mental Illness