Amayzine

Do you find the color yellow ugly? Then you have too much stress

Woman in a yellow dress reading facts about the color yellow on her phone

I am currently completely in my calm white-beige-pastel phase, because I like it when it doesn't scream with brightness in the house. But colors also say something about how you feel, it turns out.

No, thank you 
That I become happy from white may not say anything very shocking. At most, it means that I am happy with fresh, clean, calm. But if you find the color yellow, for example, very ugly, then that can be a sign that you have too much stress in your life. You are not positively inclined, and the color yellow stands for positivity. Yellow stands for light, happiness, being outside, life, enjoying, summer and chicks. If you don't resonate with that for a while, then you probably don't want anything to do with that one color. And then you hate the sun, for example. Or that banana. Or that yellow dress. You tend to lean more towards colors like blue and green during this time – if you don't feel so good mentally. Just pay attention: do you ever pick something yellow in the supermarket? Or in a clothing store?

People who are fond of the color yellow are often people who have a positive outlook on life. Research has shown that these people also suffer less from depression or anxiety than those who find the yellow color very ugly.

Happy you
Yet, according to psychologists, it can actually be beneficial to look at yellow things when you're feeling down. The color is striking, but it can stimulate your thought process and nervous system yes. The color makes you cheerful, and you can use that positivity during a stressful period.

And what you can home do best? Go for blue tones if you want to relax, especially for the bedroom this is a tip. Just put some blue pillows on your bed: blue stands for sleep and regularity. Choose green if you want to be creative, go for white if you just want calm around you. White is always good. But well, I say that, in my white house in my white dress.

Source: BMC Medical Research Methodology