Basically I like these parts of psychology which revolve around brain activity, evolution or have strong foundations in experimental data. Every theory that goes beyond observed facts is purely bullshish for me. One of the worst: humanistic psychology. And also here comes statistics... I don't understand why don't like it... it is the statistics that stand between senor Freud and the scientist. Note: Freud - Fraud.

Regarding false theories - the vast majority of them are non-falsifiable. Meaning (from my POV) they really shouldn't be treated as theories. That's why I don't like psychology very much

Or rather don't have much respect to many of so called psychologies.
I liked the idea of cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy - it's like telling somebody - ok, we are not sure what's going on in your head, but if you follow these steps it will probably get better

Not some holistic, psychodynamic bullshit.
There are WAY to many psychology majors - I totally agree. Most of them end up in HR-related fields, not doing any research. Which is ok, I guess. Well, you have to admit that psychology isn't the hardest subject to learn. Use common sense (maybe a little bit twisted

) and you should be fine during your exams. At least it works for me. Maybe that's the couse of so many psychologies

Of course if you want something more than it is much more complicated with all the new experiments coming up every month, and so on.
I'm not that into helping people

Maybe in a way - by designing usable, fun, desirable, kind and smart interfaces.

That's pretty much what I do now (mainly for the web now) and what I'll probably do in the future. There is a whole field of study regarding usability, user experience and so on:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human-computer_interaction
You can conduct experiments to determine usability of a product (site, anything), use fancy equipment (eye-tracker), do some field research, understand others' points of view and eventually design interactions, interface, information to suit user's needs.
And there is a pretty strong link between psychology and HCI, so it's not like I'm studying something completly useless for my future profession
