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23 votes
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Many of today’s unhealthy foods were brought to you by Big Tobacco
20 votes -
Acts of mindfulness through food and drink
I've recently made my own Chai Spice blend courtesy of Meera Sodha's cookbook, Made in India: Recipes from an Indian Family Kitchen. Instead of just turning on the kettle and throwing in a teabag,...
I've recently made my own Chai Spice blend courtesy of Meera Sodha's cookbook, Made in India: Recipes from an Indian Family Kitchen. Instead of just turning on the kettle and throwing in a teabag, this requires a little bit more effort and setting a pot on the stove in addition to making the spice blend itself. Sure it's not instantaneous gratification, but it's a lovely slow-down in comparison to my busy days and deliciously more flavorful than a typical teabag. It allows me to be present with what I am doing and enjoy it.
The smell of the spice as it starts to simmer into the milk and tea. The need to watch my pot of chai for the right moment to turn down the heat so it doesn't scald. The delicate balancing act of straining floating spices out to make a smoother cup. The gentle clings of a spoon to sweeten it all with a touch of sugar.
I'm curious about what other folks do as mindful acts of food and drink. It can be a comfort meal, a tasty snack, a special drink, or anything in between! Maybe we could all inspire each other to incorporate a new way to find moments of peace through a hobby we mutually love in the joy of cooking.
28 votes -
Nobel disease: Exploration of how and why some of the world’s greatest scientists eventually go crazy
20 votes -
Former US President Donald Trump denounces Ron DeSantis abortion ban as “a terrible mistake”
35 votes -
There's hope for the US opioid crisis — but politics stands in the way
8 votes -
Turmeric could treat indigestion just as well as NHS drugs, study finds
17 votes -
How to regulate AI? Bioethicist David Magnus on medicine’s critical moment
4 votes -
Florida surgeon general rejects FDA guidance, urges people under 65 not to get Covid booster
26 votes -
Poland's crusade against abortion investigates miscarriages, tests blood for evidence of abortion pills, created a national pregnancy registry
66 votes -
Ministers set to ban single-use vapes in UK over child addiction fears
30 votes -
How Columbia ignored women, undermined prosecutors and protected a predator for more than twenty years
15 votes -
This Obamacare disaster had a surprising turnaround
16 votes -
New Mexico Governor bans public carry of guns in Albuquerque
33 votes -
Lead poisoning could be killing more people than HIV, malaria, and car accidents combined
18 votes -
Women who were denied emergency abortions file lawsuits in three states: Lawsuits want to clarify abortion ban exceptions for ‘medical emergencies’ in Idaho, Oklahoma and Tennessee
36 votes -
Natural compound found in plants inhibits deadly fungi
7 votes -
Abortions rose in most US states this year, new data shows
26 votes -
How often do you brush your teeth?
Following yesterday's question about showering, I was really interested in how often everyone brushes their teeth. I know dentists recommend 1-3 times a day, with once being like "you'll be fine...
Following yesterday's question about showering, I was really interested in how often everyone brushes their teeth. I know dentists recommend 1-3 times a day, with once being like "you'll be fine if you do it properly," and thrice being like "yo, don't brush too hard because you can damage your enamel," but I also know a lot of people do it more than three times a day and I suspect a lot of people do it less than once a day...
I try to do it twice a day...sometimes I miss my evening brushing because one of our cats sleeps in the bathroom so that she has her own space and if the dog (who wants to eat the cats) is already in the bedroom, sometimes I don't feel like escorting him out first. Not great, but at least I'll get it in the morning. And I do sometimes forget in the morning on weekends, but I try to do it as soon as I realize that I've forgotten, and I try to make sure I don't skip nighttime brushing if I forgot to brush in the morning.
37 votes -
How frequently do you shower?
I'm interested to know how often people shower or bathe - but I'd also be interested on your thoughts about other people's frequency. Do you feel strongly about how often one should be cleaning...
I'm interested to know how often people shower or bathe - but I'd also be interested on your thoughts about other people's frequency. Do you feel strongly about how often one should be cleaning themselves, and what factors go into this? I would certainly hope it's reasonably frequent for warm-climate athletes, for example.
65 votes -
Air pollution: Nearly everyone in Europe breathing bad air
13 votes -
To those who play(ed) Ring Fit Adventure -- did it have an effect on your body and health?
As the title says. I am interested in hearing about your experiences with that game. Why did you pick it up? Did it meet your expectations? Did it have positive (or negative?) effects on your body...
As the title says. I am interested in hearing about your experiences with that game. Why did you pick it up? Did it meet your expectations? Did it have positive (or negative?) effects on your body and health? Did it change anything in your life?
19 votes -
You're not traumatized, you're just hurt
20 votes -
Mexico Supreme Court officially decriminalizes abortion
43 votes -
Thousands donate to save Florida abortion clinic amid crippling state fines
25 votes -
The rediscovery of circadian rhythms
29 votes -
Anti-abortion activists, including one who kept fetuses, convicted of illegally blocking a reproductive clinic in Washington, DC
37 votes -
Foreskin reclaimers: The ‘intactivists’ fighting infant male circumcision
27 votes -
Live roundworm found in Australian woman's brain in world-first discovery
14 votes -
‘People are like, wow!’: The man trying to make condoms sexy
25 votes -
A single reform that could save 100,000 lives across the USA immediately
24 votes -
Midwestern US cities become transgender health sanctuaries amid GOP legislative threats
33 votes -
Potentially faulty data spotted in surveys of drug use and other behaviors among LGBQ US youth
10 votes -
The hidden fee costing US doctors millions every year
22 votes -
Meet the American nomad prepping for doomsday by living in a homemade cart pulled by sheep and drinking their milk | World Wide Waste
20 votes -
Too much ecological fallacy with health studies
13 votes -
Estimating the association between Facebook adoption and well-being in seventy-two countries
5 votes -
The impact of vaccines and behavior on US cumulative deaths from COVID-19
9 votes -
Private equity firms in US health insurance - the private-equity backed health insurer Friday Health Plans shut down under order by Colorado state regulators in July
27 votes -
Cardiovascular ER visits plunged after Pittsburgh coal plant shut, study finds
33 votes -
Looking for short beard and face care tips
I struggle with trichotillomania which is a compulsion to pluck my own hair. Mine is focused primarily on my beard, resulting in unsightly bare patches. I am working through the mental health...
I struggle with trichotillomania which is a compulsion to pluck my own hair. Mine is focused primarily on my beard, resulting in unsightly bare patches. I am working through the mental health component of this condition already, but a better hair and skin care regiment could help reduce the triggers that start me plucking hairs.
I keep my beard relatively close cropped to my face. When the hairs in my bald patches start to regrow there is typically a lot of irritation which starts me touching my face, which leads me to find bumps like zits and blackheads and “weird hairs”, like kinky hairs, hairs growing in the wrong direction, particularly hard or soft hairs, anything that feels off when I run my fingers over them. This has the side effect of depositing more dirt and oils from my fingers onto my face, which creates a kind of feedback loop where the dirtier my face is the more I want to touch it, and the more I touch it the dirtier it gets. When I encounter these bumps and weird hairs I will want to pick at them and I won’t stop thinking about it until I do. It is a real struggle that I am working through and I figure if I can reduce that irritation that triggers it I’ll be less likely to touch and therefore pluck.
What I am hoping to find here are general care tips I can use for my short-cropped beard. What kind of products do you use for both the hairs themselves and your face, what methods do you use to trim, etc.? Currently I wash my face with a cleanser, followed by a toner, then a serum or lotion, but I don’t use any products specifically for my beard hairs themselves. I trim with an electric razor when my beard is between .5 and 1 inches long and I’ll trim it down to about 1/8 of an inch, or whatever setting 7, 8, or 9 is on my razor.
17 votes -
In Mongolia, back to school, back to sickness?
15 votes -
Norway's ongoing journey to optimize breastfeeding support – rates of breastfeeding in the WHO European Region are the lowest in the world
10 votes -
The UK NHS in crisis - evaluating radical alternatives
10 votes -
[preprint] Suicide after leaving the UK Armed Forces 1996-2018: a cohort study
13 votes -
How extreme heat hits America's hungry
7 votes -
Abortion advocates sue Alabama attorney general over prosecution threats for out-of-state travel
14 votes -
The body’s immune system responding to a COVID vaccine, and not the vaccine itself, is likely the cause of menstrual cycle changes experienced after vaccination
42 votes -
Maternal deaths are expected to rise under US abortion bans, but the increase may be hard to measure
18 votes -
A political gap in excess deaths in the USA widened after COVID-19 vaccines arrived, study says
36 votes