advice
Dating, married, single, divorced, and more. Advice on the relationships you have in life. Dear, Humans..
Living With Cognitive Fatigue? Practical Strategies for Clearer Thinking
Cognitive fatigue is the most common symptom reported after illness and brain injury. People describe walking into rooms and forgetting what they came for, reading the same paragraph several times without retaining it, or losing important information minutes after hearing it. When the brain is fatigued, it cannot process or store information as efficiently as it normally would. The encouraging news is that in many cases cognitive functioning tends to recover as fatigues improves.
By Sarah Rudebeck2 months ago in Humans
Just start by forgiving and forgetting
How many times have you heard the words forgive and forget? As far back as I can remember, my mother (God rest her soul) always talked about forgiveness that it is important because it is what our Lord and savior Jesus Christ did for those who betrayed him to be honest I have a real difficulty trying to forgive I mean it's so easy you let go of the hate you let go of the hurt that has been inside your heart your head your soul and you're able to move on I've seen people do it I've heard people talk about how they can just easily forgive those who have betrayed them I have a real difficulty trying to forgive especially those who stabbed me in the back betrayed me and figuratively speaking just left out to die. I have so many former friends that I hold so much hatred towards them, and I don't wanna hold it anymore. I try to let it go, I try to move on, but out of nowhere those memories just come back, and they ignite that fire that I thought I put out.
By stephanie borges2 months ago in Humans
Finding Calm in Cardiology: Andrew Rudin MD and a Thoughtful Path Through Modern Heart Care. AI-Generated.
Heart care has never been more advanced than it is today. From wearable technology that tracks every heartbeat to imaging tools that can visualize coronary arteries in stunning detail, modern cardiology offers unprecedented insight into how the heart functions. For many patients, however, this abundance of information brings as much anxiety as reassurance. Alerts, data points, and medical opinions arrive faster than they can be understood, leaving people unsure what truly matters.
By Dr. Andrew Rudin2 months ago in Humans
The Delusion of “Being Late” in Our Mid-Twenties
Somewhere in our mid-twenties, as we move towards practical life, a quiet pressure settles in. It doesn’t arrive loudly or start to haunt instantly. It creeps in through comparison, timelines, and expectations we never consciously agreed to. Suddenly, we feel that we are behind others who started the race with us. This belief, though common, is one of the most damaging delusions of our generation.
By Mubarik Ahmad 2 months ago in Humans
The One Habit That Quietly Changed My Entire Life
There are many habits people talk about waking up at 5 AM, journaling, meditation, exercising daily, reading books, cold showers, and more. I tried many of them. Some worked, some didn’t. But there is one habit that quietly changed my entire life, and surprisingly, it is not something dramatic or trendy.
By Sathish Kumar 2 months ago in Humans
Rev. Dr. Louise Goben on Interfaith Hunger Relief: Dignity, Golden Rule Partnerships, and Food Pantry Impact
Rev. Dr. Louise Goben is President of the North Hollywood Interfaith Food Pantry and has volunteered with the pantry almost since its inception. With her family, she spent decades transporting food from Temple Beth Hillel to distribution at First Christian Church, strengthening a practical Jewish–Christian partnership against hunger in the San Fernando Valley. Ordained in the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), she is retired from active congregational ministry but still preaches and teaches Bible when invited. She also teaches World Religion and History of Religion through the Encore Program at Los Angeles Pierce College. Her work centers on dignity.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen2 months ago in Humans
Rabbi Rachel Rosenbluth: Reimagining Jewish Ritual, Kehilla, and Communal Covenant in Modern Life
Rabbi Rachel Rosenbluth is the founder of Bluth’s Ritual Studio, a Toronto-based practice that works globally, and is devoted to reimagining Jewish ritual for modern life. Ordained by Beit Midrash Har El, an Orthodox yeshiva that ordains women, she works largely in a Conservative-inflected mode as a rabbi, educator, wedding officiant, and artist. Her work blends pastoral care, theology, and aesthetic craft, including Hebrew calligraphy and ceremony design. She is developing a stunning coffee-table book to help people build community around the rituals that matter most. She collaborates with couples and communities to make belonging resilient.
By Scott Douglas Jacobsen2 months ago in Humans








