health
Keeping your mind and body in check - popular topics in health and medicine to maintain a long and healthy life.
7 Reasons You Can’t Sleep Well (And How to Fix Them Tonight). AI-Generated.
You know that feeling. It’s 2:17 AM. You’ve been lying in bed for hours. Your mind is racing through everything you said today, everything you need to do tomorrow, and that random embarrassing moment from 2015. Your partner is sound asleep. Even the dog is snoring.
By Health Looi6 days ago in Longevity
Why You Wake Up at 3AM Every Night (And How to Fix It). AI-Generated.
Subtitle 1: The Strange Hour – More Than Just a Broken Clock You’ve been there. You fall asleep peacefully, dreaming of beaches or spreadsheets. Then, without warning, your eyes snap open. You reach for your phone. The screen glows: 3:00 AM. Not 2:00, not 4:00. Exactly 3 AM.
By Health Looi6 days ago in Longevity
The Doctor Who Prescribes Walking 🚶♀️
THE PRESCRIPTION NOBODY FILLS 💊 Dr. Sarah Mitchell has been practicing internal medicine for twenty-two years and she has stopped prescribing medication as her first intervention for the majority of her patients, not because she is anti-medication but because she has observed over two decades of clinical practice that a daily thirty-minute walk produces equivalent or superior outcomes to pharmaceutical intervention for mild to moderate depression, anxiety, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, chronic pain, insomnia, and cognitive decline, and that patients who adopt walking as their primary health intervention require fewer medications, have fewer hospitalizations, report higher quality of life, and live longer than patients who rely primarily on pharmaceutical management of the same conditions 🏥
By The Curious Writer6 days ago in Longevity
The Best Male Sexual Enhancer
Male sexual health is often discussed in whispers, jokes, or advertisements, but rarely in a calm and useful way. That is unfortunate, because intimate health is part of overall wellbeing. It is connected to energy, stress, confidence, sleep, circulation, relationships, and everyday lifestyle habits.
By Edward Smith7 days ago in Longevity
Boredom Is Not a Problem to Fix
Boredom has quietly become something we try to eliminate as quickly as possible. The moment there is a gap no task, no input, no immediate engagement we reach for something. A screen, a notification, a piece of content, anything that fills the space. It happens almost automatically, without much thought.
By Arjun. S. Gaikwad7 days ago in Longevity
The Science Behind Stubborn Fat. AI-Generated.
You eat clean, train hard, and watch the scale drop—except in a few specific places. For many, that’s the lower belly, love handles, thighs, or lower back. This fat doesn’t budge even when you’re in a calorie deficit. It’s called stubborn fat, and it’s not just in your head. There’s real biology working against you.
By Health Looi7 days ago in Longevity
The Hidden Discipline Behind Veterinary Medicine (And Why It Matters More Than You Think)
Most people think veterinary medicine is about compassion. And it is, at least on the surface. You walk into a clinic, you see calm professionals, reassuring voices, and a system that feels seamless. Your pet is treated, you get answers, and you leave. But what most people don’t see is where the real work happens. It exists behind the scenes in the form of pressure, constant decision-making, and a level of responsibility that rarely gets discussed.
By CEO A&S Developers8 days ago in Longevity
Your Job Is Literally Killing You
KAROSHI: THE JAPANESE WORD FOR DEATH BY OVERWORK Japan has a word for a phenomenon that the rest of the world is increasingly experiencing but has not yet named: karoshi, which translates to death from overwork, and it describes the sudden death of apparently healthy workers from heart attacks, strokes, or suicide directly attributable to excessive work hours and workplace stress, and the Japanese government officially recognized karoshi as a cause of death in the 1980s after a series of high-profile cases where young healthy workers in their twenties and thirties dropped dead after working extreme hours, and the phenomenon has been so extensively documented that Japanese labor law now includes specific provisions for karoshi claims and the government publishes annual white papers tracking karoshi deaths. The relevance of karoshi to Western workers who dismiss it as a uniquely Japanese phenomenon is that the same physiological mechanisms that kill Japanese workers, chronic cortisol elevation, cardiovascular damage from sustained stress, immune suppression, and the accumulated effects of sleep deprivation, are operating in every worker who regularly works long hours under high stress regardless of their nationality, and the difference between Japanese and Western workplace mortality may be more about reporting and recognition than about actual incidence.
By The Curious Writer8 days ago in Longevity







