body
Love the body you're in with recipes, fitness, meditation, and everything needed to live a long and happy life.
Having Value in a World That Doesn’t Pay for It
There is a particular kind of frustration that does not come from failure, but from misalignment. It arises when a person knows they are contributing something real, something valuable, and yet finds that value does not translate into stability, recognition, or material support. The work matters. The insight matters. The care is genuine. And still, the world responds with indifference. This disconnect is not imaginary, and it cuts deeper than simple disappointment because it challenges the assumption that value and reward naturally converge.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast9 days ago in Longevity
Clavicular Arrested Growth: Silent Changes in the Body
The human body grows in ways we rarely think about. Bones lengthen, muscles develop, and everything seems to follow a natural rhythm during childhood and adolescence. But sometimes, growth does not continue as expected. One such condition, often overlooked, is clavicular arrested growth. It does not always cause immediate pain or obvious symptoms, which is why many people remain unaware of it for years. Yet, this quiet change in the collarbone can affect posture, movement, and overall physical balance. Understanding clavicular arrested growth is not just about medical knowledge. It is about recognizing subtle changes in the body and learning how they can influence daily life in ways that are easy to miss.
By Muqadas khan11 days ago in Longevity
I Am An Old Woman
Yes, lots of hair! Then I remember that the worst thing in my life when I was younger was my new perm! I hated how it took days and sometimes weeks to be able to work with it. Today, my hair is thinning, and the worst thing in my life is the predicted 30 mph wind for today. I cover the thinning parts the best way I can, and then the wind totally messes with it.
By Denise E Lindquist11 days ago in Longevity
Visibility, Timing, and Readiness
Visibility is often treated as a reward, something earned through talent, effort, or persistence. It is framed as the natural next step once someone has something worthwhile to offer. But visibility is not neutral, and it is not automatically benevolent. Being seen amplifies everything at once: strengths, weaknesses, unfinished edges, unresolved wounds, and untested convictions. Once that amplification begins, there is no way to selectively mute what is not ready.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast12 days ago in Longevity
How Do I Eat with Endometriosis?
If you’ve been diagnosed with endometriosis, or you know someone with endometriosis, you know it’s so much more than "just a bad period." It’s a chronic inflammatory condition and it affects more than just the reproductive system (while also coming with variable levels and timing of pain).
By Emily the Period RD19 days ago in Longevity
I Won My War With Obesity
I Won My War With Obesity When December came, cold and bright with lights in every window and that quiet feeling of something beginning again, Elaine found herself standing outside the same shop she had once left in silence, her heart beating hard, not with fear, but with something steadier, something she had built slowly over months of effort and quiet determination. She stood there for a moment, remembering the woman who had walked out of those doors before, holding back tears, carrying shame that had nothing to do with her worth, and then she took a breath and walked inside, not as that woman, but as someone stronger, someone who had fought for herself in ways no one had seen.
By George’s Girl 2026 20 days ago in Longevity
When Love Isn't Enough
The most painful breakups are not the ones where betrayal or cruelty or fundamental incompatibility of character makes leaving obvious and even necessary for self-preservation, but rather the ones where you still love the person deeply and completely and they love you just as much, but love alone cannot bridge fundamental incompatibilities in life goals, values, timing, or core needs that make a sustainable long-term partnership impossible no matter how much you care about each other. Walking away from someone you love because you recognize with terrible clarity that staying will make both of you progressively more miserable requires a kind of emotional maturity and self-awareness that many people never develop, because it means accepting that good intentions and genuine feeling and even extraordinary compatibility in many areas are not sufficient to make a relationship work if you fundamentally want different things from life, and that sometimes the most loving thing you can do for someone is let them go to find what they need even when it breaks your heart and leaves you questioning whether you will ever find that kind of connection again.
By The Curious Writer21 days ago in Longevity







