fact or fiction
Is it a fact or is it merely fiction? Fact or Fiction explores the lesser known truths in the health and wellness world of Longevity.
Study: Heat Waves May Accelerate Aging as Much as Smoking or Drinking Alcohol.
The planet is heating up faster than ever before. Each summer seems hotter than the last, and deadly heat waves are becoming increasingly common across continents. Beyond the immediate discomfort and health risks, scientists are now uncovering deeper, long-term consequences of this environmental shift. According to a new study, continuous exposure to heat waves may accelerate biological aging — effectively making the body older at the cellular level — to a degree comparable to the effects of smoking or alcohol consumption.
By youssef tnaji5 months ago in Longevity
Listening with the Body: Presence Beyond Thought
There are ways of listening that have nothing to do with the ears. We often think of listening as an act of understanding — of interpreting words, deciphering meaning, forming response. But beneath that level of mind, there’s a subtler kind of listening — one that happens through the body. The skin, the breath, the pulse — they’re all in quiet conversation with the world. When we begin to notice that dialogue, presence deepens into something more whole, more real.
By Marina Gomez5 months ago in Longevity
The Loop
Every morning, Eli woke to the sound of the same alarm — a single, sharp note that sliced through the silence of his small apartment. The same pale light crept through the curtains, brushing across the same walls, the same floor, the same desk where yesterday’s coffee cup still sat.
By Bob manuel5 months ago in Longevity
Still Water Mind: Reflecting Without Grasping
Sometimes, when I sit by a lake at dawn, I think of how much the mind resembles water. When the surface is stirred by wind, it ripples and distorts everything it reflects — sky, trees, clouds, all broken into restless fragments. But when the wind settles, the water doesn’t have to do anything. It doesn’t try to become clear. It simply returns to stillness, and the world appears within it exactly as it is.
By Victoria Marse5 months ago in Longevity
Carrying Silence: How Stillness Moves Through the Day
Silence used to feel like something separate — a place I visited in meditation, a momentary pause between the noise of doing. I would sit on the cushion, close my eyes, and wait for it to arrive, like a secret I could only touch when everything else stopped. But over time, the boundaries between silence and life began to blur. I began to wonder: what if silence isn’t something we enter, but something we carry?
By Black Mark5 months ago in Longevity
Unfinished Moments: Finding Peace in Imperfection
There’s a peculiar ache that comes from wanting things to be finished — the project completed, the house tidy, the conversation resolved, the self somehow perfected. I’ve lived much of my life chasing that sense of completion, the comforting click of everything falling neatly into place. Yet life, it seems, rarely cooperates. Plans change, words go unsaid, days end before we’re ready. Again and again, I find myself standing in the middle of something that refuses to be complete.
By Marina Gomez5 months ago in Longevity
When the Mind Rests: The Art of Inner Listening
There’s a moment in meditation — rare, delicate — when the mind, after so much effort and noise, finally grows quiet. It doesn’t disappear, exactly. It just loosens its grip. Thoughts drift by like clouds instead of storms, and what remains underneath feels vast and alive. In that silence, a different kind of listening begins — not to sound or thought, but to the pulse of awareness itself.
By Jonse Grade5 months ago in Longevity
Resting in Change: When Letting Go Becomes Home
Change has always made me uneasy. Even the small ones — the end of a season, the shift of a daily routine, a friend moving away — used to leave me feeling unmoored, as if something solid beneath me had quietly dissolved. I longed for stability, for something I could hold onto without fear of losing it. But life, with its patient wisdom, kept teaching me the same lesson in a thousand quiet ways: everything moves. Everything changes. And the more tightly I held on, the more life slipped through my grasp.
By Garold One5 months ago in Longevity
Quiet Confidence: The Strength Found in Softness
There was a time when I thought strength had to be loud — that it needed to announce itself in certainty, in speed, in the ability to push through. I admired people who seemed untouchable, self-assured, always moving forward. I wanted that same kind of confidence, the kind that didn’t waver. But the more I tried to build it, the more brittle I became. It was as if I’d built a shell of strength, not realizing how easily shells can crack.
By Victoria Marse5 months ago in Longevity
The Subtle Art of Enough: Contentment Without Completion
There’s a quiet kind of hunger that seems to hum beneath modern life — not for food or shelter, but for more. More success, more clarity, more growth, more proof that we’re doing enough, being enough. Even in meditation, that same subtle striving sneaks in. We sit to find peace, to become mindful, to reach some imagined point of completion. Yet the deeper I travel into practice, the more I realize: there is no finish line in awareness. There’s only the art of enough.
By Black Mark5 months ago in Longevity
The Tender Edge of Awareness: Meeting Life Without Armor
There’s a moment in meditation when awareness sharpens — not in the way a blade does, but like the surface of water catching light. Everything becomes startlingly clear: the breath, the heartbeat, the subtle hum of emotion that runs beneath thought. It’s beautiful, but it can also feel raw. When we begin to pay real attention, we start to notice just how exposed living truly is. Awareness, in its purest form, is tender.
By Marina Gomez5 months ago in Longevity
Moments Between Moments: Touching Timeless Awareness
There’s a kind of silence that lives between moments — a pause so subtle it almost escapes notice. You might feel it just after a breath ends and before the next begins, or in the stillness that follows a sound fading into nothing. It’s easy to miss, yet when you catch it, everything opens. For an instant, the world seems to stop turning. The mind releases its grip on past and future. What remains is presence — vast, intimate, and strangely familiar.
By Jonse Grade5 months ago in Longevity











