lifestyle
Living your life - the health and wellness way.
Day 4 of Quitting. Top Story - January 2026.
If this is how sobriety feels, maybe it’s better to go through life a little buzzed… this, along with other hits like, I want to kill myself, I wish I was dead, and I’m going to throw myself off a bridge have been the only thoughts on rotation these past few days. I promise myself that if, in a month, I still feel like this (‘this’ meaning despondent, full of rage, and simultaneously numb) I can go back to smoking. Until mid-February though? Nicotine is off the table.
By sleepy drafts3 months ago in Longevity
The Silent Revolution: How a Spin Bike in My Living Room Changed Everything. AI-Generated.
For years, my relationship with fitness was a series of "starts" that never quite "stuck." I’d buy the expensive gym membership, feel the surge of January motivation, and then slowly retreat when the logistics of commuting, locker rooms, and "gymtimidation" became too much to handle.
By George Evan3 months ago in Longevity
Masturbating Ourselves to Death: Unpacking the Myth and The Real Modern Risk
Let’s clear the air immediately: you cannot, from a purely physiological standpoint, masturbate yourself to death. The provocative phrase “masturbating ourselves to death” isn’t a literal medical warning but a potent metaphor for a much more insidious modern dilemma. It points to how our relationship with self-pleasure, fueled by unprecedented access to digital stimulation, can morph into a habit that drains our vitality, time, and real-world connections.
By Epic Vibes3 months ago in Longevity
How I'm Emphasizing Astrology in 2026
Astrology has become quite the topic over the years. I remember when I first started implementing it into my life, way back in elementary school. Obviously, astrology has been around much longer than it has been popular in the Western world. In fact, some parts of the world use a completely different time sheet for their readings.
By Grace Genet3 months ago in Longevity
The Balanced Plate
In an era where plant-based eating captivates the zeitgeist—Google Trends revealing a 600% surge in "vegan recipes" since 2015—proponents herald it as a panacea for health, ethics, and ecology. Yet, poignant anecdotes abound: elite athletes faltering from fatigue, vegans hospitalized for B12 anemias, underscoring a sobering reality. While plants lavishly bestow fiber, vitamins, and antioxidants, the human proteome demands more; strict adherence invites insidious deficits in complete proteins and bioavailable micronutrients, as chronicled in cohorts like EPIC-Oxford. This article demystifies the discourse: the optimal diet pivots not on puritanical exclusion but a plant-heavy foundation—80% vegetables, fruits, legumes, grains—fortified by 20% animal products, emulating Mediterranean and Blue Zones longevity blueprints.
By Paul Claybrook MS MBA3 months ago in Longevity
Highly Processed Foods
The modern dietary landscape has undergone a radical transformation over the last half-century, shifting away from culinary traditions rooted in whole ingredients toward a globalized system dominated by industrial formulations. This evolution is defined by the rise of ultra-processed foods (UPFs)—products that are no longer merely "cooked" but are instead "assembled" through sophisticated chemical engineering. While convenience and affordability have made these foods staples of the contemporary pantry, their ubiquity comes at a significant biological cost. Unlike the whole foods our ancestors consumed, UPFs are designed to be hyper-palatable, shelf-stable, and effortlessly ingestible, frequently bypassing the evolutionary mechanisms that regulate our appetite and metabolic health. As rates of chronic illness climb globally, it is becoming increasingly clear that the crisis of modern health is not just about the presence of too many calories, but about the fundamental nature of the food matrix itself. Understanding the science of ultra-processing is therefore essential for navigating a food environment that often prioritizes corporate efficiency over human physiology.
By Paul Claybrook MS MBA3 months ago in Longevity
Why Men Seek Casual Sex: Power, Control, and the Psychology of Modern Masculinity
Let's start with a sentence that often echoes through dating discourse, social media hot takes, and late-night conversations: "Men just want one thing." That "thing" is almost universally assumed to be casual, no-strings-attached sex. But what if we're only seeing the surface? What if the pursuit of casual encounters is less about the physical act itself and more about what it represents?
By Epic Vibes3 months ago in Longevity
The Health Benefits of Spirulina
Spirulina, a type of cyanobacteria, has been consumed for centuries due to its numerous health benefits. This green superfood is rich in nutrients, antioxidants, and other bioactive compounds that have been shown to have a positive impact on overall health and wellbeing. As a dietary supplement, spirulina has gained significant attention in recent years, with a growing body of research supporting its potential health benefits. This essay will provide a comprehensive analysis of the health benefits of spirulina, examining the scientific evidence and discussing the potential mechanisms underlying its effects.
By Paul Claybrook MS MBA3 months ago in Longevity




