The Paradox of Doing Nothing: Why Your Brain Hates a Lazy Day (Even When You Crave It)
A lazy day sounds ideal, but unstructured downtime often triggers restlessness. Here’s why—and how to truly rest in a productivity-obsessed world.
A lazy day sounds ideal, but unstructured downtime often triggers restlessness. Here’s why—and how to truly rest in a productivity-obsessed world.
Sharp reductions in U.S. foreign aid have crippled Somalia’s health infrastructure, leading to a surge in child malnutrition and preventable deaths.
Baek Sehee, the South Korean author of the groundbreaking mental health memoir ‘I Want to Die but I Want to Eat Tteokbokki,’ has died at age 35, leaving behind a powerful legacy of honesty and healing.
Consumers in a dozen states are seeing higher 2026 Obamacare premiums, just as Congress debates whether to extend the subsidies that have kept coverage affordable since 2021.
A national free school lunch program in Indonesia, launched to fight malnutrition, has triggered widespread food poisoning cases—raising urgent questions about food safety and government oversight.
In response to a profile of Dr. Sue Goldie, readers with Parkinson’s share deeply personal accounts of resilience, identity, and life beyond diagnosis.
After U.S. funding cuts forced a Somali women’s and children’s hospital to close, its fired staff reopened it—volunteering without pay to keep lifesaving care alive.
New research shows introverts can enjoy long, healthy lives by focusing on deep, meaningful relationships—not large social networks.
The Trump administration is rolling out new guidance to encourage employers to offer I.V.F. benefits, but the voluntary plan lacks funding or enforcement mechanisms.
More than 3,000 people in the UK have filed a lawsuit against Johnson & Johnson, alleging its talc-based baby powder contained asbestos and led to cancer diagnoses.