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Now scientists have learned enough to understand why travel is transformative; why our brains crave the stimulus and our bodies crave the release. Travel sparks us back to life with surprise, challenge, distance, and diversion.
1. Bacon Fried food. ... Potato chips. ... Added sugars. ... Processed oils. ... Hydrogenated fats. ... Refined carbohydrates. ... Breakfast...
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Read More »Humans long to be surprised now and again, to smash routine, to see the world fresh. Travel is a painless (except for the skilled interpreters and curators) curriculum in history, geography, sociology, cultural anthropology, and the arts. Research published last August in Leisure Studies showed that family travel even heightened teenagers’ enjoyment of school. After weeks of stress and sickness, the healing side of travel will also be crucial. People with tuberculosis used to “take the cure” in thin mountain air, and doctors often sent malingering patients to the seashore. Healthy travel can recharge the energy, strengthen the body, deepen restful sleep. Stress melts away, and when cortisol and other stress hormones are not flooding our systems, we breathe in more oxygen, our heartbeat slows, our blood pressure lowers. Women who vacation twice a year are at less risk of heart attack or coronary death—and men who do not take an annual vacation have a 32 percent higher risk of dying from heart disease than men who do. Even short trips can calm us. Researchers in Japan took saliva samples from women who weekended on Kyushu Island found a marked reduction in stress after just three days. And in the famous five-decade Helsinki Businessmen Study, even men who improved their lifestyles in other ways suffered if they shortchanged their vacations. Psychologically, travel allows a little experimental reinvention of the self. When you see yourself through strangers’ eyes, you spot different aspects of yourself, different possibilities, different ways of being in the world. You also see other people differently: One study noted that trips abroad make people more open to new experiences and, frankly, less neurotic. Adam Galinsky, a professor at Columbia Business School, found that “foreign experiences increase both cognitive flexibility and depth… of thought.” For maximum creative boost, though, you have to engage with the local culture, not hunt for familiar chain restaurants. It is the ability to cross cultures that makes us feel more socially agile. With the surprise of empathy for people so different from yourself, perspective expands like an accordion. No longer is the “other” such a threat. Time expands, too. The more new experiences we pack into a day, the faster our brain processes the information—and the slower time seems to pass. Days are richer, filled with new memories, and we are not going on auto-pilot for long stretches, letting our day unspool without paying attention to it.
"You should absolutely dispose of any lip products after you've been sick," Morgan Statt, a health and safety investigator for ConsumerSafety.org,...
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We believe we have the ultimate list of difficult video games that factors in all variables. Contra. Konami Be prepared to die, die, and die again....
Read More »The Millennials are right: Spending money on vacation travel and the sort of experiences it brings makes you far happier than buying stuff—and the happiness lasts far longer. Travel is one of the rare things in life that is seriously good for us and delightful. But no one can do it all by themselves. Unless we like sleeping rough and crave nonstop risk, we need safe transportation, a serene and blissfully comfortable place to sleep, delicious food and drink, and a hot shower and soft, clean towels, so our bodies can drop their hypervigilance, savor the moment, and gather energy to explore again the next day. Hospitality is what puts us at ease in a new place. Only with that network of support can we relax into novelty; let ourselves be amused and delighted; free our minds to expand. The only bright spot in a global pandemic is that it hits a reset button, giving entire societies a chance to rethink the way they work and interact. But travel has always been our individual reset button. With the recent spate of cancellations and closures, the economic, psychological, and physical necessity of travel was made obvious. Already, the desire to travel is returning—because we now know it restores us to our calmest, smartest, happiest, and healthiest selves.
You just lay there because you're getting poured on. We slept on bamboo, which is torture. You can't sleep on the ground because of the bugs, and...
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A new survey finds most Americans believe the “sweet spot” in life is right in the mid-30s. A poll of 2,000 people finds four in 10 would not go...
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A small 2017 study of 20 people who juiced for three days found that they shed about two pounds, on average, and saw an increase in gut bacteria...
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