diet
Tips, tricks, recipes, and hacks to make your diet a successful one.
5 Habits You Should Integrate Daily For Balance, Health, and Success
Meditate. Take a walk. Get a workout in. Read a book that grows your mind. Stretch your body and take deep breaths. These five habits may look almost too simple to matter, but that is exactly why they work. They do not require special equipment, expensive memberships, or perfect conditions. They require intention and consistency. When practiced daily, they can significantly improve how you feel physically, mentally, and emotionally.
By Destiny S. Harrisabout a month ago in Longevity
5 Habits You Should Integrate Daily For Balance, Health, and Success
Meditate. Take a walk. Get a workout in. Read a book that grows your mind. Stretch your body and take deep breaths. These five habits may look almost too simple to matter, but that is exactly why they work. They do not require special equipment, expensive memberships, or perfect conditions. They require intention and consistency. When practiced daily, they can significantly improve how you feel physically, mentally, and emotionally.
By Destiny S. Harrisabout a month ago in Longevity
VITAMINS THAT KEEP FEMALES ALWAYS TEENAGER
Vitamins Required for Healthy Skin and Hair Growth Healthy skin and strong, lustrous hair are not achieved by external care alone. While creams, oils, and shampoos help protect and nourish from the outside, true beauty begins from within. Vitamins play a crucial role in maintaining skin elasticity, preventing premature aging, supporting hair growth, and reducing hair fall. A deficiency in essential vitamins often reflects quickly through dull skin, acne, pigmentation, brittle hair, and excessive hair loss.
By Ibrahim Shah about a month ago in Longevity
Ecclesiastes and the Weight of Meaninglessness
Have you ever noticed how unsettling Ecclesiastes feels compared to most of Scripture. It does not rush to reassure. It does not soften its conclusions. It returns again and again to the same observation: everything fades, everything repeats, and nothing under the sun seems capable of holding still long enough to become permanent. Wisdom fails to secure lasting satisfaction. Pleasure loses its edge. Work outlives the worker. Even moral effort appears unable to guarantee stability. For many readers, this tone feels almost dissonant, as if the book is saying out loud what faith is supposed to quiet.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcastabout a month ago in Longevity
Exercise Isn’t Enough
Commentary In the battle against obesity, being active is not enough. Going to the gym, riding a bike, or simply walking can help; however, it doesn't defeat this condition, alone. What needs to be examined is what people eat and how much they consume. The food one eats is just as critical as exercise in the battle against obesity.
By Dean Traylorabout a month ago in Longevity
What If Truth Is Rejected Even When It Is Lived Well
It’s easy to assume that if something is true, and if it is communicated clearly, reasonably, and with goodwill, it will eventually be accepted. This assumption sits quietly beneath a lot of effort, especially in faith. We speak carefully. We try to be fair. We explain ourselves patiently. Somewhere beneath all of that is the hope that clarity and sincerity will be enough. But what if that hope misunderstands how truth actually moves through the world.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast2 months ago in Longevity
Truth Is Often Rejected Because It Demands Change
There is a widespread assumption, rarely spoken but deeply believed, that truth will eventually be accepted if it is communicated clearly, patiently, and with genuine goodwill. When resistance appears, the instinct is to search for error in tone, framing, or explanation. The underlying belief is simple: if the truth were presented well enough, rejection would disappear. This belief is comforting, but it is false. History, Scripture, and lived experience all point in the same direction. Truth is often rejected not because it is unclear, but because it is costly.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast2 months ago in Longevity




