body
Love the body you're in with recipes, fitness, meditation, and everything needed to live a long and happy life.
Strength Has No Age Limit. AI-Generated.
For too long, fitness has been marketed as a young person’s game. High intensity. Fast transformations. Before-and-after photos. Performance metrics. The message is subtle but consistent. If you’re not chasing visible change, you’re falling behind.
By Alex Wilkinson7 days ago in Longevity
Bananas vs. Apples: Which Fruit is Better for Your Blood Sugar?
We’ve all heard the age-old warning: "Eat too much fruit, and your blood sugar will spike." But if you are managing diabetes, prediabetes, or simply trying to maintain steady energy levels throughout the day, the choice between a banana and an apple can feel surprisingly high stakes.
By Epic Vibes9 days ago in Longevity
The #1 Habit to Start for Better Blood Sugar, According to Dietitians
If you’ve recently been diagnosed with prediabetes or diabetes, you may be eager to learn how to improve your blood sugar levels. And even if you don’t have a diabetes diagnosis, it’s never too soon to start making lifestyle changes to help keep your blood sugar levels in the normal range. When it comes to managing blood sugar levels, eating fewer carbohydrates might be your first thought. And while carbs—and diet in general—are a key puzzle piece, other lifestyle factors also play an important role.
By Good health to everyone10 days ago in Longevity
The Protection-of-Innocence Reciprocity Doctrine. AI-Generated.
Core Moral Premise The highest duty of any legitimate social order is the protection of innocent life. Innocent life has absolute moral primacy. Any system that systematically insulates predators, tolerates predatory asymmetry, rewards hypocrisy, or allows aggressors to retain insulation has inverted its purpose and forfeited legitimacy. Truth, justice, reciprocity, humility, mercy, forgiveness, and vertical accountability are structural necessities rather than optional virtues. Vertical accountability means recognition of and submission to a moral law higher than oneself. Authority must flow toward those who most consistently demonstrate sustained competence in moral and epistemic discipline. This competence is shown through observable conduct and trajectory over time, not through doctrinal label, tribal identity, credential alone, or self-profession.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast10 days ago in Longevity
When Thinking Feels Like Action
There is a particular satisfaction that comes from understanding something clearly after wrestling with it for a long time. The mind settles. Tension releases. Pieces line up. In that moment, it can feel as though real movement has occurred, as though something meaningful has been accomplished. That feeling is not imagined. Cognitive resolution is a real event. The danger appears when that internal resolution is quietly mistaken for external change, and thinking begins to substitute for action rather than prepare the way for it.
By Peter Thwing - Host of the FST Podcast10 days ago in Longevity
What Hospice Nurses Notice About the People Who Lived Longest
They're present at the end of hundreds - sometimes thousands - of lives. They watch people in their final weeks and months. They see who fades quickly and who hangs on far longer than anyone expected.
By Destiny S. Harris12 days ago in Longevity







