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Current Topic: Health and Wellness

The Miracle Fruit, a Tease for the Taste Buds
Topic: Health and Wellness 7:13 pm EDT, May 29, 2008

“You pop it in your mouth and scrape the pulp off the seed, swirl it around and hold it in your mouth for about a minute,” he said. “Then you’re ready to go.” He ushered his guests to a table piled with citrus wedges, cheeses, Brussels sprouts, mustard, vinegars, pickles, dark beers, strawberries and cheap tequila, which Mr. Aliquo promised would now taste like top-shelf Patrón.

The miracle fruit, Synsepalum dulcificum, is native to West Africa and has been known to Westerners since the 18th century. The cause of the reaction is a protein called miraculin, which binds with the taste buds and acts as a sweetness inducer when it comes in contact with acids, according to a scientist who has studied the fruit, Linda Bartoshuk at the University of Florida’s Center for Smell and Taste. Dr. Bartoshuk said she did not know of any dangers associated with eating miracle fruit.

The Miracle Fruit, a Tease for the Taste Buds


In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto
Topic: Health and Wellness 9:09 pm EDT, Apr 25, 2008

Michael Pollan's latest book, as reviewed by New York Review of Books:

The symbiosis of the American food and pharmaceutical industries, to which Pollan refers, is the grotesque avatar of the primitive supermarket that I dreaded on the eve of the Second World War. "Is it just a coincidence," Pollan asks,

that as the portion of our income spent on food has declined, spending on health care has soared? In 1960 Americans spent 17.5 percent of their income on food and 5.2 percent...on health care. Since then, those numbers have flipped: Spending on food has fallen to 9.9 percent, while spending on health care has climbed to 16 percent of national income.

In Defense of Food: An Eater's Manifesto


Men who explain things
Topic: Health and Wellness 9:51 am EDT, Apr 21, 2008

Every woman knows what it's like to be patronized by a guy who won't let facts get in the way.

Men who explain things


Wife takes divorce drama online, vents scorn via YouTube
Topic: Health and Wellness 7:40 am EDT, Apr 16, 2008

We're the YouTube Generation, living in the YouTube Era, in a YouTube World. And now we apparently have a YouTube Divorce.

Wife takes divorce drama online, vents scorn via YouTube


Happiness is the measure of true wealth
Topic: Health and Wellness 6:57 am EDT, Apr 14, 2008

It comes as no surprise to learn from a study published this week that, although Britons are twice as rich as they were in 1987, they are no happier.

The lack of relationship between wealth and happiness has long been common knowledge, and the knowledge itself has long been a source of happiness to moralisers who like the fact that money is not life's answer.

There are, though, two confusions involved in the idea that anything significant can be discovered by looking for a correlation between wealth and happiness. One concerns the nature of happiness, the other the nature of wealth.

Happiness is the measure of true wealth


Inside the Middle Class: Bad Times Hit the Good Life
Topic: Health and Wellness 6:57 am EDT, Apr 14, 2008

This report on the attitudes and lives of the American middle class combines results of a new Pew Research Center national public opinion survey with the center's analysis of relevant economic and demographic trend data from the Census Bureau. Among its key findings:

Fewer Americans now than at any time in the past half century believe they're moving forward in life.

For decades, middle-income Americans had been making absolute progress while enduring relative decline. But since 1999, they have not made economic gains.

About half of all Americans think of themselves as middle class. They are a varied lot.

For the past two decades middle-income Americans have been spending more and borrowing more. Housing has been the key driver of both trends.

At a time when these borrow-and-spend habits have spread, Americans say it has become harder to sustain a middle-class lifestyle.

Economic, demographic, technological and sociological changes since 1970 have moved some groups up the income ladder and pushed others down.

Most middle class adults agree with the old saw that the Republican Party favors the rich while the Democratic Party favors the middle class and the poor.

Inside the Middle Class: Bad Times Hit the Good Life


Seven New Deadly Sins
Topic: Health and Wellness 6:57 am EDT, Apr 14, 2008

P.J. O'Rourke:

Busy times for us sinners--there are now an additional Seven Deadly Sins.

Seven New Deadly Sins


The Singles Map
Topic: Health and Wellness 7:05 am EDT, Apr  7, 2008

Which of these two decisions do you think has a bigger impact on someone's life: finding the right job, or finding the right significant other? No one's going to argue with the notion that where you live affects your employment prospects. But the place you call home has a lot to do with your chances of finding the right partner as well. Having an enticing "mating market" matters as much or more than a vibrant labor market.

It's not just that some places have more singles than others. If you're a single man or a single woman the odds of meeting that special someone vary dramatically across the country.

On Richard Florida's new book.

The Singles Map


In Web World of 24/7 Stress, Writers Blog Till They Drop
Topic: Health and Wellness 7:05 am EDT, Apr  7, 2008

To be sure, there is no official diagnosis of death by blogging, and the premature demise of two people obviously does not qualify as an epidemic. There is also no certainty that the stress of the work contributed to their deaths. But friends and family of the deceased, and fellow information workers, say those deaths have them thinking about the dangers of their work style.

In Web World of 24/7 Stress, Writers Blog Till They Drop


Blubberland: The Dangers of Happiness
Topic: Health and Wellness 11:31 am EDT, Mar 29, 2008

Elizabeth Farrelly:

I, like you, drive too much. I buy too much--of which I keep too much and also throw too much away. I overindulge my children, and myself. Directly as well as indirectly I use too much water, energy, air and space. My existence, in short, costs the planet more than it can afford. This is not some handed-down moral stricture, nor any sort of guilty self-flagellation, but a simple recognition of fact. The consequences are obvious, and near enough now to see the warts on their noses. For my own future, as well as my children's, I must change. And yet--this is what's weird--I, like you, can't. Cannot abandon comfort, convenience and pleasure for the sake of abstract knowledge. Can't stop doing it. This is interesting.

It's interesting because we think we are so rational, so intelligent, and yet we behave, both individually and as a herd, in such unintelligent ways. That's what drove this book into being.

Listen to an interview with the author.

Blubberland: The Dangers of Happiness


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