Archive for August, 2008
Why having an extra wife may lead to a longer life
Wednesday, August 27th, 2008The key to a long life could be as simple as getting a second wife.
Research suggests that men from polygamist cultures live 12 per cent longer than those who limit their affections to one woman at a time.
It is thought men benefit from having a fuss made over them by a gaggle of women. They may also better care of themselves into old age when they have a large family to feed, this week’s New Scientist reports.
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Naked Water Aerobics
Tuesday, August 26th, 20087 Reasons Why the Gym is Better Than Therapy
Tuesday, August 26th, 2008I have a love affair with my gym. She’s not much to look at: a rubber track and weight room in a dank basement, but appearances aren’t everything. She’s there on my best days and on my worst days. We never fight, and she doesn’t care what I look like as long as I give her my full attention for a few hours a week.
I was talking with a fellow gym goer recently (the gym and I have an open relationship). He mentioned that whenever he is facing something frustrating, he goes to the gym. The gym is his form of therapy, and if I think about it, it’s my stress release too. So, I’d like to present my list of ten reasons the gym is better than therapy.
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Group Fun at the Naked Spa
Monday, August 25th, 2008Fruit is Good For You
Sunday, August 24th, 2008Naked Outside Stretching
Monday, August 18th, 2008Naked Soccer
Tuesday, August 12th, 2008Naked Workout on the Exercise Ball
Saturday, August 9th, 2008Sleep on It: How Snoozing Makes You Smarter
Thursday, August 7th, 2008The latest research suggests that while we are peacefully asleep our brain is busily processing the day’s information. It combs through recently formed memories, stabilizing, copying and filing them, so that they will be more useful the next day. A night of sleep can make memories resistant to interference from other information and allow us to recall them for use more effectively the next morning. And sleep not only strengthens memories, it also lets the brain sift through newly formed memories, possibly even identifying what is worth keeping and selectively maintaining or enhancing these aspects of a memory. When a picture contains both emotional and unemotional elements, sleep can save the important emotional parts and let the less relevant background drift away. It can analyze collections of memories to discover relations among them or identify the gist of a memory while the unnecessary details fade—perhaps even helping us find the meaning in what we have learned.
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