Blog
Wellness blog
Clarity of thought. Soaring energy. Creative flow.
Can creativity cultivate well-being?
Turns out, it’s not just writers who benefit from taking time to be creative. A Drexel University pilot study found coloring, doodling, and free drawing activate the reward pathways of the brain, which can help improve mental health and creativity for lots of folks.
Do your eyes need a break?
Eye strain can slow your writing progress, but it doesn’t have to do so. Below are six tips to remedy this issue. If it persists, be sure to see your eye doctor.
Can ‘body doubling’ help you be healthier?
Perhaps body doubling is a way we can weave a thicker social network and feel supported while accomplishing our health and wellness goals.
Getting back to wellness practices after an illness
This is the tricky stage of recovery from illness: Those early jolts of energy tempting you to charge back into life, the return of the obligations you had to ignore because you felt too crummy to lift your head off the pillow. It’s hard not to get swept back up in the grind again. But I know if I do, I’ll overdo it and end up fighting this virus longer than I need to.
Alpaca yoga, float tanks and other wellness adventures
Several of my coworkers invited me to alpaca yoga at Eagle Eye Farm — a lovely expanse of green grass, white picket fences, friendly staff and the cutest little farm animals. I had a smile on my face the whole time, whether I was releasing muscle tension through down dog or petting Pearl, one of many alpacas on the farm.
Feel-good foods can help support your mood and wellbeing
Mood-boosting foods can help support your overall wellness and might make winter a little easier to tolerate.
Sleep as a wellness barometer
While it might not be possible to have “perfect” sleep all the time, sometimes it helps to think about our routines to see if we are maximizing them. What does your ideal sleep routine look like?
How to plan a vacation that will replenish, not drain you
For me, planning a successful vacation means identifying what’s important to me and my husband, choosing our priorities, and making sure we have time along the way to actually process and enjoy what we are seeing and doing instead of rushing from one thing to the next.
Exercise as a “feel-good” practice
Lately, I’ve been experimenting with this mindset: Asking my body what it needs today and then doing some type of exercise in line with that.