Can A Plant Remember? This one seems to.

There’s this plant I’ve heard about that had a really bad afternoon a few years ago. It was in its pot bothering nobody and then, suddenly, it fell. Not once, but 56 times. (I’ll explain in a minute.) But it’s a plant. Things happen to plants, and as far as I know, they go on as before. They don’t have brains. They have no way to “remember” anything. They’re not animals. So I figure even 56 consecutive falls left no lasting impression.

Sensitive plant, shame plant (Mimosa pudica), flower and leaf, leaves sensitiv, leaflets folded after touching Photograph by blickwinkel, Alamy. Photo by National Geographic. Image of a stunning landscape sourced from National Geographic. Available at: https://i.natgeofe.com/n/686cf10b-fb74-460c-9902-f4f5242535b7/AN2DHB.jpg?w=718&h=1095

Managing your emotions can save your heart

We often think of the heart and brain as being completely separate from each other. After all, your heart and brain are located in different regions of your body, and cardiology and neurology are separate disciplines. Yet these organs are intimately connected, and when your emotions adversely affect your brain, your heart is affected as well.

Photo by Medscape. Image of an illustration of interconnected mind and heart sourced from Medscape. Available at: https://domf5oio6qrcr.cloudfront.net/medialibrary/8865/Srinis-mindheart-blog.jpg

Yoga For Brain Power: Mindfulness Exercises Reduce Effects Of Cognitive Impairment By Improving Memory, Mood

A recent study published in the Journal of Alzheimer's Disease found yoga and meditation could reduce the cognitive and emotional problems linked to Alzheimer's and other forms of dementia compared to memory training exercises like crossword puzzles.

Yoga can stave off the effects of Alzheimer's disease and other forms of dementia. PIXABAY, PUBLIC DOMAIN

How to Make Dandelion Salve

There are a lot of recipes floating around the internet for homemade balms, salves and lotions. My frustration with a lot of them is that they include a lot of ingredients I don’t have on hand. I’ve almost invested in some of these products but couldn’t ever bite the bullet and do it. Often these products can be expensive and not something I’ll use often enough to make the investment. What I love about this recipe I created is that it includes some pretty simple ingredients that most people already have at home or can purchase for a low cost. Making and using all natural skin care products doesn’t have to be expensive! 

Photo by Montana Homesteader. Image of homemade herbal salve in a tin sourced from Montana Homesteader. Available at: https://montanahomesteader.com

Letting It Go: Easier Said Than Done

One traditional Chinese adage says, “Your heart can create heaven or hell.” The modern version of this might read something like, “Your consciousness creates your reality.”

Photo by Shutterstock. Image of beach wave and footprints at sunset sourced from Shutterstock. Available at: https://www.shutterstock.com/es/image-photo/beach-wave-footprints-sunset-time-387261568

How to Cook with Cicadas

Ever since the summer of 2004, I’ve been hungry for bugs. That’s when Cicada Brood X made its last 17-year appearance, and when a Google search turned up an all-cicada cookbook from West Virginia, with dozens of recipes by women named Bea and Mabel. I was at once revolted and compelled. My wife was just revolted.

The periodical cicada (''Magicicada septendecim'') Plate 7 from ''Insects, their way and means of living'', R. E. Snodgrass. [http://www.archive.org/details/39088001578236] Caption: The periodical cicada (''Magicicada septendecim'') A female inserti

Sexuality in Chinese Medicine: Part 3

Human sexuality is closely linked to the physiology and pathology of the extraordinary vessels, especially the Du, Ren and Chong Mai.

The Du and Ren Mai are the expression of Fire and Water respectively with regard to sexuality: the exchange of sexual essences and of Yin and Yang during sexual intercourse takes place through the intertwining of the Du and Ren Mai during intercourse.

By Giovani Maciocia

Photo by Giovani Maciocia. Image sourced from Blogger. Available at: https://blogger.googleusercontent.com

Talking to Ourselves: The science of the little voice in your head

Most of us will be familiar with the experience of silently talking to ourselves in our head. Perhaps you’re at the supermarket and realise that you’ve forgotten to pick up something you needed. “Milk!” you might say to yourself. Or maybe you’ve got an important meeting with your boss later in the day, and you’re simulating – silently in your head – how you think the conversation might go, possibly hearing both your own voice and your boss’s voice responding.

By Peter Mosely

Inner speech and talking out loud share similar brain mechanisms. Photograph: Alamy. Image sourced from The Guardian. Available at: https://www.theguardian.com

It's not Cancer: Doctors Reclassify a Thyroid Tumor

An international panel of doctors has decided that a type of tumor that was classified as a cancer is not a cancer at all.

As a result, they have officially downgraded the condition, and thousands of patients will be spared removal of their thyroid, treatment with radioactive iodine and regular checkups for the rest of their lives, all to protect against a tumor that was never a threat.

By Gina Kolata

Photo by The New York Times. Image of cancer cells under a microscope sourced from The New York Times. Available at: https://static01.nyt.com

Schisandra Berry Pastilles: A Five Flavor Recipe

Schisandra berry is a very special herb in that it has all five tastes. That means that in herbal theory, it contains the qualities and benefits of all five flavors. This explains why it doesn’t do just one thing!

 

Photo by LearningHerbs. Image of schisandra pastilles on a table sourced from LearningHerbs. Available at: https://learningherbs.com

The Year in Fungi

If there is a rule in biology, I can think about how it does not apply to fungi,” Anne Pringle, a mycologist at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, said earlier this year. “They challenge our preconceptions of how biology works.” Neither plant nor animal (though closer to the latter in evolutionary terms), fungi are everywhere.

By Nicola Twilley

Geastrum britannicum, one of 2015’s newly confirmed fungi, was previously dismissed as a variant of another species. Photograph by Dawn and Jim Langiewicz. Image sourced from The New Yorker. Available at: https://media.newyorker.com

The Medicinal Benefits of Myrrh

In the horn of Africa, a small native tree, covered in spines, grows in the arid deserts. When the bark is wounded through to the sapwood, the tree exudes an aromatic, oily, yellow oleo gum resin which eventually hardens into a hard yellow-reddish opaque globule that can be easily harvested from the side of the tree.

Photo by LearningHerbs. Image of myrrh tooth powder in a bowl sourced from LearningHerbs. Available at: https://learningherbs.com

From 1890 to 2016 in NYC's Chinatown

Sharing an image from our friends at Wing On Wo & Co at 26 Mott St. NYC. The oldest shop in NY's Chinatown, originally serving the needs of the new immigrant population as a mail center and providing goods from home. With the same proprietors for the last 91 years, Wing On Wo & Co now stocks fine antique porcelain goods and offers an unprecedented view on the history of the local community. Stop on by to see how they are still a driving force in shaping the future of the neighborhood.