Eco-friendly tiny houses offer safety, stability, and savings.
Mental health
Celebrated physician Gabor Maté on how our toxic culture is making us ill.
The Dutch art of niksen—intentionally doing nothing, letting the mind wander—is much needed in our over-scheduled lives.
From The Current Issue
Rest is not antithetical to work. We cannot imagine work without it.
Therapy can be very helpful, but we have to remember that therapy is not the standard nor the only place to find healing and safety.
During a time of relentless violence and mass shootings, it is important to understand how grief impacts us all.
More and more people are experimenting with mental health apps and discovering their benefits and limits.
Addressing domestic violence solely through the criminal justice system often doesn’t fix the problem or promote healing, and may actually cause additional harm. More holistic, trauma-informed approaches can give people a chance to process the deeper reasons for their behavior and allow them an opportunity to change.
Today’s hustle culture claims “unearned” pleasure is shameful. But there are ways to resist this cultural response.
Black and Brown rage is often dehumanized, while White rage is protected and coddled. But it takes courage to transmute rage and anger into collective and lasting transformation.
Formerly incarcerated mental health care providers are supplementing traditional resources for those still in prison—with mutually beneficial results.
Attachment theory can be helpful in holistically supporting refugee children by using its evidence to improve refugee relief and resettlement.
For Black and Indigenous communities, it takes more than therapy and medicine to tackle mental illness. We need a holistic approach.
In "Stolen Focus," Johann Hari unplugs from digital media and regains his concentration.
“Rather than letting our relationship with nature extinguish itself during the cold, wet, dark days, we need to take special care to keep it kindled.”
Understanding why many Asian Americans don’t seek mental health care—like stigma and lack of culturally appropriate resources—is essential to providing effective support.
From breath work to joyful movement, 9 suggestions on how to compassionately soothe the body amidst pandemic anxiety.
“The ultimate cause of homelessness is our spiritual break with the land.”
Stitching mantas—tortilla covers—is a traditional craft among Latin American women. As migrants wait out the U.S. immigration bureaucracy in a Mexican border city, mantas are increasingly a lifeline.
“Slow work is an exercise in doing less, and more aspirationally, doing nothing.”
For years, horror—a sort of safe danger I knew had an end—got me through some seriously traumatic situations.
Studies show that investments in public art can improve street safety, provide tourism and new jobs, and combat social isolation and anxiety.
Many in this generation are aware of what they have lost by having grown up on social media, so they’re logging off and working to create a safer, healthier future.
“Our job, as human beings, is to learn from our suffering.”
“Could it be that the fragmentation of our relations has been a fundamental cause of our exhaustion?”
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