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When You Notice Something Isn’t Right: What to Do If You Suspect Early Alzheimer’s

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  Sometimes the first sign isn’t dramatic. It’s a feeling. A missed word. A forgotten appointment. A sense that your mind isn’t moving quite the way it used to. If you still have insight—if you’re aware that something may be changing—that is not something to ignore. It’s actually a powerful advantage. Acting early can open doors to better care, clearer answers, and more options. So what should you look for, and what should you do? What to Watch For Occasional forgetfulness is normal. But these patterns are worth paying attention to: Memory changes that disrupt daily life (not just misplacing keys, but forgetting important events or repeating questions) Word-finding difficulty that happens more often or becomes frustrating Trouble following familiar tasks (recipes, bills, routines) Losing track of time or getting disoriented in familiar places Increased mental effort for things that used to feel easy Subtle withdrawal from conversations or activities If you’re not...

Childbirth — What Is a Doula and What She Can and Cannot Do

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  When you are preparing for childbirth, you quickly discover that the delivery room can feel crowded with professionals—OB‑GYNs, midwives, nurses, anesthesiologists. And then someone asks, “Are you getting a doula?” If you have never worked with one, the word itself can feel mysterious. But a doula is simply a trained support person whose entire focus is you —your comfort, your confidence, your emotional steadiness, and your sense of being seen and heard during labor. A doula is not a medical provider. She does not replace your doctor or midwife. Instead, she fills the gap that medical staff often cannot fill because they are busy monitoring fetal heart tones, charting, managing medications, and watching for complications. A doula stays with you continuously, offering the kind of steady presence that can make labor feel less frightening and more manageable. What a Doula Can Do 1. Provide continuous emotional support Labor can be long, unpredictable, and overwhelming. A doula s...

“Religion Is a Language for Talking to God”—But What Happens When We Weaponize the Grammar?

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  In An Afternoon's Dictation , Steven Greenebaum (PhD/Rev) wrote he was told by God that “religion is a language for talking to God.” It’s a beautiful insight—simple, disarming, and profoundly true. But like any language, religion can be used to bless or to wound, to build bridges or to burn them. And today, we are watching what happens when the language meant for communion becomes a tool for control. When the Language of Faith Becomes a Weapon Across the world—and across dinner tables—religious identity has become a fault line. Not because people suddenly believe more deeply, but because religion is increasingly treated as a badge of tribal belonging rather than a path to the divine. Christian Nationalism reframes Christianity not as a way of loving God and neighbor, but as a cultural boundary marker—who belongs and who does not. In this worldview, faith becomes fused with national identity, political loyalty, and social hierarchy. The result is not devotion but division. Fam...