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A Call to Love One Another: The Universal Command at the Heart of Faith

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  If there is one teaching that appears everywhere, in every tradition, in every era, it is the call to love. Not sentimental love, but the disciplined, ethical, courageous love that reshapes societies. Judaism commands love of neighbor and love of the stranger—two categories that together encompass the entire human family. Christianity centers love as the very nature of God and the defining mark of discipleship: “By this everyone will know…” Love is not optional; it is identity. Islam teaches mercy as the first attribute of God and calls believers to embody that mercy in their dealings with others. Hinduism speaks of ahimsa —non-harm—as a form of love expressed through restraint, compassion, and recognition of the divine in all beings. Buddhism cultivates metta , loving-kindness, as a disciplined practice that expands outward from the self to all beings without exception. Sikhism teaches love through service ( seva ) and through the recognition that all people are equally wo...

When the Healthiest Person Gets Labeled “The Problem”

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Every family has a story it tells about itself. In healthy families, that story can stretch to include truth, conflict, and growth. In dysfunctional families, the story becomes rigid. It must be protected at all costs. And when reality threatens that story, the family often chooses a surprising solution: it identifies the healthiest member as “the problem.” This isn’t pop psychology. It’s a well‑established pattern in family systems theory, where the person who refuses to play along with dysfunction becomes the identified patient — the one who carries the symptoms the family doesn’t want to face. Sometimes that person is the most perceptive, the most emotionally honest, or simply the one who says, “This isn’t right.” In a system built on denial, that kind of clarity is destabilizing. So the family stabilizes itself the only way it knows how: by pathologizing the truth‑teller. The “problem child” may be the one who names the tension everyone else tiptoes around. The “difficult sibling”...

Cancer Diary: When Bloating Doesn’t Go Away

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  We all know bloating — that tight, swollen feeling after a meal, the waistband that suddenly feels too snug, the sigh of relief when it passes. But what happens when it doesn’t pass? When bloating becomes a daily companion — not a passing annoyance but a persistent presence — it’s time to listen more closely. Because sometimes, bloating isn’t about food at all. It’s about what’s happening inside the body. 1. The ordinary causes — and why they matter Most bloating is benign: Swallowed air from eating quickly or talking while eating Gas from digestion or food intolerances Hormonal changes Constipation But when bloating becomes chronic , progressive , or unexplained , it can signal something deeper — especially when paired with other changes like pain, fatigue, or weight loss. 2. The cancers most often linked to bloating Persistent bloating can accompany several cancers, particularly those in the abdomen and pelvis: Ovarian cancer — one of the most classic presentations. Women ofte...