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Walking Away from Religion: When Honesty Becomes the Holiest Act

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  Many have walked away from organized religion not out of apathy, but out of honesty. That sentence unsettles some, comforts others, and quietly describes a spiritual migration that defines our age. 1. The Misread Exodus When people leave churches, synagogues, or temples, the easy assumption is indifference—“They just don’t care anymore.” But often, the opposite is true. They care so deeply that they can no longer pretend. They have outgrown the version of faith that demanded silence about their questions, conformity in their conscience, or denial of their lived experience. Leaving, for them, is not rebellion. It is integrity. 2. The Honest Heart Honesty in the spiritual life is not cynicism. It is the refusal to live divided—between what one professes and what one knows to be true. For many, the dissonance became unbearable: The institution preached compassion but practiced exclusion. The sermons spoke of humility but rewarded hierarchy. The rituals promised transformation but de...

Publisher's pride: Books on bestseller lists - Racing against Time (Weiss)

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  Today's publisher's pride is  Racing against Time  by Jeffrey Weiss, which has reached #131 in triathlons  on Amazon. Book Description: In  Racing Against Time , Jeff Weiss shares the story of his late middle-age transformation.  Weiss went from running a first 10K race at age 48 to becoming an Ironman and ultramarathoner by his late 50s.  Along the way he discovers the extraordinary physical and emotional benefits that flow from chasing ever-increasing fitness goals.  Weiss’s journey shows us that we have the power to influence how we age, that goal-setting and adventure are not solely the province of the young.  At a time when so many of us are looking for ways to increase our health span – that portion of life that we spend in good health – Weiss’s story shows us one way to get there.   Keywords: midlife fitness transformation, running after 40, Ironman after 50. ultramarathon training in your 50s, late bloomer athlete, healthy...

Caturday: When the Vet Is Scarier Than the Illness - Understanding “White Coat Syndrome” in Cats and How to Help the Ones Who Panic

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  Some cats stroll into the vet’s office like they own the place. Others melt into a puddle of dramatic despair. And then there are the rare few—like our beloved Happy Cat —who react with such overwhelming terror that the trip itself becomes the medical emergency. Happy Cat arrived in our lives as a self‑rescuing stray, already four or five years old, already carrying the emotional history of a cat who had learned to survive without help. He trusted us deeply at home, but the moment the carrier lifted off the ground, he transformed into a creature in full physiological panic: heaving breaths, frothing at the mouth, near collapse by the time we reached the clinic. The staff knew him by name, and someone always met us at the door to whisk him straight to oxygen. Every single visit. We tried all the standard desensitization tricks—carrier left out all week, soft bedding, treats inside, letting him nap in it—but the instant the carrier moved, his body remembered whatever trauma had...