Posts

Precerpt from Grandma's Ninja Training Diary: Standing Tall When the World Wants You to Shrink

Image
  I’ve never been tall. Officially, I’m short enough to qualify as a “little person.” But I refuse to do the old‑lady bend‑over. Everywhere I go, I see women my age folding forward — shoulders rounding, necks jutting, spines curving like question marks. It’s not vanity that makes me fight it; it’s survival. Posture is the architecture of independence. Lose it, and everything else starts to collapse. I’ve never had perfect posture. My natural stance leans toward “functional slouch.” But I make myself stand tall. I pull my shoulders back, lift my chest, and imagine a string from the crown of my head to the ceiling. Sometimes I catch my reflection in a glass door and check: am I straight? If not, I pull harder. It’s a small act of defiance — a daily correction against gravity and time. I do wall angels and wall sits. They hurt a little, but they remind my body what “upright” feels like. I lie flat for glute bridges and sit‑ups, even though lying absolutely flat is harder now. My spine...

Treatment for Binge Eating Disorder: Medication: Supporting Neurochemical Balance

Image
  Medication can be a valuable adjunct to therapy, helping regulate the brain’s reward and impulse systems that contribute to binge eating. When it’s used: Medication is considered when therapy alone doesn’t reduce binge frequency or when co‑occurring conditions like depression, anxiety, or ADHD are present. How it works: Certain antidepressants (SSRIs) and lisdexamfetamine (Vyvanse) can reduce binge urges by stabilizing serotonin and dopamine pathways. They don’t “cure” BED but can make therapy more effective by quieting the neurological drive to binge. Expected results: Many people notice fewer binge episodes, improved mood, and better focus. Medication is always prescribed and monitored by a qualified clinician — it’s one piece of a larger recovery plan. image and some content AI-generated This post was inspired by the book, The Optimistic Food Addict: Recovering from Binge Eating Disorder by Dr. Christine Fisanick. Book Description The Optimistic Food Addict explores...

Building Functional Families in Complex Realities: Building Intersibling Bonds

Image
  Siblings are the first practice ground for empathy. They learn to share space, negotiate fairness, and test loyalty long before they understand those words. In every family, sibling relationships form the emotional architecture that lasts a lifetime — sometimes sturdy, sometimes cracked, but always foundational. Parents can’t force closeness, but they can design conditions where connection grows naturally. Start with shared identity Children need to know they belong to something larger than themselves. Tell family stories — not just the polished ones, but the messy, funny, resilient ones. When siblings hear “We’re the kind of family that helps each other,” they begin to act like it. Create rituals that make belonging visible Rituals don’t have to be elaborate. A weekly movie night, a shared bedtime joke, a family handshake — these small repetitions become emotional glue. They remind children that connection is a habit, not a coincidence. Rotate pairings In large families, allian...