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🌿 Transformation Tuesday: St. Augustine — Restless Until Rested in God

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Before he became one of Christianity’s greatest thinkers, Augustine was a seeker — brilliant, ambitious, and restless. He pursued truth through philosophy, pleasure, and prestige, yet found himself unsatisfied. His mind was sharp, but his heart was divided. His transformation began not in a single moment, but in a gradual awakening. He wrestled with questions of meaning and morality until, one day, he heard a child’s voice say, “Take and read.” Opening Scripture, he found words that pierced through his defenses. In that instant, intellect met grace. Augustine later wrote, “You have made us for Yourself, O Lord, and our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” His conversion was not an escape from reason but its fulfillment. He discovered that truth was not an idea to grasp but a presence to encounter. Augustine’s story reminds us that transformation often begins with restlessness — the ache that drives us toward the divine. When the mind’s search meets the heart’s surrender, peace...

The Three Types of ADHD — and What They Really Mean

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  ADHD isn’t one-size-fits-all. It’s a spectrum of attention, energy, and regulation differences that show up in distinct ways. The official term is Attention‑Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder , but that name hides the nuance. There are three recognized presentations — and each tells a different story about how a brain manages focus and impulse. 1. Predominantly Inattentive Type This is the form once called “ADD.” It’s not about hyperactivity — it’s about drift. People with inattentive ADHD often: Lose track of details or instructions Struggle to start or finish tasks Zone out during conversations Forget appointments or misplace things Feel mentally “foggy” even when trying hard It’s the quiet kind — the one that hides behind politeness and daydreams. Children with this type are often labeled “lazy” or “unmotivated,” when in fact their brains are working overtime to filter distractions. 2. Predominantly Hyperactive‑Impulsive Type This is the classic image — the restless energy that ca...

💪 Staying Active in Midlife and Older Years

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It is possible — and it’s worth it. People often say, “I wish I could still do that.” The truth is — you probably can. You just have to do it differently. Midlife and older years aren’t about slowing down; they’re about moving smarter . Here’s how to make it happen: 🧭 How to Do It Start where you are. You don’t need a gym membership or a marathon goal. Begin with walking, stretching, or dancing in your kitchen. Build consistency, not intensity. Ten minutes every day beats one heroic workout a month. Mix it up. Combine strength, balance, and flexibility — your body loves variety. Listen, don’t quit. Soreness means adapt; pain means pause. The goal is longevity, not punishment. Find your tribe. Movement is contagious. Join a walking group, pickleball league, or yoga class — laughter counts as cardio. 🧩 What to Do For strength: Try bodyweight squats, resistance bands, or light weights — they keep you independent. For balance: Practice tai chi, yoga, or single-leg stands — they h...