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Nosh

Do Fermented Foods Live Up To The Hype? Here's What The Research Says

Health food stores tout kimchi, kefir, and kombucha as gut-aiding superfoods, but is the hype true?
Proponents say that [linkbuilder id=”6578″ text=”fermented foods”] increase good bacteria in the gut, which improves digestion, immunity, and a host of other biological processes.

Skeptics, however, warn that good bacteria can’t survive the acidic conditions of the stomach, which renders any potential benefits null and void.
So who’s right, and what exactly is fermentation anyway?

Fermentation relies on the presence of microorganisms to convert sugar to alcohol or acid.

This process results in high concentrations of good bacteria, like Lactobacilli, which have a large number of health benefits. While many of these probiotics can be taken in supplement form, research suggests that naturally fermented foods may be more beneficial.

How to make yogurt in the instantpot from scratch! #insantpot #instantpotrecipes #madefromscratch #homemadeyogurt #easyyogurt

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Like so many current fads—think raising chickens or eating organic food—fermentation is an ancient practice. In fact, there is evidence that Neolithic villagers made a fermented beverage of rice, honey, and fruit over 9,000 years ago.
Since then, cultures around the world have concocted yogurt, sauerkraut, pickled cucumbers, tempeh, soy sauce, and dozens more fermented foods, beverages, and condiments.

Nothing beats homemade! #homemadesoysauce #youdontseethiseveryday

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While the original goal of fermentation was a longer shelf life, cultures that incorporate fermented foods in their everyday diets also benefit from longer lives on average.

Fermentation has proven health benefits, but they don’t always outweigh the impact of harmful ingredients.

Various studies have touted the positive effects of eating fermented food—ranging from better mental health to clearer skin. The trick is to make sure you’re not consuming unhealthy amounts of sugar or sodium as a result of eating fermented food.
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Certain fermented foods, particularly kefir and yogurt, can have staggering amounts of sugar in them. To make matters worse, some manufacturers heat treat yogurt after the fermentation process. This is done to kill any bad bacteria, but it destroys the good bacteria, too.

Many fermented food claims would benefit from more research, but what we know now is promising.

Because of the wide variety of fermented foods available, many of them remain unstudied. Still, the ones that have been researched show great promise for increasing our gut biodiversity. For instance, a study of Greek dry salami found 348 different strains of lactic acid bacteria present in the food.
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Kimchi, a fermented cabbage dish, boasts an impressive list of benefits including anti-cancer, anti-obesity, and anti-aging properties. If you want more proof that this Korean side dish is a superfood, scholarly research indicates that the average life expectancy of South Korean women will likely surpass 90 years by 2030.
Other foods that have health-boosting live cultures include pickles and sauerkraut. Just be sure to pick these foods from the refrigerated section of the store. Jarred pickles and canned sauerkraut from the shelves do not have live cultures in them.

That’s right: Any foods that have been pasteurized to ensure a longer shelf life do not contain good or bad bacteria.

Probiotics can survive the gastrointestinal (GI) tract, but they could use your help.

Skeptics of probiotics and fermented food believe that acid in the stomach kills off the good bacteria before it can reach the lower GI tract. Testing this hypothesis is difficult, but multiple studies have confirmed that good bacteria can survive and have a positive impact on our gut flora.
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Choosing fermented foods with resilient strains of good bacteria, such as B. animalis, L. casei, L. rhamnosus, and L. plantarum, helps ensure that the probiotics will survive long enough to affect your gut biome.
Researchers have studied fecal samples to prove that good bacteria can survive the journey through the GI tract. Though there was variation, some strains were found in the back-end samples, proving they were able to withstand the entire digestive process. Probiotics from yogurt fared better than probiotics in cheese, for instance.
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Researchers will continue studying the health benefits of probiotics, but for now, there is clear evidence that fermented food benefits your gut.
Bottom line: Choosing refrigerated foods with live cultures is essential, and opting for items with no added sugar or salt is also a good rule of thumb.

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Wellbeing

5 Fashion And Lifestyle Subscription Services You'll Love

Picking out new clothes and accessories shouldn’t be so difficult. Thanks to these services, it isn’t! Let these monthly subscriptions help you out.

Sign up for one, or more, today.

1. Wantable

Who can afford a personal shopper? Thanks to Wantable, the answer is “you.” You can. And you don’t even have to go all the way downtown for an appointment.

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Wantable

Tell Wantable what you like. Start with a simple lifestyle quiz and a personal stylist will start sending clothes it would take you hours at malls and thrift stores to track down yourself.

The service sends five to seven personally curated items every month, so there’s always something to love. Buy what you like from each shipment and send the rest back. Your monthly styling fee counts toward your purchase, and you never pay shipping in either direction.

Start when you want. Skip a month when you want. Quit when you want.

Get started with a $20 a month styling fee here.

2. Stitch Fix

Get your own personal stylist with Stitch Fix. All you have to do is fill out a style profile that captures data about your size, style, and price preferences. Then Stitch Fix’s stylists will send five hand-selected items to your home. Buy what you like and return what you don’t, all for a $20 fee per shipment. That fee becomes a credit toward the items you buy. Shipping in both directions is free.

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Stitch Fix

Positive Review: “As a mom of 3 boys, I don’t have time to shop—nor do I enjoy it. Stitch Fix sends me unique clothing so I can still feel put together.” —Stitch Fix Subscriber

Check out the Stitch Fix site for prices and to fill out your style guide.

3. Rocksbox

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Rocksbox

Never shop for jewelry again. With Rocksbox, you receive three unique pieces tailored to your taste. Buy anything you like, send the rest back with free shipping, and your subscription fee will be credited towards your purchase.

Sign up for Rocksbox here for only $21.00 a month.

4. FabFitFun

This is the box for those of you who cannot make up your minds. The FabFitFun Box is a makeup, snack, fashion, health and wellness, and accessory box all rolled into one. Even though this box only ships once every three months, it’s packed full of all things fun and fabulous each time.

Even better, there’s no selection process. You keep whatever’s in the box. It’s yours!

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FabFitFun

Positive Review: “Opening this box felt like it was Christmas morning. I was transported back to my childhood, I was pulling out one great surprise after another!” —FabFitFun Box Subscriber

Sign up for FabFitFun here for $49.99.

5. Fabletics

Fabletics is a little different than the typical subscription service. It’s really more of an online retailer with an optional membership model. Think Sam’s Club or Costco, but for high-quality activewear, curated just for you.

There’s no better (or more affordable) way to keep your closet stocked with top-of-the-line yoga pants, tank tops, workout clothes, swimsuits, and general fashion for the super-active woman.

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Fabletics

As with Wantable, Fabletics starts with a quick, fun quiz. Your answers to the questions tell the Fabletics stylists exactly what fits your needs and desires. Then comes the really fun part: Go shopping! Search through hundreds of styles curated based on your preferences and available for speedy delivery from Fabletics online.

You have two choices at checkout: You can either buy your clothes as a “guest” or opt into the VIP membership program. The latter is where the savings really start to accumulate. VIP members can save up to 50 percent on their items, all while earning points that add up to free gifts.

Sign up for a VIP membership with Fabletics for $49.95 a month, or just shop for some nice new activewear, here.

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Nosh

Family Dinner Night Made Easy: Meal Kit Subscriptions You Should Know About

You’ve got a lot on your plate, metaphorically speaking, and meal delivery services simplify your routine by taking dinner worries out of the equation. They’re also great for exploring new recipes and refining your cooking skills.

With the success of Blue Apron, a number of new meal delivery services have staked a claim in the rapidly growing market. Of course, they’re not all exactly the same—they offer noticeably different meal options, delivery schedules, and pricing structures.

To that end, we decided to review a few of the most popular meal delivery services. Here’s what you need to know.

Home Chef

Home Chef’s meals are somewhat less adventurous than what you’d get from the other services we reviewed. That’s not necessarily a bad thing, since you can recreate many Home Chef recipes with a quick trip to the grocery store (good luck trying that with something like Blue Apron’s “roasted chickpea and freekeh salad with harissa-glazed carrots and dates”).

The service also offers excellent options for families, as you can order up to six meals for two, four, or six people. Home Chef also offers low-calorie and low-carb options, and users can elect to avoid certain ingredients (soy, red meat, nuts, wheat, milk, and more).

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Home Chef

The bottom line: If you’ve got picky young eaters, Home Chef’s simple recipes are a good thing. If you’re cooking for yourself, however, you’ll probably want to keep looking.

Price: $9.95 per serving, plus shipping for orders less than $40.

HelloFresh

Billed as “your weeknight dinner solution,” HelloFresh offers an excellent variety of seasonal recipes at an affordable rate of $9.99 per meal. Their family plan provides servings for four people at $8.74 per serving.

While the company doesn’t offer the same extensive instructional tools as Blue Apron, you can still follow recipes with the HelloFresh Android and iOS apps. Users can select “fit” and “quick” options from HelloFresh’s menu, which helps accommodate the different lifestyles and needs of diverse home cooks.

The service also offers vegetarian, dairy-free, nut-free, and gluten-free menu options (note that these aren’t distinct plans, but rather optional recipes, which are clearly identified on the company’s website).

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Hello Fresh

The bottom line: HelloFresh is affordable, and it certainly makes meal planning more efficient. It’s an excellent option for creating healthy, delicious meals, but you’ll need to bring some basic cooking skills to the table to get the most out of your weekly order.

Price: $8.74 to $9.99 per serving.

Blue Apron

With delicious, fresh ingredients, Blue Apron is easily the best-known meal delivery service. Our deliveries arrived on time, and every recipe used unusual ingredients that you might not normally find in your kitchen.

Their Family Plan offers eight servings, but Blue Apron is more geared toward couples and individuals. While their recipes are delicious, picky kids might not find them quite so satisfying.

Recently, Blue Apron substantially expanded its available menu options. Users can select from eight recipes with plenty of great vegetarian options, but people with special dietary considerations will have to alter many recipes to enjoy them (Blue Apron offers substitution resources on its website).

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Blue Apron

The bottom line: Blue Apron provides an exquisite selection of recipes, and its instructional materials are top-notch. It’s still better for individuals and couples than it is for larger families, but it provides the best overall experience.

Price: $8.74 to $9.99 per serving.

Plated

The most expensive of the services we reviewed, Plated also offers the most versatile delivery options for larger families. Users can order up to four servings per night for up to four nights per week (a whopping 16 servings for a not-too-unreasonable $159.20). The service also offers desserts for an additional $4 per serving, along with a “Chef’s Table” option with specialty meats and seafoods. Shipping is free for boxes over $50.

Plated has restaurant-quality recipes, but it’s difficult to justify the high cost of the service when other meal delivery options provide similar quality.

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Plated

The bottom line: If you want a fairly versatile delivery service with desserts and other add-ons, Plated is worth a try, but be prepared to pay for the convenience.

Price: $9.95 to $11.95 per serving.

Sun Basket

Sun Basket offers “inspired farm-to-table recipes” with organic, non-GMO produce and sustainably farmed meats. It’s the only service we tested with distinct gluten-free and paleo delivery options. You’ll also find a “lean and clean” option for weight management and a “rise and shine” option with easy-to-prepare breakfasts.

Families can select from two to four recipes per week (at four servings per recipe). Sun Basket is fairly expensive, but it accommodates different dietary requirements while staying eco-friendly, so we can understand the extra expense.

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Sun Basket

The bottom line: Sun Basket is quite versatile, and their recipes are innovative. You’ll pay more, but if you have special dietary considerations, this is the service for you.

Price: $9.99 to $11.49 per serving.

Before you start using one of these services, make sure to prep your kitchen. Here are a few must-have items for every home chef:

Cuisinart Multiclad Pro Stainless Steel 7 or 12-Piece Cookware Set, $179.10 (7-Piece) or $236.99 (12-Piece)

Sure, you could use non-stick cookware, but you’ll eventually need to replace it. Stainless steel offers better heat control, and this Cuisinart set is actually quite affordable.

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Shun VB0706 Sora 8-Inch Chef’s Knife, $79.95

Never skimp on your most important tool. A good, sharp chef’s knife allows you to prep dinner quickly and safely. The Shun VB0706 lets you refine your cutting skills with an insanely sharp VG10 blade.

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Joseph Joseph 5-Piece Chopping Board Set, $29.99

Worried about mixing up your cutting boards? This cutting board set comes in a chic stand, and the little icons on each tab show you what you’re supposed to be cutting on it.

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OXO Good Grips® 15-Piece Kitchen Tool Set, $99.99

This set comes in a nice stainless-steel holder, which fits well into narrow spaces. The tools are exceptional, and every utensil is machine washable with the exception of the can opener.

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Amazon

Joseph Joseph 9-Piece Stainless Steel Mixing Bowls, $87.64

As long as you’re outfitting your kitchen with stainless steel, you might as well pick up this mixing bowl and measuring cup set. Each item is easy to clean and you’ll stay organized thanks to the brilliant nesting design.

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Amazon

OXO Good Grips 16-Piece Glass Food Storage Set, $59.99

If you’re ordering any of these meal plans, you’ll eventually have leftovers. Keep them tasting fresh with this shatterproof glass storage set. They’re easy to care for, and you’ll never experience the unpleasant taste of plastic again.

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Bed Bath & Beyond

OXO Good Grips Swivel Peeler, $8.99

Peeling during prep? No problem. This swivel peeler gets the job done quickly without wasting much food.

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Amazon

Müeller Vegetable Chopper, $19.99

Let’s say that you’re not so keen on refining your knife skills. No worries—this vegetable chopper can handle that annoying task for you. (Bonus: fewer tears while chopping onions.)

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Amazon

Kitchen Gizmo The Original Snap N’ Strain, $12.99

Using a strainer can be a pain, especially if you’re shorthanded in the kitchen. This strainer snaps onto your pot to allow for one-handed draining. It’s excellent if you’re looking to reserve some starchy liquid to add back into certain recipes (mashed potatoes, for instance).

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Amazon

Categories
Nosh

Whole Foods Shoppers, Rejoice: Amazon Is Reducing Prices On Everything

Amazon is making big changes at Whole Foods.

Amazon acquired Whole Foods for

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Organic bananas dropped from 99 cents per pound to 69 cents. A jar of almond butter costs a dollar less (now $6.99), and Fuji apples dropped from $3.49 per pound to a mere $1.99.

Perhaps most tellingly, an organic rotisserie chicken now costs $9.99, down from a much less budget friendly $13.99. Reporters from TechCrunch claimedWhole Foods Market


to see rotisserie chickens available for even less, noting that prices vary from store to store.

Whole Foods has a reputation for its high prices, which it has justified by offering a wide variety of organic, fair-trade products. Amazon, however, seems to be targeting a less exclusive clientele in a bid to compete with stores like Walmart and Kroger.

“Whole Foods Market will offer lower prices starting Monday on a selection of best-selling grocery staples across its stores, with more to come,” read a press release issued by both companies on Aug. 24.

Jeff Wilke, CEO of Amazon Worldwide Consumer, said that the move is intended to make nutritious food more affordable to a wider audience.

“Everybody should be able to eat Whole Foods Market quality,” Wilke said. “We will lower prices without compromising Whole Foods Market’s long-held commitment to the highest standards.”

While some prices didn’t change, the overall effect was dramatic. Whole Foods shoppers took to social media to celebrate the discounts—and, in some cases, to express concern over the new ownership.

Some shoppers also claimed that the price reductions weren’t as significant as they’d hoped. The changes affected many staples such as eggs, avocados, baby kale, and bananas, but discounts were less notable outside of the store’s produce section.

For longtime shoppers, there were other changes.

Whole Foods stores also had big bins filled with the Echo and Echo Dot, Amazon’s voice-activated electronic assistants, a nod toward the technological innovations coming to the chain. Eventually, Whole Foods will adopt Amazon Prime for its customer rewards program, and current Prime members will be eligible for special savings.

This may only be the beginning. Amazon also plans to offer certain Whole Foods brands on its website, including products from 365 Everyday Value, Whole Paws, and Whole Catch. Customers will also be able to ship products to their local Whole Foods for pickup through the Amazon Lockers program.

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There’s widespread speculation that Amazon will launch its own meal delivery service to compete with smaller companies like Blue Apron, and Whole Foods will likely play a huge role in that venture.

“This is just the beginning,” the companies’ press release reads. “Amazon and Whole Foods Market plan to offer more in-store benefits and lower prices for customers over time as the two companies integrate logistics and point-of-sale and merchandising systems.”

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Sweat

10 Home Fitness Essentials

If you’re tired of paying high membership fees to use a gym you hate—or you just don’t have time to work out—give one of these products a try. They’ll help you get a satisfying workout in your own home, but they’re small enough to put away when you’re done.
Here are your pop-up gym essentials:

1. Stamina AeroPilates Magic Circle

The Magic Circle is one of those rare products that totally earns its name. It builds and tones muscle, but it’s small enough to keep in a drawer. This soft rubber-coated ring can be used anywhere at anytime, but it still gives you all the resistance you need for a full-body workout.

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Target.com

Positive Review: “I’m a personal trainer and I use the magic circle with my clients. They love the results!”- MarlainaHealthCoach
Buy your own Magic Circle here for $25.49.

2. Reehut High Density Exercise Mat

The Reehut exercise mat is made from 1/2″, easy-to-clean, eco-friendly Nitrile rubber. It is incredibly supportive and comfortable as it stabilizes your body all throughout your workout. When you’re done, it rolls up into a compact tube for easy storage.

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Amazon.com

Positive Review: “This is a great product to purchase if you work out at home. It’s thick enough to support my weight (5’4″ 160 lbs) and comfortable as well. The length is also good. It comes with detachable handles that make it easy to store.”- Riya Seifert
Buy the mat here for $19.99.

3. BookFactory Fitness Journal

Keep track of your hard work and progress with this pocket-sized fitness journal. Pages contain spaces to record your strength workouts, cardio, daily goals, food and water intake, and notes on your fitness journey.

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Amazon.com

Positive Review: “This is by far the best workout book out there. Very user friendly and flexible. There are pages to put your diet and water intake as well. So nice!”- Z on March
Get your own journal here for $6.99.

4. Empower 3-in-1 Kettlebell

Finally, a kettlebell you can adjust to fit your workout needs. Set to 5, 8, or 12 pounds and feel the burn. This compact kettlebell stores easily and takes up way less closet space than a set of weights.

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Target.com

Positive Review: “I love this Kettle Bell! It is so easy to use and the DVD is great!!”- syndig
Buy the kettlebell here for $28.99.

5. Stamina Doorway Trainer Plus

Build upper-body strength with the Doorway Trainer Plus. Use it in a door for pull-ups or chin-ups, or move it to the floor for dips and push-ups.

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Target.com

Positive Review: “I bought this warily that it would not feel safe or secure. My previous bar screwed in to the door frame but I don’t want to put holes in my rental house. This bar is worth the money. It was easy to setup, feels very sturdy, and is simple to slip in and out of the doorway. The design makes it convenient for floor dips (we don’t belong to a gym) which my wife also enjoys. We can also flip it to the bottom and use it to do sit-ups but honestly we just use the ab-wheel. Ours stays up most of the time and I do a few pull-ups when I pass through the door. I’ve been at it for about a week and I enjoy having a pull-up bar again.”- Wardy
Buy the bar here for $27.49.

6. Fit Simplify Resistance Loop Exercise Bands

These high-quality, 100 percent latex resistance bands are perfect for working out at home or on the go. Workouts don’t get simpler than this.

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Amazon.com

Positive Review: “Excellent quality bands, come in various resistances. Good packing. Very satisfied.”- Luis Malorano
Purchase the resistance band set here for $11.95.

7. AmazonBasics Medicine Ball

You don’t need fancy equipment or a ton of space to get a great workout. You just need a good, old-fashioned medicine ball like this one.

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Amazon.com

Positive Review: “I use this ball to do circuits and it is exactly what you want in a medicine ball, easy to grip and the weight is distributed evenly. It is of the same great quality as more expensive balls that I have seen and the price point is perfect. Have used it for a couple months and have no complaints!” – runnergirl
Get your own ball here. They’re available in various sizes, with prices ranging from $17.69 to $36.99.

8. Readaeer Ab Roller Wheel

Work those abs in your own living room with the durable and affordable Readaeer Ab Roller. It even comes with knee pads.

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Amazon.com

Positive Review: “Perfect for working the abs. Well constructed. It rolls smoothly. It’s a great addition to my home gym.”- Brandi
Get one here for $9.99.

9. C9 Champion Neoprene Hand Weight

Super-size your upper body with these C9 hand weights. The weights are neoprene coated, so they won’t scuff up the floors during use. The neoprene coating also provides a comfortable, non-slip grip so you can get the most out of your workout.

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Target.com

Positive Review: “Great quality. I bought 2. I like that these weights are comfortable to use. Provides a good grip, and more enjoyable and comfortable to use than metal weights. Overall, excellent quality & value.”- Jennifer M
Purchase various sizes and colors here. Priced from $3.49 to $18.49 per weight.

10. Sanganizer Balance Ball With Resistance Bands

This balance ball provides a full-body workout setup. Build your strength and your sense of balance without having to endure a crowded gym.

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Amazon.com

Positive Review: “This works just as well as the one my daughter uses at physical therapy. It’s been a great help to have one at home.”- Darcey C Frewin
Buy one here for $61.99.

Categories
Wellbeing

10 Health-Enhancing Products You Need In Your Life

It’s not always easy to live a healthy lifestyle. Some fun new toys can definitely help.

For instance, you can…

1. Up your veggie intake with this 5-blade spiralizer.

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Amazon.com

Slice and spiralize almost any vegetable for fresh raw snacks, salads, or mock pastas. Your body will thank you.

Buy one here for $29.99.

2. Give your hard-working muscles some love with this 2-in-1 trigger point foam roller.

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Amazon.com

It comes with a smooth roller and a textured roller. Both are excellent for extending flexibility and soothing sore muscles.

Get yours here for $22.95.

3. Keep track of your activity with the Coffea fitness tracker bracelet.

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Amazon.com

It’s cheaper than a Fitbit, but it provides many of the same functions, including a calorie counter, step tracker, heart rate monitor, and more.

Buy one here for $39.99.

4. Bring the gym to your home with this three-piece kettlebell weight kit.

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Amazon.com

Kettlebells are perfect for at-home strength training, and this set includes three excellent weights with extra-wide comfort grips for a more effective workout.

Get your own set here for $29.99.

5. Stay hydrated and enjoy some fruit with the Hydracy Fruit Infuser Water Bottle.

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Amazon.com

Enjoy drinking water with this sporty infuser bottle. Pick your favorite color, add your favorite fruit, and drink away.

Get one here for $14.97.

6. Keep your phone clean with a UV cell phone sanitizer.

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Sharper Image

Kill 100 percent of germs in 10 minutes with this phone sanitizer and charger. It also works on any other item that fits inside: watches, jewelry, keys, and more “if it fits, it cleans.”

Buy one here for $69.99.

7. Your posture affects everything in your life. When you slouch, you aren’t only hurting your neck and back, but your appearance and mood can also suffer.

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Amazon.com

With Lumo Lift Posture Coach and Activity tracker, you get your own personal posture coach. This device and app monitor the position of your body as well as the number of steps taken and calories burned in a day. It alerts you when you begin to slouch and gives you encouragement throughout the day to get up and move more.

Buy it here for $79.99.

8. Eat better at work with this on-the-go salad container.

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Amazon.com

With a leak-proof lid, the OXO Good Grips salad container won’t ruin your outfit or your car seats. It even comes with a separate salad dressing compartment, which allows you to keep all your ingredients fresh and not soggy throughout the day.

Get yours here for $17.95.

9. Purify the air in your home with the GermGuardian 3-in-1 Air Cleaning System.

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Amazon.com

The GermGuardian uses a charcoal filtration system to trap larger particles like dust and lint and a HEPA filter to eliminate smaller particles like pet dander, dust mites, and mold spores. This filter also uses a UV-C light to break down bad odor molecules.

Get it here for $89.99.

10. White noise machines aren’t just for the little ones… Catch some ZZZs and wake up well rested and refreshed.

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Bed Bath & Beyond

This small but powerful device will lull you to sleep and block out any sounds that could interrupt your slumber.

Get yours here for $49.99.

Categories
Wellbeing

10 Health And Fitness Apps Worth Paying For

These apps are chock-full of workout routines and nutritious recipes, along with ways to set goals and track your progress.

Download your favorite one today.

1. Pocket Yoga

Use this app to practice yoga at your own pace, in your own home. It includes more than 20 different classes and has a pose dictionary that’s illustrated with more than 200 images.

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itunes

Download from iTunes for $2.99.

2. Forks Over Knives

Forks Over Knives has over 300 recipes created by 20 leading chefs. With a focus on whole-food, plant-based meals, you’re bound to find something healthy and delicious that will leave you feeling full and satisfied.

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itunes

Download it now from iTunes for $4.99.

3. Map My Run

Track every mile and calories burned with this convenient, easy-to-use GPS workout app. Create your own path or use the Routes feature to discover new places to exercise in your city.

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itunes

Download here for free, or pay $5 to upgrade to the MVP version.

4. SWEAT

Join the biggest female fitness community with the SWEAT app. SWEAT really does have it all: intense workouts, motivation, nutrition guides, and a way to compete or share your work with other members.

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iTunes

Download here for just $19.99 a month.

5. Fit Radio

No workout is complete without the perfect playlist. Fit Radio offers you high-energy playlists to help keep you motivated and moving. New playlists are added every month, plus the app includes more than 20 coached workouts to choose from.

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itunes

Download Fit Radio here for $3.99 a month.

6. Fitstar Personal Trainer

This app was made to help you stick to your fitness goals while adapting to your life and schedule. The personalized workouts include step-by-step instruction and coaching, with workout durations ranging from 7 to 50 minutes.

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itunes

Download Fitstar here for a little as $4.99 a month.

7. Headspace: Guided Meditation and Mindfulness

Learn life-changing skills of meditation and mindfulness with Headspace. Choose your focus (health, relationships, foundation), track your stress levels, or even use the SOS function to help manage anxiety in emergency situations.

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itunes

Download Headspace here for $12.99 per month.

8. Seven

The Seven app is just like having a personal trainer in your pocket. There are more than 200 7-minute workouts to choose from. Each routine is created to give your body the most benefits in the least amount of time.

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itunes

Download Seven here for $9.99 a month.

9. Oh She Glows

If you’re looking for beautifully crafted, nutritious, plant-based recipes, look no further. Oh She Glows has close to 100 delicious vegan recipes and 75 gluten-free recipes that will make your mouth water.

HealthyWay
itunes

Download the app here for $1.99.

10. Full Fitness: Exercise Workout Trainer

Get a full body workout with Full Fitness. When you download this app, you get access to hundreds of pre-set workout routines targeting every part of the body. You can also customize your own workout with or without the use of equipment.

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itunes

Download it here for $2.99.

Categories
Wellbeing

Are The Expensive Eggs Actually Better For You?

Eggs used to be eggs. Chickens laid them; farmers gathered them; grocers sold them; we ate them.
Today, you’re bombarded by choices when you stock the larder. Organic or not? Cage-free or factory-farmed? “All-natural” or its opposite—whatever that is?
HealthyWay
Maybe the most impressive difference from one brand of egg to the next is the price tag. A dozen Great Value-brand chicken eggs costs 74 cents at a Midwest Walmart as I’m writing.
If you want some organic, cage-free eggs from Eggland’s Best, though, you’ll have to cough up $4.98—which is nearly seven times the price.
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Reason tells us that the more expensive eggs must be better. Either they’re better for us, they taste better, or both. Otherwise, how do companies justify the markup?
The most pressing question we want answered: While it’s probably going to taste delicious either way, will a recipe like this one actually be healthier if we cook it with pricier eggs as opposed to bargain ones?

Let’s deal with each of those questions in turn, starting with the issue of flavor.

Expensive vs. bargain eggs: Which tastes better?

We encourage you to repeat this study in your home, but you can’t beat the scientific rigor of food site Serious Eats’ Food Lab.

Food Lab writer J. Kenji López-Alt conducted a series of blind taste tests to see whether local, organic, grass-fed, brown-shelled chicken eggs were quantifiably tastier than their less expensive counterparts. First, López-Alt served unsuspecting diners tortilla-wrapped scrambled eggs. Half of them were from local, free-ranging chickens. Others were the cheapest option in the grocery store. The verdict?
“The eggs were universally praised for their flavor,” López-Alt wrote. Not even the owner of the chickens could tell the difference between the two types of eggs.

What tasty topping do you prefer on your whipped-to-perfection deviled eggs?

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A subsequent taste-test partially corroborated these findings, with four out of eight tasters claiming “there was almost no difference at all in the flavor of the eggs.” The other four were split between preferring eggs from free-roaming, pasture-raised chickens, and organic, cage-free eggs with higher omega-3 counts.
Of course, these tasters could see their eggs, and fresher eggs have brighter yolks. It’s certainly possible that appearance affected the tasters’ findings.

So López-Alt repeated the experiment after treating all the eggs with green food dye. “This time, most people could not taste any difference in the eggs,” López-Alt wrote.
Other accounts echo this finding. But even if more expensive eggs don’t taste better, they must be better for you, right?

Organic, free-range, local, or factory farmed: Which eggs are healthiest?

We’re willing to pay extra for healthier food. It just makes sense. But there’s really no reason to assume that expensive eggs are “better” for us than the cheapest factory-farmed eggs we can find. (Some, like free-range eggs, are probably better for the chickens. You’ve seen the PETA video, or if not, click the link with caution… But that’s another discussion entirely.)

It turns out that the authoritative United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) had the same question. In 2010, they sent food technologist Deana Jones on a quest for the answer. Sort of.
Jones and her team actually only tested different varieties of eggs for “quality.” In this case, that meant the relation between the height of the egg white when cracked on a flat surface and the overall weight of the egg. This is called a Haugh unit. It’s named after Raymond Haugh, who asserted that fresher, more desirable eggs have thicker albumens, also known as whites.

Taking all that (and only that) into consideration, the USDA asserted that “there’s no substantial quality difference between eggs produced under different production systems.”
Many media outlets, including Time magazine, then reported these findings as proof that there’s no difference in healthiness from one egg to the next. There’s just one problem with that—we’re not aware of any research associating “quality” as measured in Haugh units, with “healthiness,” which continues to mean different things to different people.

So which eggs do we buy?

Consumer Reports tells us that eggs laid by chickens given vegetarian diets “tended to have more of certain vitamins and omega-3s than those from hens fed a conventional diet.”
Some hens are given extra flaxseed or fish oils to boost the omega-3 levels of their eggs. But, in short, “healthy” is too amorphous a term for the USDA or anyone else to make definitive claims about.
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If it makes you feel better to buy more expensive eggs, go ahead and buy them. They’re not going to hurt you (well, maybe in the pocketbook), but they might not be any better for your health than the cheapies.

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Wellbeing

Why Girls Apologize So Much And How To Raise Strong, Confident Women

Have you seen the Amy Schumer skit that shows a panel of highly qualified women who are so busy apologizing that they essentially self-destruct on stage? There’s the scientist who studies neuropeptides, the Nobel Prize winner, the Pulitzer recipient, the inventor of a solar panel water filtration system, and the founder of a school for child soldiers.
They hardly get to talk about their work, though. When the male moderator makes mistakes in introducing them, they correct him—with apologies, of course. One woman apologizes for talking.

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Comedy Central

Another asks for water but is given a soda. She’s allergic to caffeine, though, and apologizes for requesting water. Then she is given a coffee, which she apologizes for also, saying it’s her fault for asking for the thing she can actually drink and asked for in the first place.
The whole thing spins into a frenzy of “I’m sorrys” that’s more uncomfortable funny than laugh-out-loud funny—which is, of course, the point. The skit is 100 percent absurd, but it strikes a nerve.

Why do women apologize so much?

The most obvious answer is socialization. Women have learned that to be perceived as a rude woman is to invite a much more difficult existence. “For so many women, myself included, apologies are inexorably linked with our conception of politeness,” writes Sloane Crosley for The New York Times.
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“Somehow, as we grew into adults, ‘sorry’ became an entry point to basic affirmative sentences.”
But as Crosley also points out, it’s a coping mechanism for existing in a world where we have been largely powerless. “It’s a Trojan horse for genuine annoyance, a tactic left over from centuries of having to couch basic demands in palatable packages in order to get what we want,” she writes.
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While we might hope that this pathological sorryness will fade into the background and be replaced with a self-assured Wonder Woman approach by younger generations of females, there’s little evidence showing this to be the case.
It’s a paradox, says Crosley. “Every day, we see more unapologetically self-assured female role models, yet women’s extreme prostration seems only to have increased.”
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What’s happening, then? Why is a skit about accomplished women apologizing themselves into oblivion still so resonant? And how can we teach girls to speak with confidence?

Individuation is important.

Individuation—a term often associated with psychoanalyst Carl Jung—is the process of identifying oneself as a competent, whole individual.
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Jung made a point of distinguishing between individualism and individuation. He regarded the former as being largely ego driven and the latter as a more holistic actualization of one’s self, requiring both an awareness of one’s unconscious and the willingness to sacrifice one’s ego.
“The natural process of individuation brings to birth a consciousness of human community precisely because it makes us aware of the unconscious, which unites and is common to all mankind,” Jung wrote. “Individuation is an at-one-ment with oneself and at the same time with humanity, since oneself is a part of humanity.”

In their book The Triple Bind, Stephen Hinshaw, PhD, and Rachel Kranz shed light on the conflicting messages sent to girls. Hinshaw points out that boys “are traditionally seen as having more of the skills that lead to individuation: assertiveness, self-confidence, expressiveness, and commitment to one’s own agenda.”
Meanwhile, girls are caught in a “triple bind“—told to “act sweet and nice,” “be a star athlete and get straight A’s,” and “seem sexy and hot even if you’re not.”
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“From a young age boys are praised and encouraged when they show direct, confident behaviors—winning a game or climbing to the highest branch,” writes Rae Jacobson for the Child Mind Institute. “Girls … are also told to be ambitious, smart, and successful. But for them the directive comes with conditions that hamper individuation.”
For example?
Girls are told, “Be confident, but not conceited.” “Be smart, but no one likes a know-it-all.” “Ambition is good, but trying too hard is bad.” “Be assertive, but only if it doesn’t upset anyone else.”

Confidence needs a spokesmodel.

Children learn how to act by mimicking those who raise them, especially a parent whose gender they identify with. “Girls who hear parents—especially moms—over-apologizing or using hedging language are likely to pick up the habit themselves,” Jacobson writes.

By “hedging,” Jacobson means using qualifiers like “Excuse me…” “Can I ask?” “I might be wrong, but…” and “I don’t know, but…”
“Being mindful of your own language will set an example of confident speech and show [your daughter] you support her learning to do the same,” Jacobson tells parents—presumably moms in particular.
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Still not feeling so self-assured? The solution may be as simple as faking it until you make it, according to advice from the Child Mind Institute on raising confident kids.
The institute advises parents to embody confidence “even if you’re not quite feeling it!” This provides children with a model for what confidence in speech and behavior looks like.
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“Seeing you tackle new tasks with optimism and lots of preparation sets a good example for kids,” the institute encourages. “That doesn’t mean you have to pretend to be perfect. Do acknowledge your anxiety, but don’t focus on it—focus on the positive things you are doing to get ready.”

Teach disagreement.

Some girls absorb the message that having an opinion that doesn’t align with the group’s is uppity or adversarial. It’s essential to teach girls (and all children) that critical thinking, dissent, and learning through mistakes are a natural—and necessary—part of robust individuality and citizenship.
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“It can feel scary to commit to a statement that others might not like, but learning to be comfortable with disagreement and debate will make her more resilient and give her a healthy toolkit for managing adversity in the future,” says Jacobson.
The importance of dissent and the ability to firmly say no are also imperative to the development and maintenance of personal boundaries. As long as children are not properly educated about enthusiastic consent and men are let off the hook for unwelcome sexual advances, females’ safety may depend on it.

Toronto clinical psychologist Lori Haskell, discussing the sexual assault trial of former CBC radio host Jian Ghomeshi, said she believed it was “deeply ingrained in women’s socialization” to treat the fear of making a romantic partner unhappy or being abandoned by them with “a higher psychological priority than acknowledging their own sense of discomfort and anger and violation.”

Give praise for directness.

While it may be helpful to consider out how linguistic habits are contributing to girls’ disempowerment, as a parent or teacher you may prefer to take the approach of positive reinforcement.
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Instead of telling girls that the way they talk is wrong (“Stop apologizing so much!”), you might focus your energy on identifying and celebrating when they are being assertive and praising them for their directness.
“Instead of overprizing politeness, help your daughter focus on being direct first, and polite second,” advises Jacobson.
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“Using clear language demonstrates confidence and makes it more likely her point will be heard. Work together to test out alternative statements that are polite, but direct.”
Why should we treat stereotypically feminine and stereotypically masculine behaviors as mutually exclusive sets of traits, anyway?
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What would happen if we raised girls (really, all children) to be assertive—celebrated them for “winning a game or climbing to the highest branch”—but also taught them to understand and value their emotions and the emotions of others?
This isn’t just good, egalitarian parenting. It’s how you change the world.

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Wellbeing

Women Share The Compliments They'll Remember Forever

There are a lot of articles about how to stop searching for the approval of others. It makes sense: Relying on external validation for your sense of self-worth is a slippery slope.

But there’s no denying the impact of compliments. Some research even shows that compliments can improve people’s performance in the same way as a cash reward.

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I’ve experienced this firsthand. During some of my most formative years, I was fortunate to have a string of teachers whose encouragement bolstered my tenuous faith in my own abilities.

One of the best compliments I’ve ever received came during my senior year. After I turned in a creative writing project, my teacher pulled me aside during class. She looked at me so solemnly that I thought I was in trouble and told me that some of my poems were “seriously publishable.”

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I thought she’d said “seriously perishable,” but I was too self-conscious to ask for clarification. I spent some time after that cycling through what she could have meant by “perishable” before finally realizing the fantastic words of encouragement she’d actually shared.

Praise like this from her and other teachers literally felt too good to be true, but I reasoned that they didn’t have any motive for lying. Craving these compliments seemed ridiculous—even dangerous to my autonomy—but boy were they powerful. They left me euphoric, though I tried to pretend that they didn’t mean that much.

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They did, of course, mean that much to me, which is why I’m writing about them (professionally!) a decade later. As it turns out, positive reinforcement works—and people treasure sincere praise.

It’s healing to recall these moments of being seen and appreciated, so I reached out to other women in my social media network and asked them to share some affirmations from others that “reached into ya very soul.”

These are the compliments they won’t forget.

“You have helped me grow.”

A study examining whether receiving praise following a specific task helps people better absorb a skill found “that praise functions as ‘social reward’ that induces the dopamine transmission in the striatum, resulting in an enhancement of the motor skill consolidation.”

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In other words: Getting a compliment can provide you with the boost you need to excel on the job. This holds true in the anecdotal accounts of people who reached out to me on social media.

“The director of my department told me I did as well in a new position as anybody ever imagined, and as a result six more people were hired on in that kind of position,” says Kara, 27, of Mississippi, about a compliment she’ll remember forever.

Jenny, 33, from Paris, France, also cites a compliment from her boss—”You have helped me grow, and see things in a more positive way”—as being the most memorable in her life so far.

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Karri, 29, from Missouri, recounts a note from a student signed, “From one of the best students ever.” It reads:

I am very sad that you won’t be my teacher next year but I’m happy that I can still give you hugs. You have taught me so much about math, literacy, social studies, spelling, grammar, and fluency. I love being with you on field trips and at school. I will miss your smile and your kindness next year. I hope I can still help clean your classroom!

“You’re a good mom.”

Being recognized for the work you do by colleagues and employers can create a powerful surge of brain chemicals—but sometimes a compliment from a random stranger is enough to give you a serious (and unexpected) dopamine rush.

Krista, 29, was at a grocery store in Virginia when she received a compliment from “a random stranger … when I had two toddlers and was super pregnant with number three.”

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The words still stick with her. “You’re doing a great job!” the stranger told her. “You’re a good mom.”

Jill, 29, from Missouri recalls one exchange with a “barista guy” that she remembers fondly. He asked if her dad was a dentist.

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“You just really have the most perfect teeth.”

Jill calls the compliment “such a pure non-douchey way to get hit on,” and goes on to say, “I appreciated it greatly.”

“The kind of face that people pay to photograph.”

Tonic refers to compliments as “mini-orgasms for your brain” because of the way they affect the mind. The reward centers of the brain (like the ventral striatum and the ventral medial prefrontal cortex) light up both during sex and when we receive a compliment.

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“The better the compliment, the greater the activity of these regions,” Christoph Korn, a postdoctoral fellow with the University of Zurich’s Computational Emotion Neuroscience lab, tells Tonic.

So…two compliments are probably better than one, right?

For Sara, 28, who lives in Madrid, Spain, there are two compliments that remain in her mind.

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“A close friend told me that she admired me because, more than anyone else she knows, I’ve followed my dreams,” she says. “And, recently, someone told me that I have the kind of face that people pay to photograph.”

Allison, 32, also living in Madrid, Spain, says she has two compliments that stick in her mind as well.

“When I was in school, my best friend said that my eyes were so beautiful that if the world became minority report she would totally steal my eyes,” she says.

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Her other most-memorable compliment was about the same thing.

“The other day, I was chatting [with] a client in the sun (we usually meet inside his club) and he said that my eyes were the coolest color he’d ever seen, that it wasn’t fair that not only were they blue, that they had yellow in them.”

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Maybe we should all just move to Spain.

“I’m fortunate to know you and call you a friend.”

Of course some of the most meaningful compliments we receive come from friends because they know us so well.

Grace, 27, of Arkansas remembers one of her “favorite compliments to date.”

“I think you’re one of the most beautiful souls I’ve ever encountered. Despite the self-proclaimed ‘crazy,’ you’re an immediate presence in any room and you glide when you make your way across it. I’m fortunate to know you and call you a friend.”

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The compliment that Kieri from Arizona remembers says a lot in just a few words: “Kieri loves big.”

“It warmed my heart to know my friend saw and felt me loving others,” she says.

Kasie, 29, from Missouri, says she’ll always remember a Facebook message from a well-respected college friend. “I just want you to know that you are the type of person that inspires others,” the message read.

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“You are constantly the friendly stranger smiling, being polite, and just a cheery ball of love. I miss and love you!”

Ka
sie says this compliment came “completely out of the blue and meant so much to me,” especially because it was from someone she’s always looked up to.

“Who cares if you can hit a softball? You’re the smartest woman I know!”

“Praise can boost self-efficacy, enhance feelings of competence and autonomy, create positive feelings, strengthen the association between responses and their positive outcomes, and provide incentives for task engagement,” according to the same Japanese study that determined compliments also enhance motor skill acquisition.

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“I attempted to play on an adult softball team with a group of friends and I struck out A LOT. My failure was frustrating me to no end,” shared Melissa, 28, from Arkansas.

“My husband, an athletic person, encouraged me after my last game by saying ‘Who cares if you can hit a softball? You’re the smartest woman I know!’ The compliment was great, but even better was the context. He reminded me that I have a part to play, just not on a softball field.”

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Amanda, 30, from Missouri, remembers being praised for her unique writing style. “You have a definite voice,” someone told her.

“I can pick up something written by you, not see your name on it, and still know that’s an Amanda piece.”

“You seem so free.”

People often most highly value praise that they feel aligns with some essential part of themselves.

Mary from Ohio shares that her favorite type of compliment is “whenever someone tells me I remind them of my dad.”

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“You seem so free,” someone told Gisela, 27, from Portugal. “You seem like you don’t need anyone to make you happy.”

Anna, 52, from Texas, treasures the moment one person told her what a difference she had made in their son’s life. “He was unsure about going to school after being out for many years,” Anna explains.

“Told him I didn’t even graduate [from high school] but now I’m a nurse. He is now an engineer.”