fact or fiction
Is it a fact or is it merely fiction? Fact or Fiction explores the lesser known truths in the health and wellness world of Longevity.
The Best Vitamins and Minerals for Optimal Hormone Function
It seems that everywhere you look (cue the Full House theme song), there’s some sort of ad for a “hormone imbalance fix”. And of course, it usually involves some sort of supplement you can buy - do those vitamins and minerals actually work to address hormonal concerns?
By Emily the Period RD2 months ago in Longevity
Global Superfood Market Size and Forecast 2025–2033. AI-Generated.
The global health and wellness wave is reshaping what consumers eat—and the food industry is racing to meet rising expectations. According to Renub Research, the Global Superfood Market will reach US$ 271.60 billion by 2033, up from US$ 184.18 billion in 2024, advancing at a steady CAGR of 4.41% during 2025–2033.
By Renub Research2 months ago in Longevity
The Unholy And Diabolical Truth Of The Western Medicine Establishment And Their Pseudoscientific Approach
If there is one thing that makes me angry in life... It is when people profit from the suffering of others... And purposefully do everything in their power to prevent real solutions from seeing the light of day.
By Dr. Cody Dakota Wooten, DFM, DHM, DAS (hc)2 months ago in Longevity
The Breath Remembers: Returning to What Never Left
It’s strange how easy it is to forget something that never stops happening. Breath — the most constant companion of our lives — moves quietly beneath the noise of thought, steady and patient, asking nothing from us except permission to be felt. It keeps us alive, yes, but also reminds us, in its subtle way, of what it means to belong to the present moment.
By Jonse Grade2 months ago in Longevity
The Slow Art of Returning: Coming Back to This Moment
We often imagine awakening as a single, luminous moment — a great unveiling, a sudden clarity that changes everything. But for most of us, the real practice is quieter, humbler. It’s the slow art of returning — again and again, breath after breath, to the simplicity of now.
By Garold One2 months ago in Longevity
When Nothing Needs Fixing: The Freedom of Allowing
There’s a quiet exhaustion that comes from constantly trying to fix yourself — a weariness so deep it hides beneath even your best intentions. I know that exhaustion well. For years, I lived with the subtle belief that I was always just one improvement away from being okay — one better habit, one clearer meditation, one more balanced morning away from arriving at peace. But peace kept moving just out of reach, always waiting for me to earn it.
By Victoria Marse2 months ago in Longevity
The Quiet Work of Trust: Surrender in Everyday Living
Trust has never come easily to me. I like to know where I’m going, to map the path before taking a step. There’s a comfort in control — or at least in the illusion of it. But life, patient as it is, keeps offering the same lesson in different forms: every time I think I’m steering, something larger reminds me that the current has its own direction.
By Black Mark2 months ago in Longevity
Moving Slowly: Reclaiming the Rhythm of Presence
I used to believe that moving faster meant living more fully — that momentum was the measure of purpose, that the busier I was, the closer I must be to something meaningful. My days blurred together in a constant hum of tasks and thoughts, and somewhere in that rush, I forgot what it felt like to arrive anywhere. The mind was always leaning forward, chasing the next thing. Even in rest, I was rehearsing motion.
By Marina Gomez2 months ago in Longevity
The Heart Remembers Calm: Returning Through Compassion
There are days when peace feels far away — when the mind is noisy, the body restless, and the heart guarded. The world, with all its movement and demand, can make stillness seem like a luxury, or worse, an impossibility. Yet beneath all the surface noise, there’s a quieter rhythm that never really leaves us. I’ve come to think of it as the heart’s memory — the way it knows, even when we forget, how to return to calm.
By Jonse Grade2 months ago in Longevity
Listening to Silence: How Absence Speaks
There’s a moment at the end of a long day — when the last sounds fade, when conversation drifts away, when even the hum of the world seems to pause — that something subtle begins to speak. It’s not a sound exactly. More like a presence that emerges in the gaps, in the pauses between what’s been said and what hasn’t. It’s the quiet that waits behind everything.
By Garold One2 months ago in Longevity










