Building Resilience When the Future Feels Unsteady

Resilience—the capacity to adapt, recover, and keep moving forward—is a mental skillset that matters more than ever in a world defined by rapid change, economic uncertainty, and constant information overload. For people who feel anxious about what lies ahead, future-proofing the mind isn’t about predicting outcomes; it’s about strengthening how you meet whatever comes next. A Quick Orientation Before We…

Shifting Your Teen’s Relationship with Social Media

As a Licensed Clinical Social Worker and author of the book, Calming Teenage Anxiety: A Parent’s Guide to Helping Your Teenager Cope with Worry, I am frequently asked about the relationship between adolescent anxiety and current social media use. While it is near impossible to disregard the impact of social media on teen mental health, I do not recommend prohibiting…

The Wellness Reframe: The Strategic Power of Doing Nothing

I used to think rest days were for quitters. Then plantar fasciitis—and too many injuries—taught me otherwise. In a fitness culture that glorifies the grind, doing nothing feels like giving up. But what if your rest days are the most important training days of all? Rest isn't weakness. It's wisdom. Learning About Recovery the Hard Way Mid-40s. Marathon training. Convinced…

The Body Mind Connection: The 7-Day Lagom Challenge

Lagom is a Swedish philosophy that roughly translates to “just enough.” Sometimes referred to as the goldilocks lifestyle, lagom living means not too much, not too little, just enough. It’s a way of approaching life with balance, moderation, and intention, rather than extremes. Instead of constantly chasing more or feeling guilty for doing less, lagom encourages you to find balance.…

The Wellness Reframe: The Meanest Person at Your Gym Is You

Not the intimidating trainer. Not the guy hogging three machines at once. You. And once you know that, everything changes. Meet My Crabby Roommate I know. You were expecting someone else. The guy who takes 45-minute rest breaks between sets. The trainer who critiques your form without being asked. But no. The person doing the most damage? They live rent-free…

Why This Exercise Deserves a Spot in Your Workout

The Dumbbell Lateral Lunge Most people train in straight lines. We squat up and down, lunge forward, walk forward, run forward, and for a lot of us, lean forward at a desk during our work day. But everyday life—and most sports—require us to move through multiple planes of movement. That’s why I’m a big fan of the dumbbell lateral lunge.…

Tech Life with Taino: Why You Need to Stop Multitasking

The Hype of Multitasking Going to my first job interviews 15 years ago, I often got the question “Can you juggle multiple tasks at once?” I enthusiastically answered “Yes!” Hiring my first employees 10 years ago, I often asked the question “Can you juggle multiple tasks at once?” I enthusiastically got the answer “Yes!”  Multitasking has been a trait to…

How to Stay Consistent with Wellness Goals

For fitness enthusiasts balancing work, family, and a real desire to feel strong, wellness goal challenges can start to feel personal. Motivation dips, time gets tight, nutrition advice feels loud and conflicting, and social media pressure turns self-care into another performance. Add the fear of injury or burnout, and many people either push too hard or stop altogether, even when…

The Body Mind Connection: Spring Cleaning the Mind with Stoicism

It’s that time of year again. Spring has officially sprung. The sun is shining, the air is getting warming, the birds are chirping, and you are feeling more motivated than ever. Year after year springtime has a way of rejuvenating a new sense of hope in all of us. It’s also the time of year known for deep cleaning. A…

The Wellness Reframe: Why Joy Is Your Best Fitness Plan

What if the thing sabotaging your fitness isn’t lack of discipline—but lack of joy? When the Steps Didn’t Count My husband Bill and I spent a long weekend in Seattle walking everywhere. Downtown to Ballard, across the University of Washington campus, up Queen Anne Hill. Miles and miles. At day’s end, Bill checked his Apple Health: “15,000 steps!” I checked…

The Resilient Athlete: What the Olympics Teach Us About Life

Every two years, the Olympics remind us of something that’s easy to forget in everyday life: performance at the highest level is rarely about a single result—let alone a single season. We see athletes at the top of their game, producing incredible performances, often on the verge of impossible (especially when a medal is decided by a hundredth of a…

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