'Fat-hating culture': Overweight people told to take advice from anorexics
Society equates thinness with health, despite what research shows.
Lifestyle Health Editor
Society equates thinness with health, despite what research shows.
The effort lit fire in my lungs and released lactic acid in my legs, but I made it to the top and somehow I came third. It was a small victory, the memory of which I've conjured in moments of physical or mental challenge ever since.
New research surprised public health experts.
Many of those suffering gut health issues have been told it's not a real illness.
A yoga-teaching ex of mine could execute a precise chaturanga and Instagram-perfect arm-balance but, off the mat – how do I put this – did not demonstrate a singular "yogic" quality.
Usually "quite harmless," sometimes it's entirely the opposite.
I noticed Raia as soon as she came to Ravenswood in year 9.
A new study, finding that four (small) cups of coffee a day carry no risk to our health, had caffeine-lovers in raptures. But is the news as glorious as many reports made out? Not exactly.
With nearly 90 per cent of young Australians using smartphones and a similar percentage downloading from the 2 billion plus apps on the market, mental health apps have been tipped as the future of treating mental health for many.
It's called "comfort food" for a reason; it's a common instinct for children and adults to self-soothe through food.
Search pagination
Save articles for later.
Subscribe for unlimited access to news. Login to save articles.
Return to the homepage by clicking on the site logo.