Lifestyle

On Nutrition: Eggs-tra nutrition

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We’ve identified Easter with eggs for a very long time, according to historians.

Knees stiff with arthritis? This company is studying whether fat injections can improve motion

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DENVER — A Louisville, Colorado, company is studying whether cells taken from patients’ fat could reduce knee pain and improve motion in people with arthritis.

Mayo Clinic Minute: High blood pressure hurts the kidneys

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Hypertension, also known as high blood pressure, is a common problem that affects the body’s arteries. If you have high blood pressure, the heart has to work harder to pump blood.

A year after a heart transplant, teacher is educating students about healthy lifestyles

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CHICAGO — Shaunté Brewer didn’t know that her health was in danger at age 13. As the Chicago resident recalls, she was more focused on passing her softball test in gym than on her prevalent cough. Fortunately, Brewer’s mother determined that the sound and persistence of her daughter’s cough called for a trip to the hospital.

The secret to writing a (good) historical novel

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Whenever I see a historical novel that’s clearly a historical novel — the curlicue cover fonts, windswept beaches, hooped dresses, moody Renaissance hues, tall-masted schooners, maybe a helicopter to suggest Vietnam — I cringe. I feel bad for the writer. Because the idiot part of myself whispers that historical fiction was a terrible mistake. It’s one of those residual, myopic cultural prejudices, the kind that equates the value of a piece of music with its complexity and tells us not to take comic books seriously. I forget momentarily that genre has nothing to do with quality, and that, in the past decade alone, more than a few National Book Award winners (“Blackouts,” “The Good Lord Bird”) and a large majority of Pulitzer winners for fiction (“Trust,” “All the Light We Cannot See,” “The Night Watchman,” “The Nickel Boys”) were historical fiction.

Ex-etiquette: Where does he disappear to?

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Q. My boyfriend has been living with me for three months. Sometimes he doesn’t come home for days, doesn’t say where he has been, and I think he is staying at his ex’s house. When I ask, he says he drank too much with his friends and slept on the couch. I think he is with his ex because they have a child together. Is there an Ex-Etiquette rule to cover this?

Glassblower: ‘practice is key;’ Black artist finds a way to stand out and develop...

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LOS ANGELES — Seated on a chair, with the hum of twin furnaces and the Impressions playing in the background, glassblower Cedric Mitchell is lost in his craft as he and assistant Sara Roller turn and sculpt molten glass with steel shears.

3 ‘not hot’ vacation destinations to avoid the crowds

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The last thing you want to deal with on vacation is overcrowding, especially when you book in advance. If traveling more this year is on your to-do list, there are a few options that offer the ultimate escape without the crowds.

What’s lurking in your body? Mayo probes health risks of tiny plastic particles

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Similar to natural elements like iron and copper, people can ingest, absorb or even inhale microplastics and nanoplastics and their chemical additives. A landmark study just published in the New England Journal of Medicine links microplastics and nanoplastics found in plaques of human blood vessels to a potential increased risk of heart attack, stroke or death.

Dawn Kessinger: Share a meal — No-dread grilled cheese

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I used to dread making grilled cheese sandwiches.