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Two Epidemics, One Root Cause. Are We Just Beginning to See the Connection?
The United States is currently managing two public health crises that have been building in parallel for decades. One is metabolic. The other is psychiatric. Neither shows signs of reversing. And for the most part, medicine has treated them as separate problems with separate solutions. They are not separate. The evidence linking metabolic dysfunction to psychiatric illness has been accumulating for years, but it has not yet crossed over into the mainstream conversation about
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Apr 118 min read


Movement Is Medicine. But Not for the Reasons You Think.
We have known for a long time that exercise is good for mental health. The evidence on this is not new or contested. Study after study, across decades of research, points to the same conclusion: people who move regularly feel better, think more clearly, and show lower rates of depression and anxiety than people who do not. What has been less understood, until relatively recently, is why. The standard explanation has leaned heavily on endorphins, that familiar post-workout moo
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Apr 56 min read


Your Brain Runs on Energy. So Why Are We Ignoring It?
There's a question that doesn't get asked often enough in mental health conversations: what is the brain actually running on? We talk about neurotransmitters constantly, serotonin, dopamine, norepinephrine. These are the chemical messengers that carry signals between neurons, and they're the primary target of most psychiatric medications. That framing has dominated mental health treatment for decades. But there's another layer underneath the neurotransmitter story that most
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Apr 54 min read
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