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  • 33 Questions About Yoga: Beginner FAQs + Free Yoga Class

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    There’s a good chance that yoga has been on your list for years. Maybe it first caught your eye in a studio, on a wellness app, or when YouTube yogis like Adriene Mishler made it feel approachable for the masses.

    Still, when it comes time to step on the mat, “I don’t know…” may creep in. That uncertainty often clears with the right questions about yoga and how it fits your life.

    “Yoga is not about the perfect pose you just saw on Instagram,” Mindvalley’s resident yoga coach, Cecilia Sardeo, says in her program, The Mindvalley Yoga Quest. “The best part about it is cultivating presence in your life.”

    Disclaimer: This article is strictly educational and does not replace medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before starting any wellness practice.

    Frequently asked questions about yoga

    1. What is yoga?

    Yoga is an ancient mindfulness practice that combines body postures (or asanas in Sanskrit), mindful breathing techniques, and attention-building movements. With it, you get to experience more ease off the mat and in daily life. 

    Sadhguru, a world-renowned yogi and founder of Isha Foundation, calls it the science of freeing your inner world. Unlike animals, he says, the human mind can move in every direction. But this very same “free will” can create stress when we don’t know how to handle it well.

    “Humanity,” he says in his Mindvalley program, A Yogi’s Guide to Joy, “is not suffering bondage. Humanity is suffering its freedom.” 

    Thankfully, though, he adds, there are ways to understand what life’s about and what we can do with it. And one of them is “what we’re referring to as yoga.” It’s why he spent decades unpacking and teaching it to millions worldwide, whether through Isha Foundation events, his spiritual classes, or his bestselling books.

    2. What does yoga mean?

    The word “yoga” comes from the Sanskrit root yuj, which means “to yoke” or “to unite.” In practice, it connects not only the body and motion but also breath and awareness, as well as attention, intention, and action. 

    This multilayered union of sorts is what makes this ancient practice more than a workout, says OM Yoga Center founder and longtime Yoga Journal contributor Cyndi Lee.

    The practice of yoga is not about perfecting the body,” the mindful yoga coach writes in her book, Yoga Body, Buddha Mind. “It is about understanding the body as a vehicle for awareness.”

    Interestingly, traces of her view can be found in modern psychology through the concept of “locus of control.” Coined by psychologist Julian Rotter, this framework examines whether people believe they’re governed by external forces, such as fate, or by their own choices.

    Those who believe fate is in their hands? They have what’s called an internal locus of control. It’s a mindset often seen in people drawn to yoga, which is all about turning inward and, ultimately, owning your inner peace.

    3. Where did yoga originate?

    The earliest ideas about yoga appeared in the Vedas and the Upanishads, both originating in the Indian subcontinent thousands of years ago. (They’re the same scriptures that explore the power of the breath, the mind’s role in shaping human experience, and awareness as the gateway to higher levels of consciousness.)

    Eventually, the practice became more clearly defined in The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. It’s the foundational text that strips yoga of its “woo-woo” status and organizes it into a clear, practical system to follow.

    Leafing through its pages, you’ll see words of wisdom describing it as the art of quietening mental noise to make way for awareness. Bodily postures were meant to support this goal, so the mind could take the lead.

    4. Who invented yoga?

    “Yoga is not an invention,” Sadhguru says. “It is a discovery.” In that sense, it’s a response to human experience itself and the need for balance in life.

    And the practice surely wasn’t an invention by any single person. In fact, yoga as you know it today developed slowly over thousands of years, shaped by many teachers, thinkers, and practitioners in India. 

    Passed down from one generation to another through oral tradition, it eventually began appearing in texts such as The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. And thanks to the likes of the ancient Indian philosopher, Patanjali, the practical ways to experience yoga are now accessible to the whole world.

    5. Is yoga a religion?

    No. Think of it as a universal set of tools for understanding yourself and your life experiences. Or in Sadhguru’s words: “A technology for well-being.” And like any technology, it’s meant for anyone and everyone, regardless of culture, background, or belief system.

    Religion, on the other hand, grows out of culture itself. That means it’s a reflection of shared stories, symbols, rituals, and social structures that shape how we see meaning and make sense of the world.

    Yoga, though, works at the level of human experience rather than cultural identity. And that universality explains why yoga fits so easily into holistic wellness. Any approach that falls under this term views you as a connected whole, where thoughts, habits, emotions, and the body influence one another throughout the day. 

    So, when one part is out of sync, the rest tend to follow. 

    Now, science has yoga’s holistic nature down pat. A 2020 study in Frontiers in Psychology found that yoga-based practices support overall well-being by helping people manage their emotions more effectively and feel more satisfied with daily life through:

    • Calmer stress responses,
    • Steadier moods, and
    • Better physical recovery from everyday strains.

    All of these? They’re qualities anyone can access, regardless of their cultural attachments.

    Questions about yoga styles

    6. What is hatha yoga?

    Hatha yoga moves at an unhurried pace. Poses are held long enough for you to notice what your body is doing and how your breath responds. 

    It’s the style many teachers, including Cecilia, treat as the groundwork of yoga. You learn how to do the basics:

    • Stand, 
    • Breathe, and 
    • Settle down.

    No complications, just the essentials.

    For anyone who wants to feel grounded instead of rushed through the day, hatha is often the starting point for mind-body balance to be a thing.

    7. What is vinyasa yoga?

    This style of yoga is all about flow. One pose leads into the next, guided by mindful breathing. From here, your body warms up for more strength, and your mind learns to stay present as things keep moving.

    Many people are drawn to vinyasa as part of a morning yoga routine, using the rhythm to wake up both body and mental focus. 

    And it also comes with real health benefits. Even a single session of vinyasa flow yoga, as a study published in Complementary Therapies in Medicine reveals, can lift up your mood and support healthy heart function. This suggests that the style’s movement-and-breath rhythm matters for more than just flexibility. 

    8. What is yin yoga?

    Going yin on the mat means staying put. Here, you hold poses for several minutes with little muscular effort. The work happens quietly, deep in the tissues and just as deeply in the mind.

    In his teachings, Sadhguru often speaks of stillness as the doorway to awareness—the exact bedrock of yin yoga.

    As much as you’d like to squirm and wriggle around in a pose, the urge to move sure does pass. When it does, the doorway to sensations and emotions opens up. It’s what science calls interoceptive awareness, the ability to sense your internal bodily signals, which, when increased in body movement, can release emotions previously stored in the body.

    One way you can think of it is as a “conversation” you have with yourself for self-healing.

    9. What is ashtanga yoga?

    Ashtanga yoga follows a set sequence of poses that remain the same throughout a session, practiced over and over. 

    That repetition is the whole point. Over time, the body builds strength and stamina, while the mind learns discipline through consistency. 

    Many people who enjoy structure find comfort here. You show up, do the work, and let the practice reveal where you are that day, without needing variety to stay engaged.

    In this sense, it shows that yoga doesn’t have to be complicated for mental clarity to come in. Like Sadhguru says, “When you are conscious of your body, your mind naturally settles.”

    10. What is hot yoga?

    Hot yoga is practiced in a heated room, where sensations intensify quickly. Your muscles warm quickly, sweat follows, and the practice feels intense from the first pose. It asks for hydration, pacing, and close attention to limits.

    You can see it as a literal take on Indian yoga, where heat is symbolic. Traditionally, warmth was meant to come from breath, focus, and sustained effort rather than from your external environment. 

    The difference here is subtle, yet telling. One approach supplies heat from the outside. The other trains the body and mind to create it on their own.

    11. What is kundalini yoga?

    Kundalini yoga works with precise sequences: 

    • Specific movements,
    • Timed breathing patterns, and 
    • Repeated sounds or chants. 

    Each element is used deliberately to influence how your nervous system, attention, and energy respond.

    Instead of holding poses for simply alignment or flow, the practice focuses on how breath and repetition affect your inner state, potentially for a kundalini awakening (the rising of dormant energy at the base of your spine). This aligns with Sadhguru’s idea of inner engineering.

    “Yoga is about engineering yourself the way you want to be,” he says. And this style of yoga reflects that directly.

    12. What is restorative yoga?

    In plain terms, it’s a practice built around deliberate rest. Poses come with props like bolsters, blocks, and blankets, so your body doesn’t have to work as hard. Then… you stay in each position for several minutes. 

    From here, eventually your muscles soften, and the nervous system slows down. The goal of this softness? Recovery.

    In her program, Cecilia reminds her student that rest is not a reward after effort but a practice to hone in and of itself. Now, restorative yoga echoes these principles.

    By removing effort, you signal safety to the body, giving it space to reset after stress or fatigue.

    13. What is somatic yoga?

    “Somatic” comes from the Greek word sōma, meaning “body.” In this yoga, all movements you make are slow and deliberate. 

    Much like yin yoga, somatic yoga builds interoceptive awareness. The key difference between them, though, is that once you’ve noticed the tension, you release it as it happens—through motion instead of stillness.

    “The moment you start listening to your body,” Cecilia points out, “it starts responding differently.”

    Most common questions about yoga benefits

    14. What is yoga good for?

    Yoga helps your body move with more ease and strength while giving your mind relief from endless mental chatter.

    Many beginners assume yoga has to look a certain way to count. Advanced poses, long sessions, a perfect routine… You know the drill.

    Yet that’s not how the practice works. 

    “There is no perfect pose,” says Cecilia. “The perfect pose is the perfect pose for you today.” Yoga meets you where you are, whether that’s five minutes of breathing in your car or a full class on the mat.

    It’s likely why, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), nearly one in six adults in the U.S. practices yoga to support their health beyond fitness.

    15. What does yoga do for your body?

    It makes you more capable without feeling pushed. You move with fewer aches, better balance, and less effort through the day. It also builds muscular endurance, training your muscles to stay engaged longer so you tire less and recover faster. 

    Esteemed physician Dr. Timothy McCall, who’s also the author of Yoga As Medicine, notes that regularly practicing it strengthens the body while easing unnecessary tension. And with steady attention, bodily strength and ease tend to arrive together.

    “It is a powerful medicine indeed for body, mind, and spirit,” he writes in the book. “The longer you stay with it and the more heart you put into the journey, the farther it can take you.”

    16. Is yoga good for weight loss?

    The short answer is… yes, though not in the quick-burn way many people expect. Yoga supports weight loss indirectly by sharpening your awareness of habits, stress, and daily choices, which matters when lasting change is the goal.

    Cecilia herself started hers on the same footing, after years of health imbalance and burnout. 

     “All I had to start chasing,” she recounts, “was the healthiest version of my body.” 

    That change in focus keeps the weight loss process sustainable.

    17. Can yoga help reduce stress and anxiety?

    Yes, it works. And it works best when you treat it as a regular practice, not a one-off quick fix.

    Here’s what sticking with yoga can do for your peace of mind:

    Ask Sarah Capel, an English teacher based in Hong Kong, about embracing the practice, and she would tell you.

    “I know I needed yoga to transform my life,” she shares with Mindvalley. “I have so much emotion inside that cannot seem to be released simply with meditation.”

    18. Will yoga help me connect with my spirituality?

    It can, if that’s the goal you want to achieve with it. And this begins by loosening the pressure to define what spirituality should look like. 

    Because the truth is? No one really knows. 

    Sadhguru has a hunch, though. “Spirituality is not about looking up,” he says. “It is about looking inward.” Which sounds like the point of yoga to begin with: to just be.

    In this vein, spiritual growth on the mat begins the moment you notice what’s actually happening inside you, like… 

    Your breath getting shallow…

    Your shoulders tightening…

    Or that loop of thoughts running on repeat.

    In that awareness, you’ll stay present long enough to hear yourself. Repeat the process, and see your world open up, day to day.

    Frequently asked questions about yoga for beginners

    19. Do I have to be flexible to practice yoga?

    No. Flexibility often shows up after you practice, not before. 

    So it’s okay to show up on the mat even if you’re stiff as wood. All you need to do here is move a little bit by bit every day. Then keep breathing evenly, in and out of a pose, from one to the next.

    Over time, your body eventually softens to meet you where you’ve arrived—all after meeting you where you were.

    Not convinced? Here’s a reality check for you. A study published in Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine found that regular yoga practice improves flexibility and range of motion, even in people with limited mobility.

    So, go ahead and get good, no matter your starting point.

    20. Can I practice yoga if I’m overweight or out of shape?

    Yes. You do not need a certain body type, stamina level, or fitness history to begin. You just start by moving what you can, breathing as you go, and letting your body change gradually as your practice deepens.

    As many holistic weight loss guides would tell you, yoga is often the entry point into a more sustainable approach to getting in shape.

    It’s exactly what drew Mary Beth Mains in, anyway. After practicing yoga casually in the past and attending hot yoga classes, the accountant from the U.S. found herself all amped to discover her best shape ever. Thanks to the practice, she says, “I’m loving the idea of losing 40 pounds.

    21. I went to a beginner class and felt overwhelmed—should I stop?

    You walk into a beginner class expecting ease. Instead, you scrunch your face trying to decode poses, cues, and breathing when everyone else seems to be so “zen.”

    Now this can feel like failure, but pump the brakes on the self-doubt. This happens more often than anyone admits. You’re not failing; the overwhelm is just a sign your body and brain are taking in new information at the same time. 

    Getting good at yoga takes time. Here are gentle steps to get you there:

    • Pick classes that focus on the basics instead of the ideal pace.
    • Try practicing at home first, where there’s no pressure to follow along perfectly.
    • Let breath be the priority, even if you’re unsure of how you’re moving.
    • Pause or rest whenever you need to. Sitting out is part of the practice.
    • Give yourself a few sessions before deciding whether it’s for you.

    Follow Cecilia as she walks you through the basics of yoga for beginners:

    Find the Right Yoga Practice for You With Cecilia Sardeo | Mindvalley Trailer

    22. How often should I practice yoga?

    As often as your life allows. In some weeks, you’d move daily. But in others, maybe you can only squeeze in one or two short sessions in between work, family time, and everything else you’ve got going on.

    The point, Cecilia emphasizes, is to keep it practical. “Consistency is key,” she says. And on tight, just scale things down. “Even if you only have 30 minutes, don’t skip it.”

    Don’t underestimate what a few short sessions can do. Things add up, and it’s a matter of time before your mind and body get the hang of it.

    23. Is yoga time-consuming?

    The thing is, it doesn’t have to be. Yoga only takes as much time as you’re willing to give it. Some days, that’s a full class. On others, it’s 10 minutes of stretching and breathing before bed.

    The thing to remember here? It’s that yoga is about showing up, even in small stretches of time.  A five-minute session still counts. A few poses wiggled in still matter. 

    When your practice fits into your life instead of interrupting it, it becomes easier to keep going.

    24. Is yoga strenuous?

    It depends on how you practice it. Some styles get your heart rate up and leave your muscles working. Others feel slow, supported, and deeply calming. 

    “Every practice has a different impact,” says Cecilia. “Hatha is grounding. Kundalini activates. Ashtanga burns through you.”

    And even within the same class, effort looks different from one person to the next.

    Here’s the thing, though: yoga gives you room to choose your level. You decide how far to go, when to pause, and how much to take on.

    Questions about yoga class prep

    25. What yoga style should I practice as a beginner?

    Start with what helps you feel grounded. 

    At this stage, the goal should be to learn how your body moves and breathes in beginner-friendly options like these:

    • Hatha yoga. Its slow pace allows you the time to understand alignment and breath.
    • Yin yoga. Longer holds and minimal movement help you tune into sensation and awareness.
    • Beginner-friendly vinyasa. Go for flow-first classes so your beginner focus stays on breath and transitions rather than speed.

    When in doubt, just remember Cecilia’s golden rule: the right style for you is simply the one you feel safe enough to return to.

    26. What should I wear to yoga?

    Honestly, wear whatever lets you move comfortably. Think: 

    • Breathable tops that don’t ride up,
    • Stretchy bottoms that ease your transitions, and
    • Layers you can peel off as you warm up.

    If you’re not tugging, adjusting, or thinking about your outfit mid-pose, you’ve got it right.

    And forget what fashion trends tell you, says Rick Cummings, a contributor at Yoga Journal, to beginners.

    You may ogle the latest flared leggings on Vogue. “But, speaking as a teacher,” he writes at the portal, “it is harder for me to correct someone’s alignment if I cannot see the shape of their leg.” 

    So, rule of thumb? Dress for function.

    27. Can I eat before yoga practice?

    You can, for the sake of energy. But it helps to keep it light and well-timed. 

    Most people feel better practicing yoga between one to three hours after a full meal, or about 30 minutes after a small meal. 

    The reason? According to research published in Sports Medicine, when you move soon after eating, your body has to split blood flow between digestion and working muscles. It’s why movement can feel uncomfortable if a large meal is still being processed. Because ultimately, that’s usually when sluggishness kicks in.

    28. How to clean a yoga mat?

    Most of the time, a quick wipe does the job. 

    After practice, use a gentle mix of water and mild soap to wipe both sides clean. Or buy a good mat spray. Either way, you’ve got to let it air-dry fully before rolling it up again to avoid it stinking up.

    Every so often, it’s worth a deeper clean, especially if you sweat a lot. You’re breathing, stretching, and grounding on that surface. Keeping it fresh just makes it easier to come back and roll it out again.

    Frequently asked questions about practicing yoga at home and online

    29. Can I learn yoga online?

    Yes. And for many people with busy schedules, it’s how they can make time for it. 

    It’s all in the science that psychologist Hermann Ebbinghaus is known for. Through his early research on memory, he found that learning tends to stick better when it occurs in short, repeated sessions rather than long ones. This idea, often called spaced learning, can explain why returning to a practice this way helps it sink in.

    And that’s exactly where Mindvalley comes in, with:

    • The Mindvalley Yoga Quest with Cecilia. The program breaks yoga into daily sessions, helping you build awareness—on and off the mat.
    • A Yogi’s Guide to Joy with Sadhguru. While it’s not about yoga, per se, the program helps you deepen your practice with philosophical insights on how the mind, breath, and body work together.

    You learn a little, return often, and let familiarity build at your own pace.

    30. How to do yoga at home?

    Here’s the thing: you don’t need a perfect setup, a long session, or even a huge space. A quiet corner and a mat will do.

    Remember Adriene Mishler? She helped popularize yoga at home through her YouTube channel, Yoga With Adriene, which now has over 13 million subscribers worldwide for its accessible, beginner-friendly approach. 

    Her guiding principle is simple. “Find what feels good,” she shared with The Guardian.

    The same idea reverberates through Cecilia’s philosophy: you can practice yoga anywhere… including your home. 

    Over time, that quiet corner becomes a space you willingly return to, no matter what happens in your day.

    Questions about going deeper into your yoga practice

    31. What is yoga nidra?

    It’s a form of non-sleep deep rest (NSDR). To do it, you lie down, close your eyes, and follow a trained guide as your attention moves through the body and breath.

    And its purpose doesn’t end there. Dr. Richard Miller, a clinical psychologist who later developed iRest Institute as a modern way to apply yoga nidra’s principles, often describes it as a way of relating to life itself.

    “When we accept life as it is,” he writes in Yoga Nidra: A Meditative Practice for Deep Relaxation and Healing, “dissatisfaction and suffering cease, and we learn to deal with reality on its own terms, rather than through what our mind desires.”

    This acceptance is, in many ways, yoga at its quietest.

    32. How do I become a yoga instructor?

    Most instructors begin with a 200-hour teacher training, the industry standard recognized by organizations like Yoga Alliance. The process usually covers ancient yoga philosophy, human anatomy, sequencing, and how to guide others safely.

    The excitement that comes with mastery is real, but what matters more is what you’ve lived on the mat. To be a great teacher, you must first show up consistently and understand what it feels like to be guided before you lead anyone else.

    That’s why Cecilia often frames teaching as a shared experience rather than a role to claim. As she puts it, “We start together; we end together.”

    33. How much do yoga instructors make?

    Well, it depends. Many earn less when starting out, then more as private sessions, workshops, or online classes come into play.

    According to Salary.com, the average yoga instructor earns about $46,500 per year, with most teachers earning between $34,000 and $65,000 annually. And on a per-class basis, Glassdoor reveals, the median hourly pay for yoga instructors often falls between $30 and $40, though the range can be lower or higher depending on the city you’re in.

    So, it’s clear that teaching yoga rarely comes with one fixed paycheck. It tends to grow alongside your experience and the community you build.

    Supercharge your superpower

    Yoga, at its core, gives you a way to work with what you’re discovering about yourself, without pressure. You show up, breathe, move, and let one moment lead to the next.

    And you don’t have to figure it all out on your own. Cecilia Sardeo’s free masterclass on Mindvalley can help you move past doing yoga “right” and start noticing how your mind-body synergy unfolds on the mat.

    Inside the free session, you’ll learn to:

    • Build a steady foundation without rushing progress,
    • Develop strength and flexibility in simple, realistic ways,
    • Choose yoga styles that match your energy,
    • Use breath and awareness beyond the mat, and
    • So much more.

    For many, that clarity shifts everything. Like entertainer and speaker Aidan O’Sullivan was initially skeptical of yoga. But after discovering Cecilia’s guidance, he realized how much he had misunderstood the practice. Sure, it’s not easy, but it was the reset he didn’t know he needed to boost his quality of life. He shares:

    The program took me through a wide variety of yoga styles, so I could find the ones that suit me best. I feel so relaxed and refreshed after each session.

    What Aidan discovered is what yoga teaches without announcement. The sooner you return to presence, the deeper you breathe, the easier you move with intention… and live your life in your inherent greatness.

    Welcome in.

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    Naressa Khan

    Source link

  • 33 Questions About Yoga: Beginner FAQs + Free Yoga Class

    [ad_1]

    There’s a good chance that yoga has been on your list for years. Maybe it first caught your eye in a studio, on a wellness app, or when YouTube yogis like Adriene Mishler made it feel approachable for the masses.

    Still, when it comes time to step on the mat, “I don’t know…” may creep in. That uncertainty often clears with the right questions about yoga and how it fits your life.

    “Yoga is not about the perfect pose you just saw on Instagram,” Mindvalley’s resident yoga coach, Cecilia Sardeo, says in her program, The Mindvalley Yoga Quest. “The best part about it is cultivating presence in your life.”

    Disclaimer: This article is strictly educational and does not replace medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before starting any wellness practice.

    Frequently asked questions about yoga

    1. What is yoga?

    Yoga is an ancient mindfulness practice that combines body postures (or asanas in Sanskrit), mindful breathing techniques, and attention-building movements. With it, you get to experience more ease off the mat and in daily life. 

    Sadhguru, a world-renowned yogi and founder of Isha Foundation, calls it the science of freeing your inner world. Unlike animals, he says, the human mind can move in every direction. But this very same “free will” can create stress when we don’t know how to handle it well.

    “Humanity,” he says in his Mindvalley program, A Yogi’s Guide to Joy, “is not suffering bondage. Humanity is suffering its freedom.” 

    Thankfully, though, he adds, there are ways to understand what life’s about and what we can do with it. And one of them is “what we’re referring to as yoga.” It’s why he spent decades unpacking and teaching it to millions worldwide, whether through Isha Foundation events, his spiritual classes, or his bestselling books.

    2. What does yoga mean?

    The word “yoga” comes from the Sanskrit root yuj, which means “to yoke” or “to unite.” In practice, it connects not only the body and motion but also breath and awareness, as well as attention, intention, and action. 

    This multilayered union of sorts is what makes this ancient practice more than a workout, says OM Yoga Center founder and longtime Yoga Journal contributor Cyndi Lee.

    The practice of yoga is not about perfecting the body,” the mindful yoga coach writes in her book, Yoga Body, Buddha Mind. “It is about understanding the body as a vehicle for awareness.”

    Interestingly, traces of her view can be found in modern psychology through the concept of “locus of control.” Coined by psychologist Julian Rotter, this framework examines whether people believe they’re governed by external forces, such as fate, or by their own choices.

    Those who believe fate is in their hands? They have what’s called an internal locus of control. It’s a mindset often seen in people drawn to yoga, which is all about turning inward and, ultimately, owning your inner peace.

    3. Where did yoga originate?

    The earliest ideas about yoga appeared in the Vedas and the Upanishads, both originating in the Indian subcontinent thousands of years ago. (They’re the same scriptures that explore the power of the breath, the mind’s role in shaping human experience, and awareness as the gateway to higher levels of consciousness.)

    Eventually, the practice became more clearly defined in The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. It’s the foundational text that strips yoga of its “woo-woo” status and organizes it into a clear, practical system to follow.

    Leafing through its pages, you’ll see words of wisdom describing it as the art of quietening mental noise to make way for awareness. Bodily postures were meant to support this goal, so the mind could take the lead.

    4. Who invented yoga?

    “Yoga is not an invention,” Sadhguru says. “It is a discovery.” In that sense, it’s a response to human experience itself and the need for balance in life.

    And the practice surely wasn’t an invention by any single person. In fact, yoga as you know it today developed slowly over thousands of years, shaped by many teachers, thinkers, and practitioners in India. 

    Passed down from one generation to another through oral tradition, it eventually began appearing in texts such as The Yoga Sutras of Patanjali. And thanks to the likes of the ancient Indian philosopher, Patanjali, the practical ways to experience yoga are now accessible to the whole world.

    5. Is yoga a religion?

    No. Think of it as a universal set of tools for understanding yourself and your life experiences. Or in Sadhguru’s words: “A technology for well-being.” And like any technology, it’s meant for anyone and everyone, regardless of culture, background, or belief system.

    Religion, on the other hand, grows out of culture itself. That means it’s a reflection of shared stories, symbols, rituals, and social structures that shape how we see meaning and make sense of the world.

    Yoga, though, works at the level of human experience rather than cultural identity. And that universality explains why yoga fits so easily into holistic wellness. Any approach that falls under this term views you as a connected whole, where thoughts, habits, emotions, and the body influence one another throughout the day. 

    So, when one part is out of sync, the rest tend to follow. 

    Now, science has yoga’s holistic nature down pat. A 2020 study in Frontiers in Psychology found that yoga-based practices support overall well-being by helping people manage their emotions more effectively and feel more satisfied with daily life through:

    • Calmer stress responses,
    • Steadier moods, and
    • Better physical recovery from everyday strains.

    All of these? They’re qualities anyone can access, regardless of their cultural attachments.

    Questions about yoga styles

    6. What is hatha yoga?

    Hatha yoga moves at an unhurried pace. Poses are held long enough for you to notice what your body is doing and how your breath responds. 

    It’s the style many teachers, including Cecilia, treat as the groundwork of yoga. You learn how to do the basics:

    • Stand, 
    • Breathe, and 
    • Settle down.

    No complications, just the essentials.

    For anyone who wants to feel grounded instead of rushed through the day, hatha is often the starting point for mind-body balance to be a thing.

    7. What is vinyasa yoga?

    This style of yoga is all about flow. One pose leads into the next, guided by mindful breathing. From here, your body warms up for more strength, and your mind learns to stay present as things keep moving.

    Many people are drawn to vinyasa as part of a morning yoga routine, using the rhythm to wake up both body and mental focus. 

    And it also comes with real health benefits. Even a single session of vinyasa flow yoga, as a study published in Complementary Therapies in Medicine reveals, can lift up your mood and support healthy heart function. This suggests that the style’s movement-and-breath rhythm matters for more than just flexibility. 

    8. What is yin yoga?

    Going yin on the mat means staying put. Here, you hold poses for several minutes with little muscular effort. The work happens quietly, deep in the tissues and just as deeply in the mind.

    In his teachings, Sadhguru often speaks of stillness as the doorway to awareness—the exact bedrock of yin yoga.

    As much as you’d like to squirm and wriggle around in a pose, the urge to move sure does pass. When it does, the doorway to sensations and emotions opens up. It’s what science calls interoceptive awareness, the ability to sense your internal bodily signals, which, when increased in body movement, can release emotions previously stored in the body.

    One way you can think of it is as a “conversation” you have with yourself for self-healing.

    9. What is ashtanga yoga?

    Ashtanga yoga follows a set sequence of poses that remain the same throughout a session, practiced over and over. 

    That repetition is the whole point. Over time, the body builds strength and stamina, while the mind learns discipline through consistency. 

    Many people who enjoy structure find comfort here. You show up, do the work, and let the practice reveal where you are that day, without needing variety to stay engaged.

    In this sense, it shows that yoga doesn’t have to be complicated for mental clarity to come in. Like Sadhguru says, “When you are conscious of your body, your mind naturally settles.”

    10. What is hot yoga?

    Hot yoga is practiced in a heated room, where sensations intensify quickly. Your muscles warm quickly, sweat follows, and the practice feels intense from the first pose. It asks for hydration, pacing, and close attention to limits.

    You can see it as a literal take on Indian yoga, where heat is symbolic. Traditionally, warmth was meant to come from breath, focus, and sustained effort rather than from your external environment. 

    The difference here is subtle, yet telling. One approach supplies heat from the outside. The other trains the body and mind to create it on their own.

    11. What is kundalini yoga?

    Kundalini yoga works with precise sequences: 

    • Specific movements,
    • Timed breathing patterns, and 
    • Repeated sounds or chants. 

    Each element is used deliberately to influence how your nervous system, attention, and energy respond.

    Instead of holding poses for simply alignment or flow, the practice focuses on how breath and repetition affect your inner state, potentially for a kundalini awakening (the rising of dormant energy at the base of your spine). This aligns with Sadhguru’s idea of inner engineering.

    “Yoga is about engineering yourself the way you want to be,” he says. And this style of yoga reflects that directly.

    12. What is restorative yoga?

    In plain terms, it’s a practice built around deliberate rest. Poses come with props like bolsters, blocks, and blankets, so your body doesn’t have to work as hard. Then… you stay in each position for several minutes. 

    From here, eventually your muscles soften, and the nervous system slows down. The goal of this softness? Recovery.

    In her program, Cecilia reminds her student that rest is not a reward after effort but a practice to hone in and of itself. Now, restorative yoga echoes these principles.

    By removing effort, you signal safety to the body, giving it space to reset after stress or fatigue.

    13. What is somatic yoga?

    “Somatic” comes from the Greek word sōma, meaning “body.” In this yoga, all movements you make are slow and deliberate. 

    Much like yin yoga, somatic yoga builds interoceptive awareness. The key difference between them, though, is that once you’ve noticed the tension, you release it as it happens—through motion instead of stillness.

    “The moment you start listening to your body,” Cecilia points out, “it starts responding differently.”

    Different yoga styles

    Most common questions about yoga benefits

    14. What is yoga good for?

    Yoga helps your body move with more ease and strength while giving your mind relief from endless mental chatter.

    Many beginners assume yoga has to look a certain way to count. Advanced poses, long sessions, a perfect routine… You know the drill.

    Yet that’s not how the practice works. 

    “There is no perfect pose,” says Cecilia. “The perfect pose is the perfect pose for you today.” Yoga meets you where you are, whether that’s five minutes of breathing in your car or a full class on the mat.

    It’s likely why, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), nearly one in six adults in the U.S. practices yoga to support their health beyond fitness.

    15. What does yoga do for your body?

    It makes you more capable without feeling pushed. You move with fewer aches, better balance, and less effort through the day. It also builds muscular endurance, training your muscles to stay engaged longer so you tire less and recover faster. 

    Esteemed physician Dr. Timothy McCall, who’s also the author of Yoga As Medicine, notes that regularly practicing it strengthens the body while easing unnecessary tension. And with steady attention, bodily strength and ease tend to arrive together.

    “It is a powerful medicine indeed for body, mind, and spirit,” he writes in the book. “The longer you stay with it and the more heart you put into the journey, the farther it can take you.”

    16. Is yoga good for weight loss?

    The short answer is… yes, though not in the quick-burn way many people expect. Yoga supports weight loss indirectly by sharpening your awareness of habits, stress, and daily choices, which matters when lasting change is the goal.

    Cecilia herself started hers on the same footing, after years of health imbalance and burnout. 

     “All I had to start chasing,” she recounts, “was the healthiest version of my body.” 

    That change in focus keeps the weight loss process sustainable.

    17. Can yoga help reduce stress and anxiety?

    Yes, it works. And it works best when you treat it as a regular practice, not a one-off quick fix.

    Here’s what sticking with yoga can do for your peace of mind:

    Ask Sarah Capel, an English teacher based in Hong Kong, about embracing the practice, and she would tell you.

    “I know I needed yoga to transform my life,” she shares with Mindvalley. “I have so much emotion inside that cannot seem to be released simply with meditation.”

    18. Will yoga help me connect with my spirituality?

    It can, if that’s the goal you want to achieve with it. And this begins by loosening the pressure to define what spirituality should look like. 

    Because the truth is? No one really knows. 

    Sadhguru has a hunch, though. “Spirituality is not about looking up,” he says. “It is about looking inward.” Which sounds like the point of yoga to begin with: to just be.

    In this vein, spiritual growth on the mat begins the moment you notice what’s actually happening inside you, like… 

    Your breath getting shallow…

    Your shoulders tightening…

    Or that loop of thoughts running on repeat.

    In that awareness, you’ll stay present long enough to hear yourself. Repeat the process, and see your world open up, day to day.

    Frequently asked questions about yoga for beginners

    19. Do I have to be flexible to practice yoga?

    No. Flexibility often shows up after you practice, not before. 

    So it’s okay to show up on the mat even if you’re stiff as wood. All you need to do here is move a little bit by bit every day. Then keep breathing evenly, in and out of a pose, from one to the next.

    Over time, your body eventually softens to meet you where you’ve arrived—all after meeting you where you were.

    Not convinced? Here’s a reality check for you. A study published in Evidence-Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine found that regular yoga practice improves flexibility and range of motion, even in people with limited mobility.

    So, go ahead and get good, no matter your starting point.

    20. Can I practice yoga if I’m overweight or out of shape?

    Yes. You do not need a certain body type, stamina level, or fitness history to begin. You just start by moving what you can, breathing as you go, and letting your body change gradually as your practice deepens.

    As many holistic weight loss guides would tell you, yoga is often the entry point into a more sustainable approach to getting in shape.

    It’s exactly what drew Mary Beth Mains in, anyway. After practicing yoga casually in the past and attending hot yoga classes, the accountant from the U.S. found herself all amped to discover her best shape ever. Thanks to the practice, she says, “I’m loving the idea of losing 40 pounds.

    21. I went to a beginner class and felt overwhelmed—should I stop?

    You walk into a beginner class expecting ease. Instead, you scrunch your face trying to decode poses, cues, and breathing when everyone else seems to be so “zen.”

    Now this can feel like failure, but pump the brakes on the self-doubt. This happens more often than anyone admits. You’re not failing; the overwhelm is just a sign your body and brain are taking in new information at the same time. 

    Getting good at yoga takes time. Here are gentle steps to get you there:

    • Pick classes that focus on the basics instead of the ideal pace.
    • Try practicing at home first, where there’s no pressure to follow along perfectly.
    • Let breath be the priority, even if you’re unsure of how you’re moving.
    • Pause or rest whenever you need to. Sitting out is part of the practice.
    • Give yourself a few sessions before deciding whether it’s for you.

    Follow Cecilia as she walks you through the basics of yoga for beginners:

    Find the Right Yoga Practice for You With Cecilia Sardeo | Mindvalley Trailer

    22. How often should I practice yoga?

    As often as your life allows. In some weeks, you’d move daily. But in others, maybe you can only squeeze in one or two short sessions in between work, family time, and everything else you’ve got going on.

    The point, Cecilia emphasizes, is to keep it practical. “Consistency is key,” she says. And on tight, just scale things down. “Even if you only have 30 minutes, don’t skip it.”

    Don’t underestimate what a few short sessions can do. Things add up, and it’s a matter of time before your mind and body get the hang of it.

    23. Is yoga time-consuming?

    The thing is, it doesn’t have to be. Yoga only takes as much time as you’re willing to give it. Some days, that’s a full class. On others, it’s 10 minutes of stretching and breathing before bed.

    The thing to remember here? It’s that yoga is about showing up, even in small stretches of time.  A five-minute session still counts. A few poses wiggled in still matter. 

    When your practice fits into your life instead of interrupting it, it becomes easier to keep going.

    24. Is yoga strenuous?

    It depends on how you practice it. Some styles get your heart rate up and leave your muscles working. Others feel slow, supported, and deeply calming. 

    “Every practice has a different impact,” says Cecilia. “Hatha is grounding. Kundalini activates. Ashtanga burns through you.”

    And even within the same class, effort looks different from one person to the next.

    Here’s the thing, though: yoga gives you room to choose your level. You decide how far to go, when to pause, and how much to take on.

    Questions about yoga class prep

    25. What yoga style should I practice as a beginner?

    Start with what helps you feel grounded. 

    At this stage, the goal should be to learn how your body moves and breathes in beginner-friendly options like these:

    • Hatha yoga. Its slow pace allows you the time to understand alignment and breath.
    • Yin yoga. Longer holds and minimal movement help you tune into sensation and awareness.
    • Beginner-friendly vinyasa. Go for flow-first classes so your beginner focus stays on breath and transitions rather than speed.

    When in doubt, just remember Cecilia’s golden rule: the right style for you is simply the one you feel safe enough to return to.

    26. What should I wear to yoga?

    Honestly, wear whatever lets you move comfortably. Think: 

    • Breathable tops that don’t ride up,
    • Stretchy bottoms that ease your transitions, and
    • Layers you can peel off as you warm up.

    If you’re not tugging, adjusting, or thinking about your outfit mid-pose, you’ve got it right.

    And forget what fashion trends tell you, says Rick Cummings, a contributor at Yoga Journal, to beginners.

    You may ogle the latest flared leggings on Vogue. “But, speaking as a teacher,” he writes at the portal, “it is harder for me to correct someone’s alignment if I cannot see the shape of their leg.” 

    So, rule of thumb? Dress for function.

    27. Can I eat before yoga practice?

    You can, for the sake of energy. But it helps to keep it light and well-timed. 

    Most people feel better practicing yoga between one to three hours after a full meal, or about 30 minutes after a small meal. 

    The reason? According to research published in Sports Medicine, when you move soon after eating, your body has to split blood flow between digestion and working muscles. It’s why movement can feel uncomfortable if a large meal is still being processed. Because ultimately, that’s usually when sluggishness kicks in.

    28. How to clean a yoga mat?

    Most of the time, a quick wipe does the job. 

    After practice, use a gentle mix of water and mild soap to wipe both sides clean. Or buy a good mat spray. Either way, you’ve got to let it air-dry fully before rolling it up again to avoid it stinking up.

    Every so often, it’s worth a deeper clean, especially if you sweat a lot. You’re breathing, stretching, and grounding on that surface. Keeping it fresh just makes it easier to come back and roll it out again.

    Frequently asked questions about practicing yoga at home and online

    29. Can I learn yoga online?

    Yes. And for many people with busy schedules, it’s how they can make time for it. 

    It’s all in the science that psychologist Hermann Ebbinghaus is known for. Through his early research on memory, he found that learning tends to stick better when it occurs in short, repeated sessions rather than long ones. This idea, often called spaced learning, can explain why returning to a practice this way helps it sink in.

    And that’s exactly where Mindvalley comes in, with:

    • The Mindvalley Yoga Quest with Cecilia. The program breaks yoga into daily sessions, helping you build awareness—on and off the mat.
    • A Yogi’s Guide to Joy with Sadhguru. While it’s not about yoga, per se, the program helps you deepen your practice with philosophical insights on how the mind, breath, and body work together.

    You learn a little, return often, and let familiarity build at your own pace.

    30. How to do yoga at home?

    Here’s the thing: you don’t need a perfect setup, a long session, or even a huge space. A quiet corner and a mat will do.

    Remember Adriene Mishler? She helped popularize yoga at home through her YouTube channel, Yoga With Adriene, which now has over 13 million subscribers worldwide for its accessible, beginner-friendly approach. 

    Her guiding principle is simple. “Find what feels good,” she shared with The Guardian.

    The same idea reverberates through Cecilia’s philosophy: you can practice yoga anywhere… including your home. 

    Over time, that quiet corner becomes a space you willingly return to, no matter what happens in your day.

    Questions about going deeper into your yoga practice

    31. What is yoga nidra?

    It’s a form of non-sleep deep rest (NSDR). To do it, you lie down, close your eyes, and follow a trained guide as your attention moves through the body and breath.

    And its purpose doesn’t end there. Dr. Richard Miller, a clinical psychologist who later developed iRest Institute as a modern way to apply yoga nidra’s principles, often describes it as a way of relating to life itself.

    “When we accept life as it is,” he writes in Yoga Nidra: A Meditative Practice for Deep Relaxation and Healing, “dissatisfaction and suffering cease, and we learn to deal with reality on its own terms, rather than through what our mind desires.”

    This acceptance is, in many ways, yoga at its quietest.

    32. How do I become a yoga instructor?

    Most instructors begin with a 200-hour teacher training, the industry standard recognized by organizations like Yoga Alliance. The process usually covers ancient yoga philosophy, human anatomy, sequencing, and how to guide others safely.

    The excitement that comes with mastery is real, but what matters more is what you’ve lived on the mat. To be a great teacher, you must first show up consistently and understand what it feels like to be guided before you lead anyone else.

    That’s why Cecilia often frames teaching as a shared experience rather than a role to claim. As she puts it, “We start together; we end together.”

    33. How much do yoga instructors make?

    Well, it depends. Many earn less when starting out, then more as private sessions, workshops, or online classes come into play.

    According to Salary.com, the average yoga instructor earns about $46,500 per year, with most teachers earning between $34,000 and $65,000 annually. And on a per-class basis, Glassdoor reveals, the median hourly pay for yoga instructors often falls between $30 and $40, though the range can be lower or higher depending on the city you’re in.

    So, it’s clear that teaching yoga rarely comes with one fixed paycheck. It tends to grow alongside your experience and the community you build.

    Supercharge your superpower

    Yoga, at its core, gives you a way to work with what you’re discovering about yourself, without pressure. You show up, breathe, move, and let one moment lead to the next.

    And you don’t have to figure it all out on your own. Cecilia Sardeo’s free masterclass on Mindvalley can help you move past doing yoga “right” and start noticing how your mind-body synergy unfolds on the mat.

    Inside the free session, you’ll learn to:

    • Build a steady foundation without rushing progress,
    • Develop strength and flexibility in simple, realistic ways,
    • Choose yoga styles that match your energy,
    • Use breath and awareness beyond the mat, and
    • So much more.

    For many, that clarity shifts everything. Like entertainer and speaker Aidan O’Sullivan was initially skeptical of yoga. But after discovering Cecilia’s guidance, he realized how much he had misunderstood the practice. Sure, it’s not easy, but it was the reset he didn’t know he needed to boost his quality of life. He shares:

    The program took me through a wide variety of yoga styles, so I could find the ones that suit me best. I feel so relaxed and refreshed after each session.

    What Aidan discovered is what yoga teaches without announcement. The sooner you return to presence, the deeper you breathe, the easier you move with intention… and live your life in your inherent greatness.

    Welcome in.

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    Naressa Khan

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  • Why Skipping Breakfast Is A Bad Idea + How To Avoid Doing It

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    If eating breakfast at home is a no-go, figuring out a few options for when you’re out and about might be helpful. Shapiro points out that coffee shops like Starbucks often offer healthy choices, such as whole-wheat breakfast wraps, egg bites, and protein boxes. Plus, you can usually find hard-boiled eggs, fresh fruit, or yogurt at corner stores or delis if you’re in a pinch.

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  • [Outliers] The Multidisciplinary Approach to Thinking | Peter D. Kaufman

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    One of the people I’ve learned the most from is Peter D. Kaufman. 

    Peter has been the chairman and CEO of GlenAir since 1977. And he’s got a track record that puts him in the top 0.001% of business leaders during that time. He’s also the editor of Poor Charlie’s Almanack and was one of Charlie Munger’s closest friends for decades.

    Public Release: January 13.
    Members have access now.
    Join us.

    Coming Soon: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Transcript

    Peter has been the chairman and CEO of GlenAir since 1977. And he’s got a track record that puts him in the top 0.001% of business leaders during that time. He’s also the editor of Poor Charlie’s Almanack and was one of Charlie Munger’s closest friends for decades.

    In a talk that was never meant to be made public, he revealed the secrets to multidisciplinary thinking.  Someone unfortunately recorded the talk without his permission. It became hugely popular and eventually Peter allowed the complete talk to be transcribed and posted on FS.

    It’s time to listen and learn. 

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    Vicky

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  • Handwriting Struggles? How Occupational Therapy Can Improve Fine Motor Skills

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    Photo by Pexels

    Small, painstakingly-written figures. Shaky lettering. Uneven spacing. Watching your child wrestle with handwriting can be frustrating for both of you.

    If you’ve ever wondered how you can help your child without pressure and tears, you’re not alone. The good news is, occupational therapy (OT) offers effective, practical strategies to build fine motor skills and make handwriting feel more natural.

    The Connection Between Poor Handwriting and Fine Motor Skills

    Fine motor skills are the small, precise movements of the hands and fingers that support a wide range of everyday tasks. These skills allow children to:

    • Hold and control crayons, pencils, and pens
    • Cut with scissors
    • Button clothes and tie shoes
    • Use utensils

    Trouble with handwriting can signal underlying fine motor difficulties, and these challenges can impact more activities as children grow.

    Using a keyboard can become fatiguing, artistic talents may languish due to a lack of precision with tools like paintbrushes, and even playing sports that require strong hand-eye coordination can be difficult. Because of the far-reaching impact, addressing handwriting struggles through occupational therapy can have several long-term benefits.

    1. OT Strengthens the Muscles Needed for Writing

    Often, handwriting struggles stem from weak hand muscles or poor shoulder and core stability. These problems make the fingers work harder than they should. Occupational therapists use activities to build strength, including:

    • Squeezing, pinching, and pulling exercises
    • Manipulating clay, putty, or small objects
    • Weight-bearing activities that support shoulder stability
    • Games that encourage controlled finger movements

    As strength improves, children find it easier to maintain a comfortable grip on writing tools.

    2. OT Improves Precision

    Strong hands aren’t enough. Writing also requires the precise finger movements that come with strong fine motor skills. Occupational therapy focuses on:

    • Isolating finger movements (not just the whole hand)
    • Developing a functional pencil grasp
    • Improving coordination between the thumb, index, and middle fingers

    With better hand and finger control, letters become clearer, spacing improves, and writing feels smoother and becomes more precise.

    3. OT Helps the Brain and Hand Work Together

    Handwriting is what’s called a visual-motor task. The eyes and hands must communicate constantly. If a child’s hand-eye coordination is off, they may:

    • Write letters that are too big or too small
    • Drift off the line
    • Have trouble copying from the classroom board
    • Struggle with spacing between letters and words

    Occupational therapists use connection activities that require children to match what they see with how they move. Over time, this helps their writing look more organized and intentional.

    4. OT Teaches Consistent Letter Size and Spacing

    Inconsistency in handwriting is another concern that arises from diminished fine motor skills. Successful occupational therapy programs address this by helping children understand size relationships in writing. Therapists use clear visual cues and structured practice, so children internalize how letters fit on a line and how much space words require.

    5. OT Uses Techniques That Build Lasting Motor Memory

    Writing skills improve faster when learning involves more than just paper and pencil. Numerous studies, including one titled “Benefits of Multisensory Learning,” published by the National Institute of Health, demonstrate that techniques that pair movement with visual feedback are more effective than what the authors call unisensory techniques.

    A multisensory approach to improving the fine motor skills associated with handwriting might involve:

    • Tracing letters with the finger in textured material to “feel” their shapes
    • Forming letters with the hands before writing them
    • Using rhythm while writing

    It’s believed that these methods help the brain store motor patterns more effectively, making handwriting feel like a more natural process as time goes on.

    6. OT Builds Endurance

    Even when writing appears legible, many children struggle with stamina. Writing may require so much physical and mental effort that their hands tire quickly, attention drifts, or frustration sets in before an assignment is completed.

    A cycle may develop. Because writing is uncomfortable, children avoid it. The practice time required to hone writing skills isn’t put in, and handwriting fails to improve, often falling further behind expectations.

    Occupational therapy addresses this by helping children write more efficiently. By developing better posture, a more comfortable pencil grip, and smoother movements, the strain of writing is reduced, and children can write for longer periods.

    7. OT Boosts Confidence

    Occupational Therapy Improve Fine Motor Skills

    Photo by Pexels

    Poor handwriting doesn’t just affect how work looks on the page. It can quietly chip away at a child’s confidence. When writing feels slow, tiring, or frustrating, children may begin to doubt their abilities and pull back from tasks that require written work. They may struggle with low self-esteem, and eroded confidence can reach far beyond the classroom.

    Occupational therapy makes writing feel more manageable, and children become willing to engage and complete assignments. As their motor skills improve, they take pride in their work, positively impacting their academic participation and their self-esteem and confidence.

    A Word About Adults With Handwriting Challenges

    Occupational therapy to improve handwriting and fine motor skills isn’t just for children. OT can help adults:

    • Improve comfort and legibility when writing
    • Develop techniques to reduce strain
    • Rebuild fine motor skills after injury or lack of use
    • Increase efficiency in a wide range of everyday tasks

    The principles are the same, and the rewards can be just as rich for adults who pursue occupational therapy assistance.

    The Bottom Line on How OT Improves Fine Motor Skills

    Occupational therapy improves fine motor skills because it doesn’t treat handwriting as a surface-level problem. It addresses how the body and brain work together to produce critical movement.

    OT transforms handwriting from a struggle into a mastered skill. If handwriting challenges are affecting confidence, school performance, and daily life, occupational therapy offers a positive, supportive path forward.

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    Dr. Beverly H. Moskowitz

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  • I’m A Health Editor & Mom, This Is My Go-To Immune Supplement

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    I’m a mom, which means at the beginning of every school year, I brace myself for an onslaught of germs that my daughter will undoubtedly bring home. I also need as much energy as I can muster to handle the many playdates, fundraisers, and sports events that fill up our schedule (does there have to be SO many all at once?). 

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  • The New Dietary Guidelines Want Us To Eat More Of This (& Less Of This)

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    The latest dietary guidelines emphasize real food, higher protein intake, and cutting back on added sugar.

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  • Weekly Planning for Your Many Hats

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    Juggling multiple roles? This Wisdom Wednesday, I’m sharing practical weekly planning strategies to help you stay on top of everything without feeling overwhelmed. Discover how to free up mental space, make time for deep thinking, and build flexibility into your week so you can thrive in all your responsibilities. Learn how to plan smarter, not harder, and reclaim your weekends.

    Get 20% off your first order: dripdrop.com and use promo code tps.

    Become a member of TPS+ and get ad-free episodes a week before anyone else with other great bonuses like the famous “One Tweak A Week” shirt.

    If you enjoyed this episode, follow the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, Overcast, Pocket Casts or your favorite podcast player. It’s easy, you’ll get new episodes automatically, and it also helps the show. You can also leave a review!

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    Asian Efficiency Team

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  • The Trouble with Romantic Love

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    Two centuries ago, a small group of brilliant and troubled young people trembling with the unprocessed traumas of their childhoods laid in their poems and letters and journals the foundational modern mythos of love. Although none but one of them lived past their thirties, they touched the lives of generations to come with their art and their ideas about life.

    We call them the Romantics, keep quoting their poems in our vows and keep paging through their textbook for suffering.

    Pulsating through our culture as unexamined dogma is their idea that there is a hierarchy of the affections and that romantic love sits at the top as the organizing principle of our emotional lives, the aim and the end of our existential longing. It is a religion that even people with extraordinary capacity for critical thinking in other domains of life tend not to question. And yet when we let our hearts be large enough and real enough, we discover that there is but a porous and permeable membrane between friendship and passion, that collaboration is a form of intimacy, that family can mean many different things and look many different ways; we discover that romantic love is overwhelmingly a relation not between complete human beings but between idealized selves and mutual projections — the most powerful prompt for fantasy the creative imagination has invented.

    Illustration from An ABZ of Love

    The Portuguese poet and philosopher Fernando Pessoa (June 13, 1888–November 30, 1935) offers a sobering antidote to the cult of romantic love in a passage from The Book of Disquiet (public library) — the posthumously published masterpiece that also gave us Pessoa on how to be a good explorer in the lifelong expedition to yourself and how to unself into who you really are. He writes:

    Romantic love is a rarefied product of century after century of Christian influence, and everything about its substance and development can be explained to the unenlightened by comparing it to a suit fashioned by the soul or the imagination and used to clothe those whom the mind thinks it fits, when they happen to come along.

    But every suit, since it isn’t eternal, lasts as long as it lasts; and soon, under the fraying clothes of the ideal we’ve formed, the real body of the person we dressed it in shows through.

    Romantic love is thus a path to disillusion, unless this disillusion, accepted from the start, decides to vary the ideal constantly, constantly sewing new suits in the soul’s workshops so as to constantly renew the appearance of the person they clothe.

    The standard romantic model is in this sense a warping of the deepest, truest kind of love — the kind Iris Murdoch so perfectly defined as “the extremely difficult realisation that something other than oneself is real… the discovery of reality.” Romantic love, Pessoa observes, is the flight from reality into fantasy, the projection of oneself onto the other:

    We never love anyone. What we love is the idea we have of someone. It’s our own concept — our own selves — that we love.

    […]

    The relations between one soul and another, expressed through such uncertain and variable things as shared words and proffered gestures, are deceptively complex. The very act of meeting each other is a non-meeting. Two people say “I love you” or mutually think it and feel it, and each has in mind a different idea, a different life, perhaps even a different colour or fragrance, in the abstract sum of impressions that constitute the soul’s activity.

    Card from An Almanac of Birds: 100 Divinations for Uncertain Days, also available as a stand-alone print and as stationery cards, benefitting the Audubon Society.

    Couple with Iris Murdoch on how to see more clearly and love more purely, then revisit Martha Nussbaum’s superb litmus test for how to know whether you really love a person and Simone de Beauvoir on how two souls can interact with one another in a meaningful way.

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    Maria Popova

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  • If I Were Building Mindvalley Again in 2026…

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    It took me 20 years to build Mindvalley.

    If I were starting today, in 2026, I could build the same company in 12 months, with one-twentieth the people, and with far less friction, stress, and pain.

    And here’s the important part:

    I’m not just saying this hypothetically.

    I’m actually building this way right now.

    What’s changed isn’t ambition.
    It’s leveraged speed.

    We are now in an era where one person with clarity, systems, and social media can outpace entire teams from ten years ago.

    Not by working more hours or posting more content.

    But by letting identity, systems, and content compound your effort.

    Let’s go deeper: 

    The New Advantage: Leveraged Speed

    In 2026, the founders who win aren’t the ones working harder.

    They’re the ones who understand Leveraged Speed.

    Leveraged Speed comes from two pillars:

    1. Cloud coding — building technology lightning fast
    2. Social media — building trust at scale

    I’ll talk about cloud coding in a future newsletter.

    Today, I want to talk about the second pillar, because this one is wildly misunderstood.

    Ten years ago, trust came after the product.

    You built it quietly. You launched. Then you marketed.

    Today, it’s reversed.

    Trust now comes first.

    And when trust exists before you launch:

    • customers say yes faster
    • advertising costs drop
    • partnerships appear without chasing

    This is why companies are being built faster than ever before.

    Why Dubai Gets It

    As I’m writing this, I’m in Dubai.

    This weekend, from Jan 9-11, Mindvalley is curating a special stage in the 1 Billion Follower Summit in Dubai which is possibly the largest creator summit in the world, with 30,000 people attending.

    (In the special Mindvalley Stage, our biggest ever – Social Media Summit is taking place in which we’ll be sharing our amazing curated speakers free LIVE on Zoom.)

    And I want to point something out:

    The Dubai government understands this shift.

    They know that dominating social media isn’t about influencers or vanity metrics.
    It’s about strategic advantage.

    For businesses. For cities. For entire countries.

    Because social media created PROOF. 

    And in a world of AI fakery – PROOF matters more than ever. 

    You no longer need years to build trust.
    You need clarity + consistency + content distribution.

    In 2026, social media isn’t a marketing channel. It’s a growth multiplier.

    It can recruit customers, attract partnerships, build credibility before you even “launch.”

    And it can do it fast.

    Don’t Think of Social Media as Content.
    Think of it as Proof.

    Here’s the biggest mistake founders make: They think social media is about content.
    It’s not.
    Social media is proof.

    Proof that: you’re real, you’re building something, you believe in what you’re creating

    And this matters now more than ever.

    We’re entering an era of AI slop: AI-generated videos, AI avatars, people cloning themselves

    Please hear me clearly:

    Do not clone yourself.
    Do not hide behind AI.
    Do not outsource your humanity.

    Humanity is developing a deep distrust of anything that feels fake.

    I see this on my own social media.

    Highly produced videos with perfect lighting often underperform.
    It was really me, but it could just as well be a polished AI clone. 

    But raw, selfie-style videos, me holding my phone, speaking honestly, unscripted, take off.

    A spontaneous video I shot in a Miami mall about an airport incident hit 2 million views.

    No script. No teleprompter. Just the truth.

    This is happening everywhere.

    More rawness. More realness. More humanity.

    Because anything that can be faked no longer carries trust.

    How Founders Are Building Faster Than Ever

    This is why building in public is no longer optional.

    I recently came across two Duke University students who built a fashion app called Styl almost entirely through Instagram.

    They shared the journey while building. They documented progress instead of performing.

    No massive ad budgets. No years of silence. Social media became the accelerant.

    This isn’t rare anymore.  It’s becoming the default.

    The IKEA Effect: Let People Build It With You

    There’s a principle called the IKEA Effect:

    People value what they help build. A psychologist noted that people grew attached to the IKEA furniture because they helped create and assemble it.

    We experienced this firsthand at Mindvalley.

    When we created Silva Manifesting in 2014, I didn’t hide the curriculum until launch.

    I put the raw outline into a Google Doc and shared it with our community.

    It was messy. Incomplete. Unpolished.

    I asked:

    What do you like?
    What would you change?
    What should we add?

    When we finally launched, it became the biggest launch in Mindvalley’s history.

    Why? Because trust had already been built. The community felt ownership.

    I recently shared this idea with a female founder launching an online clothing brand.

    She was shy about showing up on social media.

    I told her:

    “You don’t have to be polished. Wear sunglasses if it helps. Just show the warehouse. Share the frustrations. Be real.”

    Reluctantly, she did.

    A few weeks later, she told me sales were up 50%.

    Same product. Same ads. More trust.

    Stop Trying to Be a Content Creator

    Here’s the identity shift founders need to make:

    You are not a content creator. You are a founder using social media to build trust.

    You’re not posting to entertain strangers. You’re publishing to let people see what you’re building.

    That’s it.

    If you want to move faster in 2026:

    1. Pick one platform you actually enjoy
    2. Share the journey, not the highlights
    3. Let people give feedback while you build

    That’s how trust compounds. So don’t be afraid to share what you’re building in secret in your garage. 

    Don’t build in secret; build publicly, and it’s okay to be sloppy, to have uncertainty

    But most importantly, be real.

    And if you’re struggling with social media or just curious to learn the newest trends in growth hacking your way to the top for better visibility, opportunities, and revenue…

    You don’t want to miss this opportunity: 

    Join Us This Weekend (Jan 9–11)

    Social Media Summit 2026

    At Social Media Summit 2026, I’ll be teaching a session called:

    Founder-Based Content: How to Build Trust at Scale

    We’ll cover:

    1. How founders should show up online (without becoming influencers)
    2. Why trust lowers advertising costs
    3. And how to build demand before you launch

    The entire summit over this weekend will be streamed live on Zoom, free to our community.

    Reserve your spot here to get access

    If you’re building anything in 2026, this matters.

    Because the companies that win now aren’t louder.

    They’re more trusted.

    Vishen Lakhiani signatureVishen Lakhiani signature

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  • Mindful Morning Routines for Families to Start the Day Calm and Connected

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    Have you noticed how the first hour of the morning can affect your child’s whole day? If mornings are busy or noisy, children may feel stressed all day. A calm morning routine gives your child a peaceful start and helps them feel supported as they begin their day.

    When you slow down and encourage simple, predictable habits, your child may feel more secure and focused. This blog explains how small changes can support a mindful morning routine for families while strengthening bonds and cooperation within your family.

    Building Calm and Connection Through Mindful Mornings

    Gentle Wake-Up and Breathing Practices

    How your child wakes up affects the morning. You can avoid waking up your child with a loud alarm or rushing them with instructions. Instead, try calling them gently or using soft lighting. You can also encourage them to do simple breathing exercises, such as slow inhales and long exhales. This can help your child feel calm and ready to start the day with positivity.

    These quiet moments allow children to gradually shift from sleep to activity, which can make transitions feel less overwhelming and more predictable.

    Simple Gratitude and Daily Goals

    Young children often respond well to short, positive conversations. You may encourage your child to share one thing they feel thankful for or something they look forward to that day. This practice can be short and can foster a positive mindset and cheerful tone to the day.

    Expressing simple goals and intentions helps children focus their thoughts and emotions early. This pattern may consequently encourage emotional awareness associated with a family’s mindful morning routine.

    Exercising or Yoga Together

    Children can start their day by engaging in light exercises or yoga poses in the morning. You could help the children by having them play simple movement games, leading them through yoga poses, or having them perform gentle stretches.

    It’s best to keep these activities short and relaxed so that children don’t feel pressured. When the movements are presented in a playful and enjoyable way, children are more likely to participate. Apart from physical benefits, these morning exercises also help children develop focus and body awareness.

    Screen-Free, Mindful Breakfast Time

    Breakfast is a great time for parents to connect with their children before the day’s activities begin. Keeping the screens off during meals allows your kid to concentrate on eating and participate in conversations.

    Having a peaceful breakfast may also enhance the children’s ability to concentrate and listen throughout the day. Sharing a calm and unhurried breakfast allows children to feel more centered and secure, setting a positive tone for the day.

    Establishing a Short Family Connection Moment

    Kids need little moments of reassurance before being left alone. A quick family hug, an encouraging word, or a simple gesture can make your child feel emotionally supported and ready to face the day with confidence.

    Over time, consistent reassurance can help children develop independence and confidence and maintain a positive connection with their family members.

    Celebrating Small Wins to Set a Positive Tone

    Acknowledging the effort rather than the outcome can result in engaging and being more involved with you.

    Simple praise is great for building confidence and emotional maturity. Small, genuine affirmations, like acknowledging effort, persistence, or creativity can help children feel valued and capable. When combined with other mindful morning routines for families this can promote autonomy and encourage your child to take initiative.

    Conclusion

    Mindful morning routines create a steady and supportive start to your child’s day. By guiding gentle wake-ups, calm movement, meaningful connection, and unhurried meals, you help your child feel emotionally ready to face the day.

    Small, consistent habits over time are a good way to support emotional balance and early childhood development milestones. When mornings are calm and connected, you help your child take that feeling of security. Thoughtful routines can silently support learning, behavior, and well-being throughout the day.

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  • Even if only YOU want to!

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    150
    150



    Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.







    When you get knocked down, how to get up again.You started working on saving your marriage.  Good for you!

    And then, you hit a bump.  You get knocked down.  Maybe you discovered an affair, physical or emotional.  Maybe your spouse is irritable and upset.  Maybe it is anger and resentment, yours or your spouse’s.

    And it knocks you down.

    Enough that you think it is over.  That you are at the end.

    But are you?  Or do you need to get back up?

    In most things in life, we think the process is (or should be) smooth.  I fall for that myth all the time.  I think a project is going to be easy and straightforward.  Only to find a complication and difficulty at every turn.

    And guess what?  The same is true in your efforts to save your marriage.

    We talk about how you might get knocked down… and how to get up again, in this episode of the Save The Marriage Podcast.

    (And if I have you humming a song in your head… I have succeeded with my title! You are my people!)

     

    RELATED RESOURCES
    Dealing with Discouragement
    You Need A Plan
    Not A Wish, A Plan
    Your Support Team
    Do You Need Coaching?
    Coaching Resource Page
    Save The Marriage System

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    Lee H. Baucom, Ph.D.

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  • Mastering Financial Management for Emerging Entrepreneurs

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    Have you ever wondered why some new business owners feel calm about money while others feel lost and stressed? The answer often lies in money planning, which shapes how choices are made each day. Many beginners start with passion but lack clear money skills, and this gap can slow growth fast.

    This guide explains how financial management mastery helps track cash, plan wisely, and support steady growth in busy markets. By reading on, you will gain clear ideas to control money, avoid common traps, and build habits that support long term success for small teams and solo founders alike everywhere.

    Building Strong Financial Management Habits

    Strong habits form the base of business success when money is involved. Clear records help owners see where cash comes from and where it goes each week. When numbers stay visible, stress drops and better choices follow over time.

    A simple system for tracking income and costs keeps surprises low and trust high. Many beginners benefit from tools and guides found through finvisor.com, which can support learning without heavy terms. Regular reviews turn data into meaning and help owners adjust plans early.

    These habits grow confidence and create control as the business changes and expands. This steady approach also makes talks with banks and partners clearer and builds respect during early growth stages.

    Making Smart Decisions With Simple Numbers

    Good decisions come from understanding a few key numbers rather than chasing every detail. Cash flow shows if the business can pay bills on time and keep moving forward. Profit helps owners know if work truly adds value after costs are paid.

    Simple budgets give a clear path and limit waste as goals grow. Forecasts help owners look ahead and prepare for changes without fear. When numbers guide choices, emotions lose control and plans stay steady.

    This calm approach supports growth and keeps the business flexible in changing markets. Clear reports also help teams talk better, set shared goals, and solve issues early before they become costly problems. With steady reviews, owners learn faster, gain trust in data, and make choices that fit long term plans for growth minded new businesses today everywhere.

    Growing With Confidence Over Time

    Growth brings new chances and new risks for young businesses. Planning for taxes, savings, and future costs helps owners avoid shocks that slow progress. Strong systems also make it easier to hire help or expand services with care.

    Regular learning keeps skills fresh as market shifts and tools improve. Owners who review plans often can spot weak areas and fix them early. This steady focus builds confidence and protects momentum during busy or quiet periods.

    With patience and practice, money control becomes a strength that supports lasting success. Clear goals also help owners measure progress, celebrate wins, and stay motivated when results take time to appear. As confidence grows, leaders communicate better, plan smarter, and guide their teams with calm and purpose even during fast change and strong competition across many markets today.

    Take Control And Build A Strong Future

    Learning money skills early gives new owners power and peace of mind. Financial management helps turn ideas into action and keeps growth steady through change. When habits stay clear and reviews stay regular, risks shrink and choices improve.

    This guide showed how simple systems support planning, tracking, and smart decisions over time. With patience, these skills grow stronger and support long term goals.

    Did this guide help you? Browse the rest of this section for more advice on a variety of topics.

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  • Understanding the Growing Demand for Academic Support: A Look at Tutoring Trends in Las Vegas

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    As education continues to evolve, students across the United States are experiencing increasing pressure to meet high academic standards. From early literacy development to advanced STEM coursework, many learners need additional support to thrive. In cities like Las Vegas, the demand for structured academic guidance has led families to seek out reliable Las Vegas tutoring services that provide individualized learning experiences. This article explores why tutoring has become such an essential component of modern education, what types of support students are looking for, and how specialized help in subjects like calculus can shape long‑term academic success.

    Why Tutoring Has Become More Important Than Ever

    Over the past decade, shifts in curriculum, testing expectations, and classroom dynamics have significantly changed what students encounter at school. Teachers today must cover more material in less time, often while managing diverse classrooms with varying levels of readiness. As a result, some learners may feel left behind, while others seek enrichment beyond what the standard curriculum offers.

    Tutoring fills this gap by providing personalized support that adapts to a student’s pace. For many students, having a dedicated instructor who can answer questions, review challenging material, and reinforce key concepts can make the difference between frustration and mastery. Parents increasingly view tutoring not as a last resort, but as a proactive way to build strong academic foundations.

    The Role of Specialized Tutoring in a Competitive Academic Environment

    One of the reasons tutoring has become so valuable is its ability to address highly specific academic needs. While general homework help remains popular, more families are searching for targeted expertise—especially in complex subjects. For example, high school and college students often turn to a calculus tutor Las Vegas when they begin encountering advanced mathematical concepts that require detailed explanation and consistent practice.

    Calculus is a subject known for its abstract ideas, such as limits, derivatives, and integrals. These topics can be challenging even for strong math students because they require conceptual understanding rather than simple memorization. A tutor who specializes in calculus can help break down these ideas into manageable steps, provide alternative explanations when needed, and guide students through problem‑solving strategies that build confidence and competence.

    What Makes Tutoring Effective?

    Much of the effectiveness of tutoring comes from its adaptability. Unlike classroom learning, tutoring sessions can shift focus based on a student’s immediate needs. This level of customization allows students to progress at a pace that feels comfortable and productive.

    Key components of effective tutoring include:

    1. Diagnostic Understanding
    Before instruction begins, a good tutor identifies the student’s strengths, weaknesses, and learning style. This helps shape a personalized plan that targets the areas needing the most attention.

    2. Consistent Reinforcement
    Regular sessions give students time to practice new skills without the pressure of keeping up with a classroom schedule. Repetition and guided practice help reinforce challenging concepts.

    3. Immediate Feedback
    Students benefit greatly from real‑time correction and clarification. This helps prevent misunderstandings from building up over time.

    4. Confidence Building
    As students begin mastering topics they once found difficult, their confidence naturally increases. This confidence often carries over into other subjects and areas of life.

    The Increasing Popularity of Las Vegas Tutoring Services

    Las Vegas is home to a diverse population, and the academic needs of students reflect this diversity. Many families are seeking reliable Las Vegas tutoring services that can accommodate different grade levels, learning styles, and academic goals. The city’s growing emphasis on educational support has also led to wider availability of tutors with specialized expertise, from reading intervention to advanced mathematics and science.

    Parents often appreciate the flexibility that tutoring provides. Sessions can be held in person or online, allowing families to choose a format that fits their schedules. This flexibility is especially helpful for students balancing school with extracurricular activities or part‑time jobs.

    The Importance of Advanced Subject Support

    As students progress into higher grades, subjects like calculus, physics, and chemistry become significantly more demanding. These courses require not only understanding new concepts but also applying them in complex ways. Many students who excel in earlier math courses encounter challenges when they reach calculus because the subject introduces entirely new ways of thinking.

    Working with a calculus tutor Las Vegas gives students a structured way to approach these new challenges. Tutors can help learners understand the logic behind calculus rules, practice solving problems step by step, and connect abstract ideas to real‑world applications—an approach that often improves both performance and appreciation of the subject.

    Tutoring as a Tool for Long‑Term Growth

    The benefits of tutoring extend far beyond improved grades. Students who receive individualized support often develop stronger academic habits, including effective note‑taking, time management, and critical thinking skills. These habits help them succeed not only in school but also in future college or career paths.

    Tutoring also encourages students to take ownership of their education. When learners understand their challenges and see themselves making progress, they become more active participants in their academic journey. This sense of empowerment is one of the most valuable outcomes of any tutoring program.

    Choosing the Right Tutoring Option

    When selecting tutoring support, families should consider several factors:

    1. The tutor’s expertise in the subject area
    2. Experience working with students at the relevant grade level
    3. Ability to adapt instruction to the student’s learning style
    4. Clear communication and structured lesson plans
    5. A comfortable, supportive learning environment

    These elements help ensure that tutoring is both productive and enjoyable.

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  • Frugality Is Precision, Not Deprivation – Dragos Roua

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    Frugality has a bad reputation. It sounds like eating cold beans from a can while wrapped in a blanket because you can’t afford heating. It brings to mind images of people obsessively counting pennies, reusing tea bags, and missing out on life because they’re too scared to spend.

    But that’s not frugality. That’s a scarcity mindset disguised as virtue.

    Real frugality is precision, not deprivation. It’s knowing exactly what you need versus what you think you need. And there’s a massive gap between those two.

    Hunger vs. Appetite

    Here’s a distinction that took me years to understand: hunger versus appetite. Hunger is a real signal from your body that it needs fuel. Appetite is that thing you feel when you walk past a bakery and smell fresh croissants, even though you just had breakfast. One is real need. The other is just addiction pretending to be need.

    Most of what we spend goes toward appetite.

    That gadget you bought because the ad hit you at the right moment? Appetite. The upgraded phone when your old one worked fine? Appetite. The “investment piece” clothing item now living in the back of your closet? Appetite with better marketing.

    The frugal person isn’t cheap—they’re accurate. They’ve trained themselves to recognize the difference between what genuinely improves their life and what just feels like improvement for fifteen minutes before the dopamine goes away.

    I’ve spent money on things I forgot existed a week later. Subscriptions I never used. Courses I never finished. Tools that promised to change everything and changed nothing. I’ve also spent on things that keep serving me years later. A good chair that saved my back. Skills that opened new income streams. Experiences with people I care about that still make me smile.

    The first type of spending is consumption. The second is investment. Frugality is knowing the difference before you swipe the card.

    The Gap That Keeps You Safe

    Financial resilience isn’t about having a lot of money. It’s about maintaining a sustainable gap between what comes in and what goes out. You can earn six figures and have zero resilience if you spend everything. You can earn far less and be rock solid if you’ve mastered this gap.

    Frugality is how you create and maintain that gap without feeling like you’re constantly sacrificing.

    The trick is that real frugality doesn’t feel like sacrifice at all. When you genuinely understand what you need, saying no to the rest isn’t painful—it’s obvious. You’re not denying yourself. You’re just not interested in the noise.

    Think of it like this: a person who doesn’t drink alcohol isn’t “sacrificing” by refusing a beer. They just don’t want it. There’s no internal struggle. The same applies to spending once you’ve recalibrated what matters to you.

    Getting there takes some work, I agree. Our entire environment is designed to blur the line between hunger and appetite. Advertising exists specifically to manufacture appetite where none existed before. Social media shows you what everyone else has, making you feel like you’re missing out. The economy literally depends on you confusing desire with need.

    Building The Skill

    Frugality is a skill, not a personality trait. It’s something you develop through practice and attention. Every purchase is a chance to ask: do I actually need this, or did something else convince me I do?

    Start small. Before you buy something, wait. Not forever—just a day or two. If the urge fades, it was appetite. If it persists and you can articulate exactly how this thing will serve you, it might be genuine.

    Track what you spend and, more importantly, what you actually use. You’ll find patterns. Subscriptions you forgot about. Categories where money just leaks. Things you bought with good intentions that never materialized into actual use. This isn’t about guilt. It’s about awareness. Once you see where your money actually goes, you can redirect it toward things that matter.

    Because here’s the thing: earning more doesn’t solve the problem if the problem is accuracy. People who can’t manage $3,000 a month won’t magically manage $10,000 a month. The pattern follows you up. The only way out of the downward spiral is to fix the pattern.

    Frugality can fix these patterns.

    It’s not glamorous. Nobody’s posting about it on social media. But it’s the quiet foundation underneath every financially resilient life I’ve ever seen.


    If you want to dig deeper into building automatic financial habits that stick, check out my book Gravitational Habits for Financial Resilience. It’s a practical guide to creating small, repeatable behaviors that pull you toward stability—without requiring willpower or constant attention.

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    dragos@dragosroua.com (Dragos Roua)

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  • 10 New Book Releases Shaping 2026, Mindvalley Book Club Picks

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    It’s 2026, and the question of the year is, has that reading pile on your nightstand gotten any smaller? Meanwhile, the hours to read them keep shrinking.

    Another year hums with the pressure to choose wisely about what deserves your attention. And reading isn’t exempt.

    New book releases arrive faster than ever nowadays, and knowing how to find the ones that are actually worth your time has become the real challenge. Miss that window, and the next thing you know, it’s 2027.

    Mindvalley Book Club steps in right there, answering the question of how to find new book releases that are chosen for depth, relevance, and real impact.

    And this list of 10? It favors reads that earn your time rather than demand it.

    Disclaimer: Some links below are affiliate links, so Mindvalley may earn a commission if you buy a book, at no extra cost to you.

    1. Start Making Sense by Steven J. Heine

    Have you ever felt like your life looks great on paper, but something feels…empty?

    Or you’re doing all the “right” things, but none of it feels like it really matters?

    Or perhaps you sometimes wonder how replaceable you’ve become?

    It’s all the things psychologist Steven J. Heine touches on in Start Making Sense: How Existential Psychology Can Help Us Build Meaningful Lives in Absurd Times.

    We’re living in an existential vacuum,” he tells Kristina Mӓnd-Lakhiani in a Mindvalley Book Club interview. Simply, it’s the sense that your life is full, yet strangely devoid of meaning.

    And he’s spot on. A 2025 Gallup poll found that fewer than half of Americans say they’re very satisfied with their personal lives. While you might think, “Very satisfied? That doesn’t sound so bad.” Well, get this: that’s the lowest level Gallup has ever recorded.

    Meaningful lives are getting harder to come by,” Steven adds. And it boils down to the slow loss of connection to other people, to our work, to our communities, and to something bigger than ourselves.

    Pulling from decades of research, he explains meaning in a way that’s practical, not philosophical. He also shows that it comes from three things: your life making sense, having a reason for what you do, and feeling like you matter. Each of those can be strengthened again.

    There are no inspiration or shortcuts here. But what you’ll find is a framework for understanding why life can feel empty and what actually restores a sense that what you do, and who you are, genuinely counts.

    Key takeaways

    • Meaning isn’t vague or mystical. It grows out of real connections you can build and repair.
    • Modern life undermines meaning quietly. Social isolation, weakened communities, and fragmented work erode meaning without announcing themselves.
    • Meaning isn’t lost forever. When coherence, purpose, and mattering return, life starts to add up again.

    What people are saying

    “Start Making Sense is essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the science behind our psychological need for purpose and meaning—and how these needs can be met through connectedness and cultural narratives.” ― Michael Muthukrishna, London School of Economics

    About the author

    Steven’s a social and cultural psychologist at the University of British Columbia who studies how people make sense of themselves and their lives. His research explores how culture, identity, and meaning shape the way people understand who they are and what matters to them.

    Purchase the book:

    Start Making Sense by Steven J. Heine

    2. Shift by Ethan Kross

    In his book, Shift: Managing Your Emotions—So They Don’t Manage You, experimental psychologist Ethan Kross is out to help people “get what they want out of life.” But what usually gets in the way of it are emotions.

    We have been socialized to understand how to manage our physical body,” he says on the Mindvalley Book Club. “We have not when it comes to our emotional health.”

    So rather than asking you to suppress emotions or “think positive,” he explains in his book how emotions actually work in the brain and why many common coping strategies fall apart under pressure. 

    I study the science that explains how you can align your thoughts, feelings, and behaviors with your goals,” he points out. That’s why you can find practical tools to use in the moment, especially when your thoughts start looping, and you feel stuck in your own head.

    Key takeaways

    • Emotions aren’t the problem. They become disruptive only when you don’t have a way to respond once they surge.
    • Most people don’t lack willpower. They were never taught emotional regulation skills for moments when stress takes over.
    • Small shifts matter in big moments. A change in focus, language, or environment can redirect how an emotional moment unfolds.

    What people are saying

    For anyone who has wondered whether they’ll ever be in charge of their emotions, this book has the answer: yes. Easy to read and winningly personal, this gem of a book is a complete toolkit of science-based strategies for managing how you feel.” — Angela Duckworth, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Grit

    About the author

    Ethan’s a psychologist and neuroscientist who studies how people manage emotions and regain control when their thoughts spiral. He leads the Emotion & Self Control Laboratory at the University of Michigan and works at the intersection of science, everyday life, and decision-making under stress.

    Purchase the book:

    Shift by Ethan KrossShift by Ethan Kross

    3. Tiny Experiments by Anne-Laure Le Cunff

    So many of us keep rewriting the same five-year plan and are questioning why we made it in the first place.

    And there are some of us who are why-in-the-world-ing the path we’ve chosen to be on.

    Then, there are also some of us who adopt a new method altogether, follow it perfectly for a few weeks, then burn out and blame ourselves.

    Well, it’s true that strict planning can create more pressure than progress. According to 2021 research published in Frontiers in Psychology, high, rigid, and specific goals can backfire when they’re missed. When that happens, motivation drops and people are more likely to disengage.

    So pshhh to the clear, linear plan. Anne-Laure Le Cunff’s Tiny Experiments: How to Live Freely In a Goal-Obsessed World introduces an experimental mindset. Instead of asking, “What should I commit to long term?”, you ask, “What’s one small thing I can try next?

    She gets into the neuroscience of it, the psychology of it, and her own experience—all to show how small, curiosity-driven trials can help you:

    • Reduce pressure,
    • Learn faster, and
    • Make progress without the cycle of burnout.

    The focus here is to help you build a way of working and living that stays flexible, responsive, and aligned with how you, as a human, actually change.

    Key takeaways

    • Linear goals don’t reflect real life. They break down the moment circumstances shift or new information appears.
    • Small experiments reduce pressure. They let you act, observe results, and adjust without locking yourself into one outcome.
    • Curiosity beats certainty. Noticing what holds your interest over time reveals patterns that plans can’t predict.

    What people are saying

    I loved this profound, practical, and generous book. Through the ingenious lens of the tiny experiment, Anne-Laure Le Cunff shows how we can jettison arduous and dispiriting attempts at self-improvement in favor of achievable and energizing adventures on the path to a more vibrant, accomplished, and wholehearted life.” — Oliver Burkeman, New York Times bestselling author of Four Thousand Weeks

    About the author

    Anne-Laure’s a Googler-turned-neuroscientist who studies how people learn, think, and adapt to uncertainty. She’s also the founder of Ness Labs and writes about practical, evidence-based ways to work with your mind and keep learning across your life.

    Purchase the book:

    Tiny Experiments by Anne-Laure Le CunffTiny Experiments by Anne-Laure Le Cunff

    4. This Is Body Grief by Jayne Mattingly

    Did you know that, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), more than one in four US adults lives with some type of disability? It makes body change and body-related grief a mainstream reality, not a niche one.

    But we, as Jayne Mattingly explains in her Mindvalley Book Club interview, have “a grief-illiterate society.” The disability advocate and eating disorder recovery coach would know. She herself is disabled, living with multiple chronic and neurological conditions that changed her body and daily life.

    Body grief, as she defines it, is the mourning that shows up when a body changes through… 

    • Illness,
    • Injury,
    • Aging,
    • Disability,
    • Pregnancy loss,
    • Puberty, or
    • Any shift that feels like a betrayal.

    And her book, This Is Body Grief: Making Peace with the Loss That Comes with Living in a Body? It frames this experience as common, personal, and shaped by culture, including ableism, diet culture, and hustle expectations.

    If you’re trying to fix your body or forcing body love… don’t. Instead, try Jayne’s method: seven phases that move from dismissal and shock to body trust, with exercises that feel like a counseling session on the page.

    What you’ll learn is how to build a relationship with your body that can hold loss, change, and reality without turning life into a constant fight.

    Key takeaways

    • Body grief has a name for a reason. Naming it gives you permission to recognize loss instead of blaming yourself for struggling.
    • The “body betrayal” story usually comes from culture, not truth. Ideas about productivity, beauty, and control teach you to see natural change as failure.
    • Body trust isn’t a finish line. It’s something you move in and out of as you respond to what your body needs now.

    What people are saying

    I laughed, I cried, and I related all while reading This Is Body Grief. Jayne beautifully articulates the universal feeling of Body Grief and explores it on both macro and micro levels. It is the perfect blend of informative and vulnerable.” — Jacqueline Child, co-founder of Dateability

    About the author

    Jayne’s a disability advocate and eating disorder recovery coach. She’s the CEO of Recovery Love and Care and the founder of The AND Initiative, where she works to support people living with chronic illness and physical disabilities.

    Purchase the book:

    This Is Body Grief by Jayne MattinglyThis Is Body Grief by Jayne Mattingly

    5. The Care Economy by Tim Jackson

    6. Autism Out Loud by Kate Swinson, Carrie Cariello & Adrian Wood

    Out of all these Mindvalley-recommended books, this one is written by three mothers raising autistic children. It’s also a book Kristina connects with personally, as a parent of a child on the spectrum, which makes the conversation around it feel honest and grounded.

    Autism can look very differently,” says Kate Swinson, one of the three authors of Autism Out Loud: Life with a Child on the Spectrum, from Diagnosis to Young Adulthood

    Look at Raymond Babbit from Rain Man, Sheldon Cooper from The Big Bang Theory, or Julia from Sesame Street. Or look no further than the book itself. All three authors are raising children who fall on different points of the spectrum, each with their own needs, strengths, and challenges.

    According to the CDC’s 2025 estimate, about 1 out of every 31 eight-year-old children in the studied communities has been identified as autistic. That means this neurodevelopmental condition is already part of everyday family life, classrooms, and communities, even if most people still don’t understand what it actually looks like beyond stereotypes.

    The thing is, autism doesn’t follow a single pattern, progression, or outcome. It changes with age, environment, support, and personality. That’s one of the core truths the book makes clear.

    And the three authors tell the truth about diagnosis day, anxiety, school battles, medication decisions, public meltdowns, siblings, marriage stress, and the question nobody wants to say out loud: what happens when the kid needs lifelong care?

    Key takeaways

    • Autism doesn’t show up one way, and parenting doesn’t either. The book places radically different family realities side by side, without ranking which one is harder or more valid.
    • Caregiving reshapes the entire household. Siblings, marriages, energy, and emotional bandwidth all shift, and the book refuses to treat those effects as side notes.
    • Support has to work in real life. Instead of comfort slogans, the book focuses on what actually helps when families are navigating schools, anxiety, systems, and public scrutiny.

    What people are saying

    This book is not just for people with autism in their families. I have personally been places, and experienced children and adults displaying behaviors that I simply did not understand. After reading this book, I have a much better perception of how people on the spectrum may behave differently than what is considered ‘normal.’” — Anne Goshert

    About the authors

    Kate, along with Carrie Cariello and Adrian Wood, are mothers, writers, and advocates who’ve spent years speaking openly about life with autistic children. Through books, blogs, national media, and Autism Out Loud, they focus on caregiving, family dynamics, and the parts of this experience most people never see.

    Purchase the book:

    Autism Out Loud by Kate Swinson, Carrie Cariello & Adrian WoodAutism Out Loud by Kate Swinson, Carrie Cariello & Adrian Wood

    7. Hello, Cruel World! by Melinda Wenner Moyer

    I don’t worry about my kids at all,” said no parent ever. But that’s the quiet reality of being a caregiver. You and anxiety become your frenemies: sometimes useful, sometimes exhausting, never fully gone.

    You watch your child scroll, withdraw, or worry about things you never had to think about at their age. Mom guilt kicks in as you wonder if you should step in or step back.

    It’s a legitimate worry, though. As the World Health Organization reports, about 1 in every 7 kids and teens aged 10 to 19 around the world lives with a mental health condition. Together, these struggles make up about 15% of all health problems affecting people in that age group.

    So, it’s no wonder every choice feels loaded. You’re trying to figure out how to help your child navigate in a world where screens shape identity before kids fully know who they are.

    Melinda Wenner Moyer felt the same. As a mother of two, she wrote Hello, Cruel World!: Science-Based Strategies for Raising Terrific Kids in Terrifying Times because she wanted “to give parents, including myself, a toolkit” that lowers fear and gives real steps. She leans on research because science is “really the best tool we have for whittling away at the truth in any situation,” especially when parenting advice feels loud and conflicting.

    You get help turning today’s biggest stressors into skills your child can actually practice, with a focus on what works for “most kids in most situations.” It reads like someone sitting next to you, helping hard topics feel manageable and reminding you that you’re not doing this alone.

    Key takeaways

    • You don’t need perfect parenting to raise a confident kid. When you model repair, calm, and honesty after a hard moment, you’re teaching skills your child can reuse in real life.
    • Big feelings aren’t the enemy; avoidance is. When you help a child name what they feel and sit with it safely, you’re building coping skills that can protect them when life hits harder.
    • Listening changes the whole relationship dynamic. When a child feels respected and heard, you’ll get more trust, more openness, and fewer power struggles that spiral.

    What people are saying

    If you’re confounded by our culture and want to raise children who can not only navigate our world but evolve it for the better, Hello, Cruel World! is an essential guide. It’s science-based, profound, and intuitive, and full of techniques to apply not only to our parenting, but to ourselves.” —Elise Loehnen, New York Times bestselling author of On Our Best Behavior

    About the author

    Melinda’s an award-winning science journalist, a contributing editor at Scientific American, and a regular contributor to The New York Times. She’s also the author of How to Raise Kids Who Aren’t Assholes and writes the popular Substack newsletter Now What, where she translates research into practical guidance for everyday parenting decisions.

    Purchase the book:

    Hello, Cruel World! by Melinda Wenner MoyerHello, Cruel World! by Melinda Wenner Moyer

    8. Reverse the Search by Madeline Mann

    You can do everything you’re told: tailor the resume, write the cover letter, apply again and again… And still hear nothing back. 

    That version of job hunting is dead.

    There’s no such thing as job security,” says career coach Madeline Mann on a Mindvalley Book Club interview. “You can lose your job at any time.”

    The reality is, by December 2025, layoffs in the U.S. had passed 1.1 million, the highest level in more than twenty years. Technology was hit especially hard, alongside retail, warehousing, and service jobs, showing how widespread and unpredictable job loss has become.

    So, trust her when she says, “You could be the top performer, everything can go right for you, and you can still get laid off.” She, too, was once let go from her dream job.

    Instead of telling you to apply harder, earn another credential, or wait your turn, she flips the entire process on its head in her book, Reverse the Search: How to Turn Job Seeking into Job Shopping.

    She explains why the traditional job search drains your confidence and rarely works. And then, she shows you how to replace it with a strategy that attracts opportunities to you instead of you chasing them.

    A huge piece of reversing the search and job security is making yourself more findable online,” she says. For instance, research published in 2025 found that people who stay active on LinkedIn report stronger expectations about their career progress.

    And if job searching has started to feel like rejection on repeat, this book is a reset.

    Key takeaways

    • The job search is broken, not you. Most hiring doesn’t happen through mass applications, so pouring energy into them often leads to burnout rather than results.
    • Clarity creates leverage. When you know exactly what role you want and why, companies respond differently because commitment signals value.
    • Career security comes from strategy, not loyalty. Building visibility and relationships before you need them makes future job searches faster and less stressful.

    What people are saying

    Job shopping is a brilliant concept, and Madeline Mann delivers it with the perfect mix of strategy and encouragement in Reverse the Search. Prepare to get hired on your terms.” — Sarah Johnston, global executive resume writer and founder of Briefcase Coach

    About the author

    Madeline’s a former head of HR turned career strategist who has helped thousands of professionals land roles without relying on mass applications. She’s best known for teaching how hiring decisions actually work and for giving job seekers tools to regain control in a system designed to exhaust them.

    Purchase the book:

    Reverse the Search by Madeline MannReverse the Search by Madeline Mann

    9. Time Anxiety by Chris Guillebeau

    There are days when sending emails, doing tasks, and “staying on top of it” lead to a sense of being behind. When that feeling becomes constant, it’s no longer about poor planning.

    Entrepreneur Chris Guillebeau explains why most advice about how to be more productive actually makes people more anxious, not more fulfilled. Take it from the guy who’s “read every productivity book” and still felt stuck.

    To explain what’s really going on, he breaks time anxiety into two forms:

    • The fear that life is running out, and
    • The daily stress of having too much to do.

    From there, he dismantles common productivity planner tools and routines that promise control but quietly turn everything into an emergency. Instead of chasing perfect systems, Time Anxiety: The Illusion of Urgency and a Better Way to Live shows how to choose what truly matters, let go of the rest, and stop measuring your life by output alone.

    It’s practical, funny, and grounding, especially for anyone who’s done everything “right” and still feels behind.

    Key takeaways

    • Time anxiety usually comes from “too late” or “too much.” Once you name which one you’re dealing with, decisions get clearer because you can see what actually needs to change.
    • Productivity can become a trap. Getting better at doing the wrong things only builds a faster life that still feels off.
    • Trying to control time creates more stress. Letting go of that fight gives you space to choose what matters and tune out the nonsense.

    What people are saying

    A wealth of insanely useful advice, from the practical to the psychological, for breaking free from time anxiety, slowing down, and living on purpose.” — Cal Newport, New York Times bestselling author of Slow Productivity and Deep Work

    About the author

    Chris is a New York Times bestselling author known for writing about work, purpose, and building a life on your own terms. After years of self-employment and a four-year volunteer role in West Africa, he became one of the youngest people to visit every country in the world, an experience that shaped how he thinks about time, choice, and meaning.

    Purchase the book:

    Time Anxiety by Chris GuillebeauTime Anxiety by Chris Guillebeau

    10. Team Intelligence by Jon Levy

    It may seem logical to put the smartest, most talented people onto one team to maximize performance and results, but… Did you know that these all-star teams often underperform?

    Behavioral scientist Jon Levy explains, “The person with the highest IQ on the team doesn’t predict if the team does well.” And that’s because, as research published in Psychological Science shows, competition and ego undermine coordination and cooperation.

    Jon has spent years studying why this happens and what high-performing teams do differently. In his book, Team Intelligence: How Brilliant Leaders Unlock Collective Genius, he shows that results don’t come from heroic leaders or superstar talent, but from how people interact, share information, and create trust.

    Drawing on his experience in behavioral science and real-world examples, the book explains why emotional intelligence, psychological safety, and so-called “glue players” matter more than raw brilliance.

    So if your team looks impressive on paper but feels slow, political, or fragile in practice, this book explains what’s missing and how to fix it.

    Key takeaways

    • Leadership works when people want to move with you toward a better future. When others believe in where you’re headed, following feels natural, not forced.
    • Your team performs best when cooperation is designed in. Instead of stacking stars, you create shared goals and systems that help people support each other.
    • Emotional intelligence is a real advantage you can use. It helps ideas move faster, gives the right voices room, and lets the team work together instead of competing for attention.

    What people are saying

    I’ve spent my career in labs full of smart people. The teams that succeeded weren’t always the smartest—they were the best at working together. This book explains why that matters.”  — Michael Brown, winner of the 1986 Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology

    About the author

    Jon’s a behavioral scientist and New York Times bestselling author known for his work on trust, leadership, teams, and influence, advising both Fortune 500 companies and startups. He’s also the founder of The Influencers, a private dinner community where guests cook together before discovering they’re dining with Nobel laureates, Olympians, executives, astronauts, and other global leaders.

    Purchase the book:

    Team Intelligence by Jon LevyTeam Intelligence by Jon Levy

    BONUS: New book releases by Mindvalley authors

    There is research,” says Kristina in her Mindvalley U 2025 stagetalk, “that shows that long-form reading—and long-form reading means 10,000 words, which is approximately an essay or a very, very large article—actually activates other parts of your brain and is very beneficial for you in many ways.”

    Mindvalley authors know this well. And many of them continue to choose that format to explore ideas that need more space, nuance, and context.

    The good old-fashioned reading of books is still good for you no matter what happens in the world.

    — Kristina Mӓnd-Lakhiani, co-founder of Mindvalley and host of Mindvalley Book Club

    Here are a few recent personal growth book releases worth spending real time with.

    1. Your Home Is a Vision Board by Marie Diamond

    If you’ve ever cleaned, redecorated, or moved things around during a life reset, then you’ve already dabbled in feng shui basics. A 2021 study in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health shows that interior design choices influence mood, stress, and cognitive responses. And that can shape how you experience your everyday spaces.

    This is something Marie Diamond has spent decades teaching people. And in Your Home Is a Vision Board: Harness the Secret Manifesting Power of Your Home, she shows how your home is constantly sending signals about what you’re available for. The images on your walls, the colors you live with, the objects you keep, and even how your furniture is placed all communicate intention.

    That shift can feel surprisingly tangible. Kim Bradley, a Mindvalley student who took Marie’s Feng Shui for Life program, shares that after applying the practices, her home “feels more at peace now,” as does she.

    The book pairs naturally with the program, where the same principles come alive through guided, visual practice. Together, they help turn your space into quiet support for the life you’re building.

    Your Home Is a Vision Board by Marie DiamondYour Home Is a Vision Board by Marie Diamond

    2. Heavily Meditated by Dave Asprey

    Dave Asprey went Head Strong. He helped you get Smarter, Not Harder. Now, he’s Heavily Meditated and helping you see what real clarity looks like when your nervous system is no longer stuck in overdrive.

    Drawing from his 40 Years of Zen program, Dave’s newest book combines neuroscience with ancient practices like meditation, breathwork, and sleep optimization. What that does is help you remove the triggers quietly draining your mental bandwidth.

    That shift shows up in real ways. For instance, a Mindvalley student, Andrey Logunov, tried this with Dave’s Smarter Not Harder program. The psychotherapist and naturopathy doctor from Russia shares, “During the quest, I became very interested in neurofeedback, now my personal meditations take place with brain monitoring right at home.”

    The aim here isn’t extreme optimization or constant self-improvement. It’s learning to recover deeply, calm your brain, and access focus and creativity without burning out.

    Intense? Maybe. Necessary? Very. One of the next impactful reads to dive into? Absolutely. It’s a strong companion to Dave’s Mindvalley program, especially if you want the “why” behind the practices.

    Heavily Meditated by Dave AspreyHeavily Meditated by Dave Asprey

    3. Ready, Steady, Slow by Lee Holden

    Lee Holden didn’t write Ready, Steady, Slow: Ready, Set, Slow: How to Improve Your Energy, Health, and Relationships Through the Power of Slow for people who have nothing to do. He wrote it for people who feel constantly rushed, even on days when they technically “should” be fine. 

    Like Erik Nordstrom, a musician from the U.S., who took Lee’s Mindvalley program, Modern Qi Gong. He shares, “I had a visceral feeling of the energy flowing in my body and felt great after the first lesson.”

    If Lee’s methods can have that kind of impact so quickly, it’s easier to see why his book goes deeper. Drawing from Qi Gong, Eastern philosophy, and Western science, it shows you how to work with your nervous system through breath, gentle movement, and attention.

    Doing so allows energy to return naturally instead of being forced. And that gives you back clarity, steadiness, and a feeling of being fully present in your own life.

    Ready, Steady, Slow by Lee HoldenReady, Steady, Slow by Lee Holden

    Fuel your mind

    Meaningful reading can start to feel like another thing you’re failing at, especially with so many new titles and recommendations. And now, figuring out how to keep up with new book releases turns into its own kind of overwhelm.

    But have no fear. Mindvalley Book Club is here.

    When you join (for free, of course), you’ll get access to:

    • Expert picks selected based on substance, relevance, and real-world impact.
    • New book recommendations weekly, thoughtfully chosen titles in personal growth and business.
    • Live interviews and Q&As with the people shaping how we think about growth, work, and well-being.

    It’s a simple way to stay connected to ideas that matter, without letting reading become another obligation. As Kristina says, “The good old-fashioned reading of books is still good for you no matter what happens in the world.”

    Welcome in.

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    Tatiana Azman

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  • How To ‘CAP’ Off Your Day For Peak Health & Performance

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    Even better, a positive evening ritual not only improves your mood, it helps reduce mental clutter. “Most of us spend our days in what I call ‘middle gear,’” Foster explains. “We’re constantly multitasking, switching between tabs, emails, and to-dos. By evening, our cognitive bandwidth is shot.” 

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  • This Type Of Movement May Reverse 4 Years Of Cognitive Aging

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    What if one simple habit could help keep your brain sharper, starting today? Research shows that everyday movement (no HIIT required) can have an immediate impact on how quickly you think and process information. In fact, it may even make your brain feel years younger.

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  • Understanding True Tone: The Hidden Technology Lost in Most Unofficial Screen Replacements

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    Introduction: The “Something Feels Off” Syndrome

    We see it almost every day. A customer walks into our shop, holding an iPhone they had repaired a month ago at a mall kiosk or a bargain “fast-fix” store. They look frustrated. They say, “My screen works—it touches and swipes fine—but something feels… wrong. It hurts my eyes at night, the colors look cold, and it just doesn’t look like it used to.”

    They aren’t imagining it. They are the victims of a lazy repair job that sacrificed one of Apple’s most subtle yet essential features: True Tone.

    When you crack your screen, you might assume the repair is just about glass and pixels. You think, “If it lights up, it’s fixed.” But modern smartphone screens are not just dumb pieces of glass; they are smart components paired cryptographically to your specific logic board. When a technician simply swaps the screen without transferring the hidden data, your phone “rejects” the new part by disabling key features.

    As a team dedicated to expert phone repair New Haven, we believe you deserve a screen that doesn’t just look new—it needs to act new. In this deep dive, we are pulling back the curtain on the “EEPROM” data that most shops delete, and the specialized programming tools we use to save it.

    Section 1: What is True Tone? (It’s Not Just “Auto-Brightness”)

    The Science of Color Temperature

    To understand what you’ve lost, you first need to understand what True Tone actually does. Many users confuse it with “Night Shift” (which turns your screen orange at night) or “Auto-Brightness” (which makes the screen brighter or dimmer).

    True Tone is far more advanced. It relies on advanced multichannel sensors hidden in the “notch” or “Dynamic Island” of your iPhone to read the color temperature (measured in Kelvin) of the light in the room around you.

    • Scenario A (The Coffee Shop): You are sitting in a room with warm, yellow incandescent lighting. True Tone instantly adjusts your screen’s white balance to be warmer (more yellow). This makes the screen look like a piece of paper reflecting the room’s light.
    • Scenario B (The Outdoors): You walk outside into an overcast, blue daylight. True Tone shifts the whites to be cooler (bluer) to match the sky.

    Without True Tone, your screen emits a fixed, harsh blue-white light (usually calibrated to 6500 Kelvin). In a warm room, this makes your phone look like a glaring flashlight. This mismatch between your peripheral vision (warm room) and your focal vision (blue screen) causes your brain to work overtime, leading to significant eye strain and headaches.

    Section 2: Why Does It Disappear?

    The “Pairing” Problem

    This is the technical secret that budget repair shops won’t tell you.

    Inside every original iPhone screen, there is a tiny chip called an EEPROM (Electrically Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory). This chip stores a unique serial number and calibration data. When your phone turns on, the Main CPU (the brain) performs a “handshake” with the screen.

    • Original Factory Screen: The screen says, “I am Serial #123XYZ, the screen you were paired with at the factory.” The CPU replies, “Confirmed. Enabling True Tone.”
    • Replacement Screen (Even an Original One): The screen says, “I am Serial #789ABC.” The CPU replies, “I don’t recognize you. You might be a counterfeit or unauthorized part. I am disabling True Tone security features.”

    This is why you can buy two brand-new iPhones, swap their screens, and both will lose True Tone. It is not about the quality of the part; it is about the data mismatch. Most repair shops treat phones like LEGO sets—they just swap the blocks. They ignore this digital handshake, and as a result, you lose functionality forever.

    Section 3: How Experts Restore True Tone

    The “Programmer” Solution

    So, how do we keep True Tone working even after replacing the screen? We use a specialized device called a Programmer (such as the QianLi iCopy or JCID V1SE).

    This process is what separates a generic parts-swapper from a professional iPhone repair New Haven specialist.

    The Data Transfer Process:

    1. Read the Old Screen: Before we throw away your cracked screen, we plug it into our programmer device. The device reads the unique serial number (MtSN) and color calibration codes from the chip.
    2. Save the Data: We store this unique “fingerprint” in the programmer’s memory.
    3. Write to the New Screen: We take the brand-new replacement screen and plug it into the programmer. We “write” or “clone” the old serial number onto the new screen.
    4. Install & Verify: Now, when we install the new screen, the CPU asks, “Who are you?” The new screen replies with the cloned ID: “I am Serial #123XYZ.” The CPU is tricked into thinking it is still the original screen, and True Tone remains active.

    Section 4: The Hidden Danger of Cheap Screens

    Why Some Screens Can’t Be Programmed

    You might be thinking, “Can’t I just ask any shop to do this?” The answer is no, because the quality of the replacement screen matters.

    The market is flooded with cheap “Aftermarket” screens (often called “In-Cell LCDs” or “Hard OLEDs”). To save costs, the manufacturers of these cheap screens often remove the EEPROM chip entirely or use a locked chip that cannot be written to.

    If a shop uses a $20 screen, there is literally nowhere for us to put the code. We can try to program it, but the screen will reject the data. This is why it is critical to use “Soft OLED” or “Refurbished Original” panels. These high-quality screens mimic the original architecture of the phone and have the necessary chips to accept the True Tone data transfer.

    Section 5: Why You Should Care (Beyond Aesthetics)

    Health, Value, and Battery Life

    Is it really a big deal if your whites are slightly bluer? Yes, for three major reasons.

    1. Eye Health & Sleep: Our eyes are not designed to stare at a fixed light source. We evolved to see reflected light that changes with the sun. Using a non-True Tone screen forces your optic nerve to constantly process the conflict between the ambient light and the source light. This leads to “Digital Eye Strain” and can suppress melatonin production more than a properly calibrated screen would.

    2. Resale Value: This is a financial issue. When you go to trade in your phone or sell it on the secondhand market, savvy buyers check for True Tone. If the option is missing from the “Display & Brightness” menu, it is a giant red flag. It tells the buyer, “This phone was repaired cheaply.” It instantly devalues your device by 15-20%.

    3. Auto-Brightness Bugs: While True Tone itself doesn’t drain battery, the sensors that control it also control your Auto-Brightness. When the data isn’t transferred, the calibration often breaks. This can lead to a screen that stays too bright in dark rooms, draining your battery faster than necessary.

    Section 6: Conclusion

    Technology is getting more complex, and the “right to repair” is about more than just having a screwdriver. It’s about understanding the software locks that manufacturers put in place.

    True Tone is a luxury you don’t notice until it’s gone. Once you realize your new screen looks harsh and cold, you can’t un-see it. Ensuring your repair shop has the tools to transfer calibration data is the only way to keep your device working exactly as the manufacturer intended.

    Don’t settle for a “dumb” screen. If you aren’t sure if your current screen supports this feature, taking it to a phone repair New Haven professional for a diagnostic is the best move to ensure your device retains its full value and functionality.

    Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

    Q1: Can I get True Tone back if I already had my screen replaced by a cheap shop? A1: Maybe. If the previous shop threw away your original screen, the easy method is gone. However, a specialized technician can sometimes use a computer software tool to “pull” the serial number directly from the motherboard and write it to your screen, provided your current screen is high-quality enough to accept the code.

    Q2: Does True Tone affect color accuracy for photos? A2: Actually, yes. True Tone makes colors look natural to the eye, but not necessarily technically accurate to the file. If you are a professional photographer editing photos, you should temporarily turn True Tone off to see the raw colors. For everyone else, leave it on for comfort.

    Q3: My new screen works, but the “True Tone” toggle is missing from Settings. Why? A3: If the toggle is missing entirely, it means the data transfer was not performed. The phone has detected a mismatched serial number and has removed the option from the software interface.

    Disclaimer

    The information provided in this blog post is for educational purposes only. Restoring True Tone requires specialized hardware programmers (e.g., QianLi, JCID). Attempting to modify screen data without proper training can result in screen malfunction. Always consult a professional for data transfer.

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    Robert

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  • The 3am Crypto Swap That Changed How I Think About Exchanges

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    So this happened about eight months ago and honestly, it completely changed how I handle crypto exchanges now.

    It’s 3am. I’m scrolling Twitter in bed (bad habit, I know), and I see some news that’s gonna tank one of my altcoin holdings. Like, definitely gonna drop hard. I need to convert it to something stable, and I need to do it now.

    Problem? My main exchange account was locked because they wanted me to re-verify my identity. Again. For the third time that year. I’d been putting it off because, well, it’s annoying. My backup exchange? Under maintenance. Of course.

    When You Can’t Access Your Own Money

    That feeling of having crypto but not being able to move it really hit different at 3am. The price was already starting to slide, and I’m just sitting there with my funds basically stuck.

    This wasn’t some huge amount – maybe $2,000 worth – but watching it drop while being unable to do anything about it was frustrating as hell. By morning, I’d lost about $300 just from the price movement.

    Could’ve been worse. But that’s when I realized something was fundamentally broken with how I was doing things.

    The Problem With Having All Your Eggs in Exchange Baskets

    I’d been operating the same way most people do. Keep some funds on exchanges for “convenience.” Have accounts on 2-3 platforms in case one goes down. Do KYC on all of them.

    Sounds reasonable, right? Except it’s not really your crypto if you can’t access it when you need it. And exchanges can lock you out for basically any reason – maintenance, additional verification, regulatory changes, “suspicious activity” (which could be anything).

    That night made me rethink the whole setup.

    Finding a Different Approach

    The next day, still annoyed about the whole thing, I started looking for alternatives. That’s when I stumbled across instant swap services.

    The concept seemed almost too simple. No accounts, no KYC, just straight-up swaps. You send crypto A, you get crypto B. That’s it.

    My first thought was “this has to be a scam.” Because in crypto, if something sounds too good to be true, it usually is. But I dug deeper.

    Turns out, these platforms work differently than traditional exchanges. They’re not custodial – they don’t hold your funds. Each swap is processed individually. You’re not depositing money and trading from a balance, you’re just converting one crypto to another in a single transaction.

    Testing the Waters

    I found Changeum.io first (there are others too, but this one had decent reviews). Decided to test it with a small amount – like $50 worth of some random token I didn’t care much about.

    Went to the site. Picked my cryptos. Saw the rate and fees upfront. Pasted my wallet address. They generated a deposit address. I sent the crypto. Waited maybe 20 minutes. New crypto showed up in my wallet.

    No drama, no verification, no account creation. Just worked.

    The skeptic in me was still suspicious though. So I tried a few more times over the next week. Different amounts, different coins. Everything went through fine.

    What I Learned About How These Things Work

    The reason these instant swaps can operate without all the KYC stuff is they’re structured differently from traditional exchanges.

    Traditional exchanges are money services businesses. They custody funds, they facilitate trading between users, they hold order books. That’s why they need licenses, KYC, all that regulatory overhead.

    Instant swaps are more like… automatic conversion services? They aggregate liquidity from various sources, give you a rate, and process a one-time exchange. They never hold your funds long-term. It’s just a pass-through.

    This matters because it means:

    1. They can’t freeze your account (you don’t have one)
    2. They can’t lock your funds (they never custody them)
    3. Less regulatory burden (different business model)
    4. No personal data stored (nothing to hack or leak)

    Obviously there are tradeoffs, but for my needs, this made way more sense.

    How I Use It Now

    These days, I keep most of my crypto in my own wallets. Not on exchanges. When I need to swap something, I use instant exchanges.

    Takes a bit more planning – you need to account for blockchain confirmation times, can’t do instant market orders like on a traditional exchange. But for me, the benefits outweigh that inconvenience.

    I can swap crypto at 3am without needing anyone’s permission. No accounts to maintain, no re-verification requests every few months. Just send crypto, get different crypto back.

    Still have one traditional exchange account for fiat on/off ramps, but I don’t keep funds there anymore. Buy crypto, withdraw to my wallet immediately. When I need to sell, send to exchange, convert to fiat, withdraw to bank. In and out.

    The Things You Gotta Watch Out For

    Not gonna pretend this approach is perfect. There are definitely things to be careful about.

    First – you’re responsible for wallet addresses. Paste the wrong one and your crypto’s gone. No support ticket’s gonna fix that. I’ve gotten paranoid about checking addresses now. First five characters, last five characters, sometimes more.

    Second – rates can vary more than on exchanges. Sometimes they’re better, sometimes worse. For smaller amounts I don’t really care, but for bigger swaps, I’ll compare a few platforms.

    Third – network fees are what they are. You’re doing on-chain transactions, so you pay blockchain fees. During high congestion, Ethereum gas can be brutal. I’ve learned to time my swaps better.

    Fourth – limited recourse if something goes weird. You’ve got a transaction ID and hopefully responsive support, but it’s not like having an account with full history and dispute resolution.

    Would This Have Helped That Night?

    Going back to that 3am situation – would instant swaps have helped? Absolutely.

    If I’d had my altcoin in my own wallet instead of on an exchange, I could’ve swapped it immediately. No waiting for verification, no maintenance windows. Just open the site, process the swap, done.

    The $300 loss probably wouldn’t have happened. Or at least, it would’ve been my choice whether to swap or not, rather than being forced to watch the price drop while locked out.

    The Bigger Lesson

    That whole experience taught me something bigger than just “use instant swaps instead of exchanges.”

    It’s about control. Real control, not the illusion of it.

    When your crypto’s on an exchange, you don’t really control it. They do. They can lock you out, require verification, freeze your account, whatever. You’re trusting them to give you access when you need it.

    Not your keys, not your crypto – you hear that phrase a lot in crypto circles. But it really hits different when you’re watching your investment drop at 3am and can’t do anything about it.

    What I’d Tell Someone Starting Out

    If you’re new to crypto, here’s what I wish someone had told me:

    Exchanges are useful for getting in and out of crypto (buying with fiat, selling to fiat). They’re also good if you’re actively trading with all the charts and indicators and stuff.

    But if you’re just holding crypto and occasionally swapping between different coins, you probably don’t need to keep everything on exchanges.

    Get a decent wallet. Could be software like MetaMask or Exodus, or hardware like Ledger. Move your crypto there. When you need to swap, use instant exchange services.

    Yeah, it’s a bit more work. But you actually control your assets. Nobody can lock you out at 3am.

    Eight Months Later

    It’s been about eight months since that night, and I haven’t looked back.

    I’ve probably done 40-50 swaps using instant exchanges now. Different amounts, different coin pairs. Had one transaction take longer than usual (network was congested), but everything eventually went through fine.

    Zero account freezes. Zero verification requests. Zero watching my crypto drop while being locked out.

    Is this the right approach for everyone? Probably not. If you’re day trading or need advanced features, traditional exchanges make more sense.

    But for holding and occasional swapping? I’m not going back to keeping funds on exchanges. That 3am lesson cost me $300, but it was probably worth it in the long run.

    Now excuse me while I go check crypto prices at 3am for no good reason. Some habits die hard.

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    Robert

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