And it apparently comes in a nasal spray.
Why and how to cultivate walkable cities
In particular, men have trouble telling when other men are depressed.
"Crazy Radio" in Buenos Aires breaks down boundaries between the "interned" and the "externed."
With personal lidocaine spray, anesthetized genitals are just a "please excuse me for a moment" away.
Good news for those with neurosis. Try not to overthink it.
Styles of practicing medicine vary from hospital to hospital, and they get transmitted to young residents through a "hidden curriculum."
First, do no harm.
The milquetoast has been, and continues to be, maligned.
Not only is it overused, it refers to a horrendous massacre. And it's not even technically accurate.
Administration looks at everything as a possible weapon of self or mass destruction. But we need windows and nature.
For the vast majority, the effects of the election will be much less drastic than it expected.
One of the few products that's both FDA-approved and endorsed by real witches
The stuff now kept around to salvage bland cooking was once used to prevent diseases and visits from demons.
And other excellent questions from kids, answered by great minds
Lydia Callis's "mesmerizing" work during Hurricane Sandy called attention to how facial and body movements are parts of grammar.
The brain registers the anticipation of math -- but crucially, not math itself -- as physical pain.
The human connection is threatened by a reductive focus on data collection, algorithms, and information transaction.
How chronic illness, lifestyle, and access to care differs above and below the poverty line
Celebrating uniqueness and breaking from the norm in a place so filled with physical and mental stress