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Author: Mayukh Saha

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11 min read Health

<p>You sleep eight hours and still need a nap by 2pm. You took a long weekend and came back feeling exactly the same as when you left. You cut the alcohol, downloaded the meditation app, bought the magnesium gummies. Still: a low, grinding tiredness that doesn’t shift. If that sounds familiar, the explanation probably has…</p>

16 min read Lifestyle

<p>Florida has been the retirement default for so long it’s practically a reflex. Sun, no state income tax, warm water – for decades, those three things pointed in one direction on the map, and millions of retirees followed. Then something shifted. Home prices in Florida’s coastal towns climbed past what most retirement budgets can absorb,…</p>

8 min read Animals

<p>Cats don’t tend to announce when something is wrong. You go to fill the bowl and realize you haven’t seen them since yesterday morning. You check the usual spots, the sunny patch on the sofa, the top of the wardrobe, behind the washing machine. Nothing. Most of the time they do come back. But some…</p>

9 min read Politics

<p>The rally in Suffern, New York on the evening of May 22, 2026 was billed as an economics event. The banner said “Fighting For American Workers.” The stated purpose was to stump for a vulnerable House Republican ahead of November’s midterms and tout the administration’s record on tax cuts and cost-of-living relief. What it became,…</p>

10 min read Food

<p>Most coffee in America gets consumed before it’s even tasted. You order it at a counter, your name gets called, and you’re out the door before the cup is cool enough to drink. The whole transaction takes three minutes if the line is short. For a lot of people, that works fine. For a growing…</p>

9 min read Living

<p>The American passport has spent decades being one of the quietly powerful documents in global travel. Not flashy about it – just functional. Holders showed up at borders, got waved through or handed a visa on arrival, and went about their trip. That ease of movement became something of a background assumption, the kind of…</p>

10 min read History

<p>Tsunamis don’t look the way we picture them. Most people, if they imagined one coming, would picture a towering wall of dark water. The reality is stranger and, in some ways, more terrifying: a relentless surge that doesn’t stop, that keeps pushing inland for minutes at a time, carrying everything in its path. By the…</p>