The Companionship Effect: Why Doing Life With People Beats Hustle, Hacks, and Heroics

The Companionship Effect: Why Doing Life With People Beats Hustle, Hacks, and Heroics

Most self-help advice is a solo sport: get up earlier, grind harder, optimise smarter. But a huge time-use study shows something simpler—and kinder: almost everything feels better when you don’t do it alone. From co-working to co-errands to low-key “parallel play,” shared rhythms lift mood, make habits stick, and protect mental health (especially for queer folks navigating loneliness or chemsex pressures). This piece swaps lone-wolf optimization for social fitness—tiny, repeatable touch points that make ordinary weeks easier, lighter, and more human.

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The 4:30 a.m. Club: Why Early Starts + Hard Effort Changed My Brain (and Might Protect Your Health)

The 4:30 a.m. Club: Why Early Starts + Hard Effort Changed My Brain (and Might Protect Your Health)

Exercise isn’t just “good for you” — it may directly change your blood chemistry in ways that suppress cancer cell growth. We unpack new findings from exercise-oncology, why high-intensity intervals spike helpful myokines, and how resistance work builds the muscle that makes those signals stronger. Add the mental edge of early starts — better mood, cleaner focus — and you’ve got a morning protocol that’s about more than abs; it’s agency. Practical templates included, whether you’re rebuilding or levelling up.

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Dry(ish) Is the New Deep: How Drinking Less (or Not at All) Gave Me My Life Back

Dry(ish) Is the New Deep: How Drinking Less (or Not at All) Gave Me My Life Back

I used to outsource confidence to a drink. Quitting didn’t turn me saintly — it made me steadier. With more people rethinking alcohol (and data backing the shift), this is the sober-ish playbook that rebuilt my energy, friendships, and self-respect: morning anchors, clean-fun rituals, social plans that don’t revolve around booze, and a kinder way to “start again.” No preaching — just practical steps for a life that feels like yours again.

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