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All Healthy - Home
Daily Edition • Tuesday, June 16
SPONSORED BY
All Healthy - Home
Daily Edition • Tuesday, June 16
SPONSORED BY
You’ve almost surely heard this before: if you drop food on the ground, you have five seconds to pick it up before it becomes unsafe to eat. Where exactly this came from is unclear. But according to experts, the rule of thumb may not actually have much evidence to back it up. Find out more about why here.
♔ Personal Development

Are Smartphones the Reason No One is Having Kids?

A person holds a smartphone in one hand and a pair of glasses in the other, with well-manicured nails visible.
Sincerely Media/Unsplash
Falling Fertility: Birth rates in the U.S. have been falling for nearly two decades, and researchers have proposed everything from housing costs to delayed marriage as explanations. Now, a provocative new study suggests smartphones may have played a surprisingly large role.

The Study: Researchers analyzed the rollout of the first iPhone, which was sold exclusively through AT&T from 2007 to 2011. Because AT&T’s mobile broadband coverage expanded unevenly across the country, the researchers could compare areas that gained early iPhone access with those that got it later. They found that regions with earlier access experienced larger declines in births, particularly among teenagers and young adults. The proposed mechanism isn’t biological: smartphones appear to have reduced in-person socializing, increased pornography consumption, and contributed to less frequent sex.

The Takeaway: The study’s central claim is that smartphones may have changed how people spend their time and form relationships — and those behavioral shifts may have translated into fewer births.

Keep in Mind: Critics note that fertility was already declining before smartphones arrived and that factors like the Great Recession and changing attitudes toward family formation could also explain part of the trend. The findings are intriguing, but they’re far from the final word, and the hypothesis remains speculative.
✲ Sponsored

Morgan Stanley Calls This a $9T Opportunity

A futuristic flying vehicle with a sleek design and one pilot, hovering over a city skyline at sunset.
Courtesy: Doroni
If Morgan Stanley's right, the flying car industry will grow 185,850% by 2050, reaching $9 trillion… more than twice the size of today's global car market.

And 5,500+ investors believe Doroni will lead the charge.

While competitors chase air fleets and taxis, Doroni's H1-X is built for everyday life: charges like an EV, fits in a two-car garage, and takes just 25 hours to pilot.

Others are pushing blueprints. Doroni just unveiled a full-scale prototype so impressive, FOX Business called it the “'flying car' set to revolutionize personal air travel.”

600+ people have already made reservations, good for $240 million in potential revenue for Doroni. Invest in Doroni for $3.10/share until June 18.
Invest in Doroni 
Thank you for supporting our sponsors! They help us keep All Healthy free.
✥ Fitness

The Smart Way to Exercise in Summer Heat

A woman in a blue sports bra ties her hair up against a sunlit, blurred natural background.
Renato Leal/Unsplash
The Heat of Competition: The 2026 World Cup is just heating up — and we mean that literally. Recent headlines have spotlighted the extreme temperatures expected across North America, where the tournament is being hosted in Mexico, Canada, and the United States. The heat is so concerning that 60 current and former players signed an open letter urging FIFA to update its heat guidelines. 

The Danger: The average soccer player runs between 5.2 and 8 miles in a 90-minute match. That level of exertion in high heat can impair performance and increase the risk of dizziness, cramping, dehydration, and, in severe cases, heat stroke. But you don’t need to be a professional athlete to take heat seriously. If heat and humidity are summer staples where you live, outdoor workouts require extra caution.

What to Do: Safeguarding yourself isn’t complicated. There are a handful of best practices: Hydrate before and after exercise, wear lightweight clothing, train early or late in the day, take breaks, and scale back your intensity when conditions are brutal. Stay smart, and you can stay active without putting yourself at unnecessary risk.
◐ Mindfulness

How People Are Using TikTok to Process Grief

A person interacts with a smartphone displaying a large flower, surrounded by colorful blossoms and other individuals.
Midjourney
The Trend: At some point, nearly all of us will experience grief. Yet most of us process this emotion privately — but that’s changing on a certain corner of social media, where GriefTok has become a place to process loss out loud. Creators like Kait Granger posted about her mom’s death and watched it take off, giving her a sense of purpose again. Donna Clements, a recent widow, films nightly videos called bedtime snack time, talking through her day the way she used to with her husband.

What People Are Saying: Experts acknowledge that, while social media gets a bad rap, it can be an empowering space that offers validation and acceptance for those who are grieving. And these posts help lift the silence that often surrounds grief in everyday life.

What to Know: There’s value in saying it all out loud, especially since grief can feel so isolating. It can ease loneliness and chip away at the stigma of talking about people we’ve lost.
➺ Quick Picks
Chronotype Quiz — What’s your sleep type? Take the quiz to find out.
 
The Dad Trap — He says he wants nothing, but this is what he’s hoping for.*
 
Worth a Closer Look — This is how birdwatching could change your brain.
 
In a Nutshell — 3 dietitians agree this is the healthiest nut.
 
5 Second Rule — Do you really have 5 seconds after dropping food on the floor?
 
*Indicates a brand partnership
✾ What We're Cooking

Tomato, Cantaloupe, and Burrata Caprese

Colorful tomato and melon salad topped with fresh herbs and burrata cheese, drizzled with olive oil.
Courtesy: Food52
Serves: 4 | Cook Time: 15 minutes

Bright, juicy heirloom tomatoes pair with sweet cantaloupe and rich, creamy burrata in this refreshing twist on a classic summer salad. Everything’s tossed in a light, lemony vinaigrette, while parsley, oregano, and mint add a fresh, herby finish. Creamy burrata balances the juicy, crisp base — creating a simple summer dish that’s flavor-packed and comes together in just minutes.
Get The Full Recipe 
By clicking, you are agreeing to receive a daily recipe from Better Plates.
☞ This, Not That

Set A Closing Time

A hand holding a spray bottle is cleaning a countertop with a cloth.
THIS
Cluttered kitchen countertop with various bottles, jars, and a sink filled with dishes. A pair of purple gloves hangs nearby.
NOT THAT
Sandra Seitamaa/Unsplash, Jason Leung/Unsplash
This: A “closing shift” for your kitchen
Not That: Vague promises to clean tomorrow

Borrow the restaurant move: spend five minutes wiping counters, loading dishes, and setting up coffee or breakfast before bed. It makes the next morning feel less like you’re waking up inside yesterday’s mess.
✲ Sponsored

$DRNI Prepares For Potential Nasdaq Listing

But the real opportunity is now. Doroni just unveiled the showroom model of a flying car with 600+ preorders, representing $240 million in potential revenue. Now, they’re working toward their first commercial deliveries by 2028. Because of this momentum, they’ve just reserved the Nasdaq ticker $DRNI. Invest at $3.10/share by June 18.
Invest in Doroni 
Thank you for supporting our sponsors! They help us keep All Healthy free.
❦ HEALTHY HABIT

Stretch While the Kettle Boils

Use a built-in waiting period — coffee brewing, tea steeping, microwave running — to stretch your calves, hips, neck, or shoulders. Tiny mobility breaks count.
★ Final Thought
Lush green mountains with rugged peaks and gentle slopes under a golden sunset sky.
You can change all things for the better when you change yourself for the better.”
– Jim Rohn, 7 Strategies for Wealth & Happiness
Ales Krivec/Unsplash

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