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The Daily Vitamin
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All Healthy - Home
Daily Edition • Wednesday, April 29
SPONSORED BY
All Healthy - Home
Daily Edition • Wednesday, April 29
SPONSORED BY
By this point you’ve likely seen the news that the world record in the marathon was broken at the London Marathon on Sunday. Sebastian Sawe ran the 26.2 mile course in a time of 1:59:30, or at an average of 4:34 a mile. That is astoundingly fast. 

Not long ago, the idea of a sub-two-hour marathon felt like a hard human limit. But with advances in training, fueling, and shoe technology, that ceiling moved faster than most experts expected. It’s a useful reminder: a lot of what we think of as “limits” aren’t fixed. They’re just the current edge of our understanding of the body — and with the right inputs, that edge has a way of shifting.
☾ Sleep & Recovery

The Sleep Tracking Trap

A wrinkled gray bed sheet with a checkered brown pillow and a smartphone resting on it.
Ari Sha/Unsplash
Track Your Sleep, Lose Your Sleep?: Wearables have made it easy to monitor every detail of your night — but new research published in Frontiers in Psychology suggests that for people with insomnia, that data obsession may actually backfire.

The Study: About 1,000 adults in Norway completed a questionnaire with demographic information, insomnia symptoms, sleep-app usage, and feelings about sleep apps. Almost half (46%) used a sleep-tracking app or device. Overall, participants noted more positive effects of sleep apps than negative ones. Younger adults reported more benefits. People with insomnia, however, were more likely to report negative effects and more worry about sleep from the apps.

The Takeaway: Preoccupation with perfect sleep or anxiety about not sleeping can actually lead to worsened sleep (called orthosomnia). Some studies have found sleep tech can improve sleep habits, but the information overload can increase sleep-related stress and worry in others.

Keep in Mind: Participants were drawn from a web panel of interested candidates who self-reported information, which, the researchers say, does not provide a fully representative sample.
✲ Sponsored

Audiologists Reveal the Tiny Device Redefining Hearing Clarity

A hand holds two colorful hearing aids, one blue and one burgundy, against a blurred green background.
Courtesy: Hear
Most people think hearing aids just make things louder — but audiologists now say clarity comes from giving the brain cleaner sound, not more volume. And that shift is exactly why experts are pointing to Horizon IX by hear.com. Its virtually invisible, German‑engineered design was built with dual‑processing AI technology that cuts through chaos in real time so conversations finally feel effortless again. Curious whether this tiny device could make conversations clearer for you? See if you qualify for a 45‑day no‑risk trial today.
Discover More 
Thank you for supporting our sponsors! They help us keep All Healthy free.
✾ Nutrition & Food

Could Your Desk Setup Be Affecting Your Blood Sugar?

A person in a yellow sweater sits at a table working on a laptop, with skyscrapers visible through large windows.
Olegs Jonins/Unsplash
Sun Catcher: If you're working to stabilize your blood sugar, your office environment (and how much natural light it provides) may play a role.

How to Do It: If you can, set up shop near a window that catches morning and midday light. If that’s just not feasible, a short outdoor walk in the morning or at lunch counts too. But this works best when paired with bigger blood sugar controls — a balanced diet of whole foods and regular exercise.

The Evidence Behind The Habit: A small study published in Cell Metabolism tracked 13 adults with type 2 diabetes through two separate 4.5-day sessions in a controlled office. In one, participants worked next to large windows that let in natural daylight from morning to afternoon. In the other, the windows were blocked and only standard artificial light was used. In daylight, participants spent 7.6 percentage points more time in their target glucose range, with fewer spikes and drops. They also burned more fat for fuel, and the genes governing their cellular clocks looked better synced to the time of day.
☼ SPOTLIGHT

The Therapist Who Takes Sides

A smiling man with glasses rests his chin on his hand, wearing a black shirt and rings, set against a neutral background.
TERRY REAL
Family Therapist, Author
Courtesy: Terry Real
Most couples therapists position themselves as neutral observers. But not Terry Real. For over twenty years, he has built a practice around the premise that at least one person in the room is behaving badly, and pretending otherwise is a waste of time.

Real came to therapy through his work on male depression in the 1990s. He noticed men who couldn't access their own emotions often left a trail of wreckage in their relationships. At the time, the therapeutic convention was to validate both partners equally, but Real started calling out the behavior instead.

His latest book, Us, argues that American individualism is killing intimacy. Real thinks the current framework for protecting boundaries and asserting our needs is actually hurting relationships. So when your partner criticizes you, the work is figuring out what they actually need, not defending yourself.

The method the Real promotes is direct but not cruel. When you feel hurt, it's important to say so clearly, rather than shutting down or lashing out. His work draws a line between self-awareness (necessary) and self-absorption (corrosive). The goal is building something functional together, which requires working on the relationship rather than endlessly focusing on yourself.

FOLLOW | READ | WATCH
➺ Quick Picks
Feeling Dysregulated — Can you actually “reset” your nervous system?
Grow Your Bones — This workout may boost bone formation in premenopausal women.
Block & Tackle — This summer staple will cut your risk of skin cancer by 40%.*
Role Model — Here’s how to raise your kids with a healthy relationship to food.
Breathe Easy — Eat this food to protect your lungs from air pollution.
*Indicates a brand partnership
☞ This, Not That

The Better Reset

A woman stretching while sitting at a desk with a tablet and a yellow mug, surrounded by natural light and plants.
THIS
A brightly lit vending machine stocked with various snacks and drinks, including candies and chips, in an office setting.
NOT THAT
Getty/Unsplash, Kanishka Burnwal/Unsplash
This: Short Breathing Break
Not That: Stress Snacking

When stress hits, the pantry (or the office vending machine) can look like the fastest solution. But a two-minute breathing reset — slow inhale, longer exhale — can lower stress hormones and give your brain space before reacting. Often, the craving fades once the nervous system settles.
✾ What We're Cooking

Grilled Shrimp Tacos with Charred Corn & Peach Salsa

Two shrimp tacos with grilled shrimp, diced mango, onions, cilantro, and a lime wedge on the side.
Courtesy: Food52
Serves: 4 | Cook Time: 35 minutes

Shrimp tacos are a summer favorite, and a quick marinade followed by just minutes on the grill means they’re ready in no time. But what really makes this recipe stand out is the salsa — to make it, char a whole ear of corn over an open flame, then combine with peaches, cucumber, jalapeño, avocado, and fresh lime juice. It’s best to prep it ahead of time, and you’ll likely want to make extra — it’s just as good served on its own as a fresh, vibrant summer salsa with tortilla chips.
Get The Full Recipe 
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✲ Sponsored

Your Brain Is Working Overtime

What most people don’t realize is how much mental energy gets burned just trying to keep up with conversations. When speech isn’t clear, your brain has to fill in the gaps — and that quiet strain can chip away at focus and memory over time. Horizon IX flips that dynamic. Its dual-processor design separates speech from background noise, so conversations feel effortless again. Over 670,000 people say the difference is immediate. See for yourself with a 45-day, no risk trial.
Discover More 
Thank you for supporting our sponsors! They help us keep All Healthy free.
❦ HEALTHY HABIT

The Compliment Habit

Once a day, offer a sincere compliment — to a coworker, friend, or stranger. Keep it specific: something they did well, something you admire. Positive feedback strengthens relationships and tends to boost your own mood in the process.
★ Final Thought
Calm ocean waves with surfers in the distance, surrounded by rocky shoreline and tidal pools. Soft pastel sky.
Stand before the people you fear and speak your mind - even if your voice shakes.”
– Maggie Kuhn, No Stone Unturned
Annie Spratt/Unsplash

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