LGBT Wellness Roundup: May 17

Each week HuffPost Gay Voices, in a partnership with blogger Scout, LGBT HealthLink and researcher Susana Fajardo, brings you a round up of some of the biggest LGBT wellness stories from the past seven days. For more LGBT Wellness visit our page dedicated to the topic here.

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6 Foods That Can Make You Happier

By Cynthia Sass, MPH, RD

I’m a happiness research junkie. I love reading about simple things we can do to elevate mood and boost contentment. Mindfulness meditation, adequate sleep, laughing, volunteering, and spending time with pets (as well as with happy people) all help. And believe it or not, science shows you can also eat your way happier!

If you’re in need of a little more glee, here are six research-backed “better mood foods” to build into your eating repertoire.

Probiotic-rich foods

In a recent Dutch study, 20 healthy volunteers received either a probiotic supplement or a placebo for four weeks. Those who received the real deal showed a significantly reduced reactivity to sad mood, which was largely due to a reduction in aggressive thoughts and rumination (you know, when you over-think or obsess on the negative). The conclusion: the type and amount of bacteria in your digestive tract impacts your mood. Scientists even have a name for it: the gut-brain axis, or the communication highway between the GI tract and the brain, and it’s fascinating.

In an animal a study conducted at McMaster University in Ontario, gut bacteria from mice with different personalities were swapped. Fearless mice became timid after receiving gut bacteria from anxious counterparts, and the reverse was also true — fearful rodents became more expressive and less apprehensive. The researchers also found that aggressive mice became calm when scientists changed their gut microbes by health-ing up their diets. All of this means that, for all intents and purposes, your gut bacteria can literally be mind-altering. To reap the benefits, stock up on probiotic-rich fermented foods, including kimchi, sauerkraut and kefir, or consider popping a probiotic supplement.

Fruits and veggies

In a study published in the British Journal of Health Psychology, nearly 300 young adults kept daily food journals for three consecutive weeks, in addition to completing psychological and mood-related ratings. Researchers found that a higher intake of produce resulted in more energy, calm and a greater sense of happiness. They also noted that the effects were seen not only on the days more veggies and fruits were consumed, but also throughout the following day. Another study, published in the journal Social Indicators Research, which tracked 80,000 adults, found that consuming a higher amount of produce boosted mental well-being, with the magic number for happiness being seven daily servings. To use produce to elevate your mood, choose fruits and veggies first and build each meal around them. For tips on how, check out my previous posts 5 Veggies That Make Perfect Pasta Alternatives and 5 Reasons to Eat More Fruit.

Coffee

Coffee drinkers can be thought of as curmudgeons, but research has actually linked regular java consumption to positivity. In one study, researchers found that coffee consumed in the morning was linked to energy, kindness and pleasure. Coffee enjoyed socially was tied to affection, friendship, satisfaction, and good nature; and when sipped leisurely, cups of Joe induced calm, happiness and tranquility. Another study, published in the JAMA Internal Medicine, found that women who drank two to three cups of coffee a day were 15 percent less likely to develop depression over a 10-year span, compared to those who consumed one cup or less each day. Now that doesn’t mean a pot a day is a recipe for bliss, but if you enjoy coffee there are other health benefits to making it a daily habit. Check out my previous posts 6 Reasons to Keep Loving Coffee and 5 Reasons to Drink Coffee Before a Workout.

Dark chocolate

Even thinking about dark chocolate brings a smile to my face, but research backs its happiness benefits. The antioxidants in dark chocolate can trigger the walls of your blood vessels to relax, lowering blood pressure and improving circulation. That may be why one study found that eating about an ounce and a half of dark chocolate daily for two weeks reduced levels of stress hormones in people who rated themselves as highly stressed. Dark chocolate also contains magnesium, a mineral that has been shown to help alleviate PMS symptoms, including fatigue, depression and irritability. Finally, dark chocolate’s unique natural substances trigger a sense of euphoria that’s similar in to the feeling of being in love! For more check out my 5 Healthy Ways to Eat More Chocolate.

Mushrooms

I adore mushrooms. In a previous post I wrote about five surprising benefits of this underrated superfood, and due to their unique nutrients, mood regulation may be a sixth. Shrooms are rich in selenium and research has linked a deficiency of this mineral (which doubles as an antioxidant) to a higher risk of depression, anxiety and fatigue. Mushrooms are also the only plant source of natural vitamin D, a key nutrient of us aren’t getting enough of. In a study of people with seasonal affective disorder, which affects 11 million Americans, scientists found that those who upped their vitamin D intake experienced an enhanced mood. To bolster your intake, incorporate mushrooms into omelets or quiche at breakfast, salads at lunch and sauté, grill, or oven roast them at dinner.

Green tea

A Japanese study, conducted with more than 40,000 people, found that levels of psychological stress were 20 percent lower in people who drank five or more cups of green tea per day compared to those who drank less than one. The results held true even after other factors were accounted for, including age, sex, medical history, body mass index, alcohol consumption, cigarette smoking and diet. Reach for green tea as a beverage, or incorporate loose tea leaves or brewed green tea into cooking. It’s fantastic in smoothies, marinades, soups and sauces. For info about a currently trendy form of green tea, check out my previous post 7 Things You Should Know About Matcha.

6 Food That Can Make You Happier was originally published on Health.com.

Cynthia Sass is a nutritionist and registered dietitian with master’s degrees in both nutrition science and public health. Frequently seen on national TV, she’s Health’s contributing nutrition editor and privately counsels clients in New York, Los Angeles and long distance. Cynthia is currently the sports nutrition consultant to the New York Rangers NHL team and the New York Yankees MLB team and is board certified as a specialist in sports dietetics. Cynthia is a three time New York Times best selling author, and her brand new book is Slim Down Now: Shed Pounds and Inches with Real Food, Real Fast. Connect with her on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest.

More from Health.com:
12 Worst Habits for Your Mental Health
13 Foods That Are High in Magnesium
A Sleep Meditation for a Restful Night

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Fitness 101: The 8 Core Principles to Start Strength Training

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Photo Credit: brucewill03 via Compfight cc

Over the last few months, I’ve been trying to learn German. In my head, I have fantasies of walking the streets of Berlin speaking fluently with citizens and fitting in seamlessly.

Unfortunately, fluency on day seven of a new language isn’t likely. In fact, I wasn’t close to being fluent two months later. This fantasy I had in my head is a lot harder than I realized. I just want to get on with the speaking already.

However, just as a child has to start off learning his ABCs — I have to start off by learning the everyday grammar rules of German. Is this part sexy, not exactly. But, neither is sitting through pointless college 101-level courses.

You can’t build a house without a solid foundation. You can’t learn a new language without learning grammar rules. You can’t immediately flock to the gym without some preparation.

So, let’s pretend we’re going back into lecture hall and this time, no sleeping through lecture.

Here are the essential eight core principles to start strength training.

1. Start small

Work piles up. Projects are late. Kids have numerous sport practices. Your friends need your attention. Next thing you know, you haven’t made it to the gym this week.

Anytime you’re adding a new habit into your existing life, it’s essential that you ease the habit into your life as seamlessly as possible.

Take it slow and give yourself time to adjust to your new habit. The main objective at the beginning is to get into the habit of strength training.

Everything else in life isn’t going to slow down or vanish just because you want to start lifting weights.

2. Be patient

Need to look up some random fact or spelling? Easy, pull out your phone and find the results in 15 seconds.

In our instantaneous world, the concept of showing patience is almost as obsolete as the flip phone.

However, strength training isn’t a skill that is mastered over a day, a week, or even a month. It’s a skill that requires consistent practice.

Approach your strength training just as an artist approaches his paintings — with a growth mindset, appreciation of the journey and a commitment to consistently improve their craft (think 1 percent a day).

Small daily improvements leads to large results (aka the body you want) over the long haul.

3. Start with bodyweight movements

When it comes time to buy a house — you wouldn’t buy one without a sturdy foundation. You wouldn’t go to a surgeon who hasn’t went to medical school.

Building a foundation is essential before moving on to anything else. Your body is no different with strength training.

Practicing bodyweight exercises before attempting weighted movements allows you to learn the basic biomechanics of how your body moves and feels.

Practicing with bodyweight movements allows you to fail and experiment in a safer setting. It’s better to squat poorly using your own bodyweight than to have 100 pounds on your back while squatting poorly.

4. Think compound movements over isolation movements

The majority of individuals don’t have hours to waste in the gym, therefore exercise selection needs to be precise.

Compound exercises such as squats, dead lifts, chin ups, and hip thrust are going to work multiple muscle groups simultaneously while creating a greater metabolic response (aka helping burn calories) within the body than isolation exercises such as bicep curls, tricep kick backs, and the hip abductor machine.

Not only are compound exercises saving time, but you’re positively affecting hormones, improving joint stability, and improving your cardiovascular system.

5. Focus on getting stronger

If you’re a guy or gal who wants to add some lean muscle, working out with the goal of increasing your strength should be the main priority initially.

Lifting with light reps for an endless amount of sets isn’t going to build the body you want. Lifting challenging weights is the catalyst to shaping our bodies up and provides a solid foundation to workout from.

It might be frightening initially for women to be told to lift more challenging weights, but women don’t carry enough of the hormone testosterone to build muscles as us men.

Besides improved stability, pain management, and bone health (preventing osteoporosis), lifting challenging weights is a stress relief and feels empowering.

6. Think quality over quantity

Lifting for marathon sessions that exceed an hour aren’t better than lifting for only 30-40 minutes. Eventually, you run into the law of diminishing returns.

Think quality of exercise selections over quantity of exercises selected. A full body workout consisting of compound lifts for 30 minutes trumps a 90-minute workout that is filled with isolation exercises and long rest periods.

Get in and get out should be your motto.

7. Prioritize form above everything else

Lifting challenging weights is encouraged, but that doesn’t mean you lift the weights up by any means necessary. In addition to increasing your chances of injury, lifting with bad form teaches you bad habits and doesn’t train the muscle properly.

If you’re squatting and you feel only your back working, take a timeout, lower the weights, and reevaluate your form.

Whatever exercise you’re performing, you should feel that particular target muscle working. Leave the ego at the door and focus on your form and technique for optimal results.

8. Place a priority on rest and recovery

Strength training is vital to a successful transformation, but growth doesn’t take place in the gym. Instead, it’s determined by your actions outside of it.

Lifting weights merely tears our muscle fibers down, while proper nutrition and rest helps our bodies recover, grow, and become stronger for the next time we enter the weight room.

Always place rest over an extra workout session. Plus, it’s nice to relax and treat our bodies well, we deserve it, life can be a grind at times.

To learn more about Julian and how to build the body you want while making your dent in the universe, visit”The Art of Fitness and Life’and receive your free starter kit to get started toward remarkability.

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NYC Pioneers An Innovative Alternative For Those On The Verge Of A Mental Health Crisis

This piece comes to us courtesy of Stateline. Stateline is a nonpartisan, nonprofit news service of the Pew Charitable Trusts that provides daily reporting and analysis on trends in state policy.

By Christine Vestal

NEW YORK – It is a busy Friday afternoon. Staff members check in guests at the front desk. Other employees lead visitors on tours of the upstairs bedrooms, or field calls from people considering future stays. Aromas of garlic and roasted chicken seep out of the kitchen.

Community Access is not a bed and breakfast, although it feels that way when you walk through its unmarked door off Second Avenue on Manhattan’s Lower East Side. Also known as Parachute NYC, this quiet seven-bedroom facility is one of four publicly funded mental health centers in New York City (located in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens and the Bronx) that provide an alternative to hospital stays for people on the verge of a mental health crisis.

Parachute’s respite centers have no medical staff, no medications, no locks or curfews and no mandatory activities. They are secure, welcoming places where people willingly go to escape pressure in their lives and talk to trained “peer professionals” who can relate to what guests are going through because they are recovering from mental illness themselves.

Without places like this, New Yorkers who suffer from serious mental illness would have little choice but to check into a hospital or a hospital-like crisis center when their lives spin out of control. Some people need to be hospitalized for severe psychosis and depression, but many others end up in the hospital because they have no other options.

Relatively rare in the U.S., respite centers like this one cost a fraction of the price of a hospital stay, and can be far more effective at helping people avoid a psychotic break, severe mood swing or suicidal episode.

Community-based mental health services are particularly vital at a time when the number of beds in state psychiatric hospitals has declined sharply. Nationwide, psychiatric hospitals shed 3,222 beds from 2009 to 2012 amid recession-related budget cuts, and the number has continued to decline even as the economy has improved. According to the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, 55 percent of U.S. counties have no practicing behavioral health workers and 77 percent have reported an unmet need.

Launched in 2013 by the city’s public health department, Parachute NYC includes mobile treatment units and phone counseling in addition to the four brick-and-mortar respite centers. A collaboration of city and state mental health agencies, the project received a three-year $17.6 million innovation grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Its financial goal is to save $50 million in hospital expenses.

In addition, New York state’s Medicaid agency plans to use a federal waiver to pay for respite services and other community mental health services for 140,000 state residents under a managed care program for people with behavioral health needs. Separately, New York state’s mental health office has invested $60 million since last year on the creation and expansion of community-based services throughout the state, including child and adult respite programs.

“A hospital is the last place you want to be if your life is unraveling,” said Community Access CEO Steve Coe. “They put you in a room, check your blood pressure and walk away and leave you for hours. You need to put your life back together, not be held in a place where you can’t do anything or talk to anyone,” he said.

Nevertheless, there is broad agreement that nonmedical services such as Community Access are not for everyone.

“The caution is that while this approach is good for some people, others really need medication and structure, so it has to be a good match for the person who is coming into it,” said Sita Diehl, director of state policy at the National Alliance on Mental Illness. “The advantage is that you get an expert listener working with you, really delving into who you are, rather than someone slapping a diagnosis on you and handing you a prescription.”

Averting Crisis

Parachute NYC provides a non-threatening environment where people who are coming undone can take a break from their turbulent lives and think through their problems before they reach a crisis point. Many who shun hospitals and crisis stabilization units will voluntarily seek help at respite centers.

In fact, Community Access insists that all prospective guests check in on their own, without coercion from a doctor, friend or family member. They also screen applicants to ensure that respite is their best option. Some may need medication and more intensive treatment from medical professionals.

“We’re not against medication,” assistant director Keith Aguiar explained. “If they come in with their own medications and they want to take them, that’s fine. But we do not tell them they have to.”

Many guests have full-time jobs and continue working and seeing friends during their stay. They can come and go any time of day or night. Unlike a hospital, Coe stressed, respite centers allow people to maintain their lives and relationships instead of putting everything on hold. Guests can also continue seeing their regular mental health providers during their stay.

The maximum length of stay at Parachute NYC respite centers is 10 days, soon to be shortened to one week under new Medicaid rules. But guests can return up to three times per year as needed. They also can visit weekly and monthly as “alumni” and take part in group activities and talk to staff.

To qualify for any of Parachute’s respite centers, guests must be New York City residents who are 18 or older. They must also have a clinical evaluation (within the last 48 hours) and a referral from a mental health provider stating they are not an imminent risk to themselves or others and would benefit from respite care. Guests also must have stable housing to go back to.

The Guest List

“We have a wide diversity of guests, from a Columbia University professor and an art critic to people who have been chronically homeless much of their lives,” Aguiar said. “We see men and women of all ages and all walks of life.”

In the last month, the guest list at Community Access included a 28-year-old woman who was living in mental health support housing and believed her roommates were practicing witchcraft on her. She was referred by her housing counselor. Another 24-year-old woman with a diagnosis of schizoaffective disorder needed to escape mounting conflicts at home with her brother, who had a diagnosis of schizophrenia. She was referred by a community psychiatric team.

A 70-year-old jazz musician who suffered from drug and alcohol addiction came to get away from his chaotic living situation. He talked to peers about his struggle with addiction, played his trumpet and napped a lot during his stay. “It was the best sleep I’ve had in years,” he told the center’s director Lauren D’Isselt, who is a psychologist.

Another woman, 25, applied to become a guest without a referral (the center arranged for Parachute’s mobile unit of clinical professionals to provide an assessment.) She’d heard about Community Access from a friend. A native New Yorker who left college because of severe depression, Maggie (not her real name) spoke calmly about her history of mental illness while sitting on a bench on the center’s sunny back courtyard.

“I wanted to finish college,” she said, “but I kept ending up on the tops of buildings.” Diagnosed with depression when she was seven, Maggie has been in psychiatric care most of her life. She spent the better part of the last six months in hospitals.

Now that she’s back in New York temporarily living with her parents, she said she wants to find the right kind of treatment and get on her feet so she can return to school. “Living at home is not very comfortable because my parents are the source of my problem. They abused me when I was a child,” Maggie said. She said she could stay with friends, but they don’t understand what she’s going through.

Five days into her stay, Maggie said it’s been good for her. She’s been able to make plans for future treatment. “It makes a lot of sense,” she said. “At a typical hospital, they take depressed people and lock them up and away from everyone and expect them to get better. Here you can go out and have coffee with a friend and no one has to go through double-locked doors to see you.”

“When I feel really anxious or sad, I can talk to a peer. Places like this are rare,” Maggie said. “But they shouldn’t be.”

A National Need

One in four adults, about 62 million Americans, experiences some form of mental illness during the course of a year. Of those, about 14 million live with a serious mental illness such as schizophrenia, major depression or bipolar disorder, according to data from the National Alliance on Mental Illness. More than half of them do not seek treatment, in many cases because they don’t know where to find help.

For those who do seek treatment, the direct medical costs total more than $100 billion per year, according to estimates from the National Institute of Mental Health. Community mental health services such as respite centers may make it possible to reduce those costs and relieve the demand for psychiatric hospital beds, which are in short supply in most communities.

Parachute NYC has so far served about 700 people at its respite centers, 600 through its mobile treatment teams and more than 20,000 through its peer-operated telephone support service. The city’s health department intends to analyze the program to determine whether it has resulted in a reduction in the city’s 100,000 annual psychiatric emergency room visits.

“We don’t perform miracles here,” D’Isselt said. “But we do help people find joy in their lives.” Most guests forge new friendships and leave with a new life plan, she said. “A lot can happen in a week.”

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Regret: Facing, Feeling and Healing the Heartache of Lost Possibilities

A friend and colleague, recently turned 40, shared the following sentiment, “I have now reached the age when I experience regret. And it sucks.”

There, he said it. Just like that. I remember the relief I felt, hearing someone speak this out loud. Not whitewashing the experience with something like, “But it’s all good!” or negating the uncomfortable recognition by focusing one-sidedly on all the benefits of choices made and all the good intentions held. Just the raw and honest expression of regret, which, I find, gets spoken rarely these days.

Instead we often focus on forging ahead, ignoring the regrets we may feel (“No regrets!” being a familiar phrase and ideal), pretending them “away,” making do and moving on, even while we may be tripping up over unacknowledged regrets and all the feelings piled on top of or buried under them.

His utterance hit home directly, expressing what I, and I’m sure many others, feel as we reach an age when we have lived enough years that many things may have gone beautifully — just as we wished, hoped and strived for — and others likely didn’t, by a bit or by a lot.

It is a stage in life (for some of us this may come earlier or later) when we can look back and see the consequences of choices we made or that were made for us. We see paths trodden and untrodden, junctures, decisions, and circumstances leading us to where we now stand. While we may still have years ahead of us to take different routes, there are certain things we just wish so very much had gone differently.

I’m talking about the real regrets, the ones that don’t just go away, but keep niggling at us. The ones that really do suck. That keep popping up, when you’re trying to move on. That surprise you in unexpected moments; you thought you had dealt with them. These regrets are frequently tied with dreams and hopes, which are deeply meaningful, essential to you. They may carry heart-aching hurts and disappointments, or deep-seated shame, guilt, grief or anger.

Even when we seek to live in alignment with our values, some things are just beyond our control. Even when we try our best, we may hurt others. Even when we do everything we can possibly conceive of, things don’t always work out the way we hope. And sometimes we miss the mark. Fact is, we humans are fallible, we make mistakes, we are not always kind with one another, we effect each other for better and for worse, life is not perfect, and it is all a much bigger mystery than we could ever fully fathom with our minds and desires.

So what shall we do with our regrets? What does a healthy relationship with regret actually look like?

Here are some reflections & guidelines I use with my clients and, to this day, in my own life.

1. Neither indulge nor repress them.

Imagine you are swimming along a river and then, at one point, you find yourself unable to continue because your feet have become entangled in a riverbed weed. The weed in this case is “Regret” (you can apply this metaphor to any kind of stuckness). You tug and swim harder and harder, to no avail. You can’t swim on, your feet are knotted with this weed.

When we indulge a regret, we swim down to the weed, and then go over it again and again, we analyze it in every detail, and get even more tangled in the endless litany of “should have” and “could have”. We hold on to it and sometimes even become identified with it. We get so caught up in the regret that we feel paralyzed and victimized. We forget to just look at it, feel it, accept it, learn from it, and when ready, untie it and swim on.

When, on the other hand, we repress a regret, we avoid swimming back down and dealing with the “knot”. While paddling furiously forward, we end up making little if any headway, remaining stuck while thinking we are swimming on. By “getting on with life” and ignoring the feelings that need to be felt, we tend to harden, our hearts shut down.

Instead of these two approaches, I suggest you dive down, have a good look at what is going on, and untangle your feet from the weed. Acknowledge the regrets, face them, feel them, learn from them, make good wherever possible, forgive yourself and others, and in doing so, find new footing in the present and the future, rather than being held hostage to your past while thinking you are forging ahead.

Then you can truly swim onward.

2. Be brave and inquisitive.

Stepping into a healthy relationship with our regrets requires courage, curiosity and patience.

Let regret inform and transform you. Allow regret to soften you, to humble you. Let it change you and prepare you for a freer future.

Facing a regret involves figuring out what feelings are buried under or covering up the regret. Is there grief there? Or anger? Disappointment? Or disillusionment? Or a whole mix? Find out, and be present and honest with these feelings. You don’t need to do anything. You just need to be present with them, neither indulging nor repressing. Just feeling them sincerely. And that takes courage. They’re not usually what we think of as fun to hang out with, right?

3. Be honest. Remain curious. Make new choices.

Once you have discovered what you actually feel, you can make a fresh choice, a real one.

An example from my own life: Over the past few years I noticed that whenever one particular and persistent regret bubbled up it would come out as anger (sometimes just a disgruntled remark, other times a distancing and closing off of my heart, or outright blaming). This happened enough times to help me realize I was going around in circles with this particular regret instead of truly moving onward and up. Even if this regret would stay with me for the rest of my life, I didn’t have to stay hostage to the anger it housed. Even as I still wish things had gone differently, dragging bitterness along my future path was not worth it.

It took a while to gain this clarity. And then I curiously followed the anger to its root, where I found sadness. A deep well of: “That really sucks and I’m so very sad about it.” From then on, when the anger would arise, I took the time to soften and feel the grief. I shared it with my husband and spoke about it with a few close friends. I journaled and danced it. I gave it up in prayer and asked for overwhelming peace. I accepted it. And, bit-by-bit, it is easing. The regret is still there, perhaps it will be there as long as I live, but it is not dragging me down anymore as much. I am untying the knot. I am swimming on.

Following curiosity to find the source and making a new choice — taking the space and time to feel the grief whenever the anger has flared up, and trusting that when the true feeling runs its course, new Life becomes possible — has been the doorway through.

4. Just do the work. Don’t worry about the timing.

We like to have timelines attached to transformation. If you’re like me, you would love to know when you will finally be done with a particular regret and freely swimming on. But what if there is no predictable timeline? What if all you have to do is focus on the work, and let go of expectations around outcome and timing? What if releasing your feet from the weed takes longer that you wished, or less time? So what? As long as you are not indulging and not repressing, but simply facing it and allowing it to move through you, you really don’t need to worry about the timing.

Our work is to shed layers that get in the way of living and showing up fully. You may think you are all done and good with a particular regret, only to have it bubble up in an unexpected moment, months or years later, inviting you to shed yet another layer of the past, and refresh the future in doing so. The regret itself may linger for the remainder of our lives. And that’s OK. It’s not something we have to make go away. Every time it arises, we can simply notice it, allow it to deepen our experience of vulnerability and humility, and grow in integrity.

When regret has changed from something that drags you down, overwhelms you, closes down your heart and keeps you stuck into something that makes you more human, more caring and kind, you are swimming on and up. It may linger, but it has lost its sting.

5. You don’t have to do it alone.

Speak your regret out loud — to yourself, to a friend, to a piece of paper, to God, to your partner, to your therapist or coach, to your grandmother, to whomever you trust can simply listen and be present. There is something inherently restorative in this act. You don’t have to carry it alone. An ‘other’ can hold it with you.

One evening, a few weeks ago, my husband and I were sitting on the couch chatting about this and that, and our conversation ended up with both of us sharing our deepest regrets. Speaking them out loud, acknowledging them to one another, especially those that touched the other in some way, offered unexpected healing and intimacy.

I think we could do this more: two (or more) people, reflecting on the respective journeys taken thus far, the choices made, the dashed hopes, voicing apologies and insights gained. No frills, no drama. Not getting swamped in the regrets, neither accusing nor ignoring, but with a calm and gentle courage, facing and voicing, acknowledging, feeling and learning. Knowing that there is a place beyond regret, which can only be reached by feeling it, living through it and moving onward, rather than side-stepping it. Sitting together, heartfully matter-of-fact.

6. Don’t assume you know for another.

We can be so wrapped up and familiar with our own stories that we forget: regret is a very subjective thing, it is a deeply intimate reflection of a particular person’s life, hopes, dreams and choices. This became poignantly apparent to me in a recent gathering with a few women sharing openly what they regretted most at that point in their lives.

One woman’s greatest regret was that she was not able to get pregnant. She had tried for over a decade. She was heartbroken. Still longing so much.

Another regretted not having begun her career before having children. She was struggling with finding her professional footing now that her children had left home. She wished she had held onto herself more.

Yet another, almost shy to speak it out loud, but this was her honest regret: she had 4 sons and, while loving them to bits, silently wished so much she could have also have had a daughter.

One regretted choosing safety over adventure in her life.

Another spoke of the deep regret she felt every time she yelled at her kids.

One regretted marrying for the wrong reasons.

Another regretted divorcing.

There is no right or wrong when it comes to regrets. Let’s give one another the spaciousness and support to honestly face, feel and move through our respective regrets. Let’s be present to one another in this journey.

And let’s remember: We can’t always choose what happens to us. We don’t always make the right choices. But we do have a choice in this present moment about how we respond to our past and make way for our future.

To stay in touch with Miriam, find her on facebook and visit her website.

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Shhh…

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Another Russian Rocket Malfunctions, Destroying Mexican Satellite

Mexico’s newest communications satellite crashed into Siberia just minutes after launch early this morning. This marks the sixth catastrophic mishap of this particular configuration of a Roscomos Proton-M rocket since 2010.

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Beautiful Two-Stroke Engine Lets You Watch Its Inner Workings

Combustion of fuel—a process that you, me and everyone else we know very much relies on—is usually hidden from sight inside that big hunk of metal called an engine. But Huib Vissier saw something beautiful in this process, so he built a simple engine that showcases combustion rather than concealing it.

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Burundi President Nkurunziza Makes First Appearance In Capital Since Attempted Coup

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By Goran Tomasevic and Njuwa Maina

BUJUMBURA, May 17 (Reuters) – Burundi President Pierre Nkurunziza on Sunday made his first public appearance in the capital Bujumbura since an attempted coup last week failed to oust him from power, saying he was monitoring a threat posed by Islamist militants from Somalia.

The east African nation was plunged into crisis after Nkurunziza said he was seeking a third term of office.

Critics said the move would be unconstitutional, and there have been almost daily protests since Nkurunziza’s announcement, stirring memories of an ethnically driven civil war that ended a decade ago.

At a news conference, Nkurunziza, who has not been seen in the capital for days, did not address the crisis in his country but said he was “very preoccupied” by the threat posed by the al Qaeda linked militant group al Shabaab.

Burundi is one of the countries that contributes forces to an African Union peacekeeping mission battling al Shabaab in Somalia. In recent years, the group has attacked Kenya and Uganda, which also contribute troops. (Writing by Edith Honan; Editing by Hugh Lawson)

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Bodies Of 6 U.S. Marines, 2 Nepalese In Crash Identified

KATHMANDU, Nepal (AP) — The bodies of six U.S. Marines and two Nepalese soldiers who were aboard a Marine helicopter that crashed during a relief mission in earthquake-hit Nepal have been identified, officials said Sunday.

The wreckage of the UH-1 “Huey” was found Friday following days of intense searching in the mountains northeast of Kathmandu, Nepal’s capital. The first three charred bodies were retrieved Friday by Nepalese and U.S. military teams, and the rest were found Saturday.

The U.S. Marines who were killed were Capt. Dustin R. Lukasiewicz, from Nebraska, Capt. Christopher L. Norgren, from Kansas, Sgt. Ward M. Johnson IV, from Florida, Sgt. Eric M. Seaman, from California, Cpl. Sara A. Medina, from Illinois, and Lance Cpl. Jacob A. Hug, from Arizona, according to a statement from the U.S. military joint task force in Okinawa, Japan.

Nepal’s army identified its soldiers as Tapendra Rawal and Basanta Titara.

All eight bodies have been flown to Kathmandu, Nepal’s army said in a statement.

The U.S. relief mission was deployed soon after a magnitude-7.8 earthquake hit Nepal on April 25, killing more than 8,200 people. A magnitude-7.3 quake struck the country on Tuesday, killing at least 117 people and injuring about 2,800.

The second quake was centered between Kathmandu and Mount Everest, and hit hardest in deeply rural parts of the Himalayan foothills, hammering many villages reached only by hiking trails and causing road-blocking landslides.

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