Grieving the loss of our younger selves and negotiating the future with our older selves is one of the most challenging things we get to
It’s Still “All in the Family” This Holiday Season
Having grown up with a mother who was a Democrat and a father who was a Republican, the tension in our home during the 1960
Me Too Accountability and What We All Can Do to Change Society For The Better
The wave of “Me Too” accountability washing over America is a good thing. It’s good for women who have been sexually assaulted, harassed, and victimized.
Rising Out of the Floodwaters
I know what it’s like to lose everything. My life (as I knew it) ended in 1996 when my oldest daughter, Jenna, died while studying
The Industry of Aging
An excerpt from Courageous Aging: Your Best Years Ever Reimagined Chapter 6 – The Industry of Aging: Pop Culture, Wrinkle Cream, and Annuities In this culture
When “Positive Thinking” Isn’t Enough
It started back in the early 70s when I was a young graduate student in psychology, working in the trenches at a mental-health center where
Compressing Time
The Lost Art of Compressing Time We all live in the stream bed of time. Sometimes the waters move agonizingly slow and we ache for
Hot Flash in Costco!
“Ever wonder why so many of us women camp out in the freezer section at Costco?” my friend asked me the other day while she
Mirror Talk
5 Steps to Making Peace with Your Reflection We do it all the time — that is, catch a glimpse of ourselves in the mirror.
When Father’s Day is a Mixed Blessing
For a lot of us, Father’s Day, 2017, will be a mixed blessing. It will be a day of both great sorrow and great joy.
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