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How to buy yourself some happiness

How to buy yourself some happiness

    Research shows that spending money on experiences and relationships produces lasting happiness, while buying material goods leads to rapid satisfaction decay through hedonic adaptation. Why buying more stuff won’t make you happy (but coffee with a friend might) You’ve probably done it. Standing in line at checkout, phone in hand, about to buy something you… Sigue leyendo "How to buy yourself some happiness

    Magnesium L-threonate for better sleep quality.

    Magnesium L-Threonate for Better Sleep

      Magnesium L-threonate (MgT) is the only magnesium form designed to cross the blood-brain barrier, and two recent clinical trials show it improves sleep quality without acting as a sedative. Why most magnesium pills don’t work You’ve probably seen magnesium recommended for sleep. But here’s the problem. Most magnesium supplements are lousy at getting into your… Sigue leyendo "Magnesium L-Threonate for Better Sleep

      The reverse bucket list for happiness

      The Reverse Bucket List

        Harvard happiness researcher Arthur C. Brooks found that completing every item on his bucket list left him less happy, not more. His fix is a reverse bucket list that changes how you relate to desire. The counterintuitive happiness hack You’ve probably got a bucket list somewhere. A note on your phone or a mental catalog… Sigue leyendo "The Reverse Bucket List

        The 5-minute meeting hacks for better meetings

        The 5-Minute Meeting Hack

          A Google engineering’s simple scheduling trick (starting meetings at :05 instead of :00) spread organically across his entire organization, and brain research from Microsoft backs up why it works. Why shifting your start time beats trying to end early The clock is 1:58pm, and you’re still wrapping up a call. Someone is mid-sentence about Q3… Sigue leyendo "The 5-Minute Meeting Hack

          Passive exposure makes you learn faster

          Passive Exposure makes Learning Faster

            A study found that passive exposure to relevant sounds helped mice learn a categorization task significantly faster. The principle likely applies to human skill-learning too. Passive exposure makes you learn faster You sit down to practice guitar. Your fingers stumble through chord changes, and progress feels painfully slow. You know the drill: repetition, feedback, correction,… Sigue leyendo "Passive Exposure makes Learning Faster