Search Podcasts
Invisible Disabilities: Loving Unconditionally through Hardships
What's Trending in Birth Control?
Truth Behind Mental Illness
How to Motivate Your Partner to Work Out
9 Things Successful Couples Do Differently
5 Reasons to Stop Seeking Acceptance from People Who Won’t Accept You
Science Proves Why Men Love Your Curvy Backside
Letting Go of Resentment for a Healthier You
How to Improve Doctor-Patient Relationships
Medication Isn’t ALWAYS the Answer: Why there’s Nothing Wrong with Your Sex Drive
Broken Heart Syndrome: Can It Kill You?
What Does Success Mean to You?
Dating Violence: Recognition & Prevention
How Food Cravings & Sexual Desire Overlap
He Loves You, He Loves You Not: Finding the Right Man
How to Attract Your Ideal Partner
How to Create a Flawless Love Plan
Know a Debbie Downer? Learn to Ward Off Energy Vampires
Set Yourself Free from ADHD
20 Things to Know if You Love Someone with ADHD
Can You Really Be Addicted to Love?
BDSM: What You Need to Know About Getting Kinky in the Bedroom
HealthMaker: James Fowler
Human Contact: Maintaining Relationships in the Digital Age
What Are Your Chances of Having an Affair?
What You Need to Know About Birth Control
5 Ways to Reinvigorate Your Love Life
5 Ways to Reinvigorate Your Love Life
Nature's Secrets: Rev Up Your Love Connection
Remove Emotional Clutter for a Better Love Life
Sexual CPR
Breathe Your Way to a Better Relationship
Meet "America's Love Guru"
Using Porn Together: Is Your Relationship Ready?
What 50 Shades of Grey Says About Women's Sexuality
How to Make Online Dating Really Work for You
Scientifically Redefining Love
Dr. Roizen's Do-Over Tip: Learn About Your Biggest Sex Organ... Your Brain
Want some simple ways using diet, exercise, sleep, stress management and sex to revitalize your life now and for the vital years on the horizon? Dr. Roizen has them... in his new book, This Is Your Do-Over, he explains how to reverse your mistakes, optimize your health, and live a life filled with energy and happiness. After all, nobody is too old, too out of shape, or too unhealthy to start their Do-Over today.
Dr. Roizen's Do-Over Tip for the Week: Learn About Your Biggest Sex Organ... Your Brain
Oftentimes middle school health class is where we learn all the basic biology about how our bodies work; specifically, what part goes into what part, with the outcome of extending the survival of our species. I’m not condemning sex-ed classes for doing this dutiful job; but, I also want to point out that too often these classes seem like they’re making the case that sex is about plugs and sockets, in and out, penis and vagina… that sex is about what goes on below the belt.
That, we know, is 100 percent biologically true. Can’t make babies without plugs or sockets.
But, I also think that we take that truism and hold onto it as if this law of biology is the only sexual scientific fact there is. The real truth is -- especially when you grow older and your hormones aren’t the only things that make your primal sexual decisions -- that the more important relationship isn’t groin to groin.
It’s brain to brain.
Do-Over Tip from Dr. Roizen: Share Some Warm Fuzzies
Want some simple ways using diet, exercise, sleep, stress management and sex to revitalize your life now and for the vital years on the horizon?
Dr. Roizen has them... in his new book, This Is Your Do-Over, he explains how to reverse your mistakes, optimize your health, and live a life filled with energy and happiness. After all, nobody is too old, too out of shape, or too unhealthy to start their Do-Over today.
Dr. Roizen's Do-Over Tip for the Week: Share Some Warm Fuzzies
Do something nice (and unexpected) for someone in your life, or even a stranger! Be creative. Do it “just because.”
In 2014, sociologists from Notre Dame University published The Paradox of Generosity, a book based on a study of over 2,000 individuals tracked over five years from a range of socioeconomic classes and races. They found that Americans who met measures for being generous were “generally more compassionate, forgiving, in tune with others’ needs, empathetic, and more likely to see the world in terms of abundance.” And get this: giving of your time, your money, and your emotional self all significantly increase not only your happiness, but also your physical health.
Low Libido? Foods that Naturally Boost Your Sex Drive
Drunk in Love? How Being in Love Affects Your Brain
5 Tips for Safe & Successful Online Dating
Want to Connect with Your Kids? Join Them in the Digital World
4 Dirty Secrets that Happen after Marriage
What No One Ever, EVER Tells You About Grief
Grief is some tricky shit.
I apologize for the language... I tried to think of any other phrase that would set the stage for this blog; for what I’m feeling... somehow “grief is some tricky stuff” didn’t cut the mustard.
I’m fairly cerebral in my life processes; meaning that I tend to make sense of things by “thinking it out.” That is, I try to work everything out in my brain. If I can explain it away, with a reasonable argument and step-by-step analysis, I can process and move on.
I can’t make sense of what’s happening in my heart.
There are varying levels of grief. You can grieve the loss of a loved one (death). Grieve the loss of a loved one (divorce). Grieve the loss of your skinny jeans (just getting fat).
Obviously that last one is super-superficial.
It’s strange how I’ve processed grief in the past. When my grandparents and great aunts and uncles (who treated me like a grandchild) passed, I think I was still too young to realize what this meant. They were elderly; many in the stages of dementia and disease. What I didn’t realize is that while I lost a grandparent, my folks lost a parent.
And, while I haven’t lost a parent, I’ve lost a parent-in-law.