Page 10 - Peace With News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
La Chiesa in campo per la riconciliazione in Nicaragua Il messaggio
interris.it - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from interris.it Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
El pueblo paisa que no quiso recibir a excombatientes de las Farc
lasillavacia.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from lasillavacia.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
UExpress
uexpress.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from uexpress.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Claus Christensen via Getty Images
A cluttered or disorganized home can be a major source of stress, especially for some people with anxiety.
Stacks of mail and papers cover your desk. Piles of clothes accumulate on the chair in your bedroom. Makeup, toiletries and other products crowd your bathroom counter. Toys are strewn across the living room floor. For some people, a messy home is a minor nuisance or something they can easily overlook. For others, it can have a significant impact on their mental health.
As Wendy Wisner, who has an anxiety disorder, explained in a blog post for the site Scary Mommy, “Cleaning up clutter is not just another thing on the to-do list like packing my kids’ lunches, changing the car’s oil, or making my next dentist appointment. It’s a full-on ragey kind of panic.”
Heather Holty-Newton
It’s a pop culture movie scene, flattened to two dimensions. A breakout artist sings her new hit song on big stages as thousands of new fans sing along. She’s living the dream, feeling that rush of fulfillment that comes from hard work and nurturing her talent. Unless it’s more complicated than that. Case in point, Garrison Starr blasting out radio fresh “Superhero” in 1997. “I was in survival mode. I mean, I was having an identity crisis,” Starr says of those fast-moving days.
The trouble was incited in her home state of Mississippi, when in the exclusive space of an Ole Miss sorority, somebody blew her cover as a young gay woman trying to live her life and be with a girlfriend. Long before the cultural sea change in American life that led to gay marriage in the 2010s, Starr says she was iced out socially and judged piously by family and friends back in her hometown. It made for some epic cognitive dissonance.