Toolbox: Refreshing Bath Rituals
Get the most from your you-time with these products that can make your bath extra rejuvenating.
Get the most from your you-time with these products that can make your bath extra rejuvenating.
Discover your new reading list: S&H’s guide to books we love, from upcoming titles to past favorites.
Sex therapist Tammy Nelson, author of Open Monogamy, suggests that you can have your cake and eat it too.
Celebrated writer Ruth Ozeki’s latest novel, The Book of Form and Emptiness, continues her tradition of “enacting the Zen teachings in the world.”
The black box is awkward at best and excruciating at worst. But it’s where change happens.
Amazonia expert explores ayahuasca from the perspective of an elder of the indigenous Shawi people.
S&H editor Ben Nussbaum spoke with New Hampshire-based artist Kim Ferreira about foxes and racoons, happy paintings, phonographs, and more.
Faith Hunter, author of Spiritually Fly: Wisdom, Meditations, and Yoga to Elevate the Soul, offers a technique for diving deep with your demons.
As a teen, Felicia Cocotzin Ruiz realized that her ancestral foods were medicine. Now a chef and curandera, she shares a lifetime of personal remedies and body care recipes.
What might we gain from considering ourselves in the same way, affected by both our earthly presence and the influence of the moon?
“Our human emotional system, at times, is wired to lead us to embrace the three poisons without thinking of the consequences.”
Don’t rush to cultivate your gifts in an effort to accomplish or secure what you want or dream of. Slow down to meet the world through what you’re given and your beauty will be released.
When your life feels like it’s getting to be too much ... simply stay in the “I” of the hurricane.
Rabbi Rami Shapiro answers questions from S&H readers. “I’m engaged to a man I met in Bible study. He asked me to be his helpmeet the way Eve was Adam’s helpmeet (Genesis 2:18) ... What do you think he means?”
In a week of both tragic and comedic karma, Keith Kachtick awakens to the circular nature of the Universe and our existence in it.
Playing with language can be a powerful way to reframe burdensome thoughts.
“Language is an imprecise tool. Sometimes it buckles a little under the strain of meaning.”