Category: Ask Questions
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ASipOfFlava| Your Elders Have Value
Just a quiet moment with a hot cup of coffee… thinking about the elders who shaped me, guided me, and poured wisdom into my life without needing recognition. I valued them deeply then. I honor them even more now. And as I step into that elder space myself, I find myself wondering how wisdom is…
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H&W|How to Keep Yourself Safe From Injury as You Age
Aging doesn’t mean slowing down — it means moving smarter. A few small changes can help protect your body, your independence, and your peace. Let’s talk about staying safe, steady, and supported.
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RealTalk|Same Time, Different Worlds
We’re all living in the same moment — but not the same reality. Age, experience, and perspective shape how the world lands on us… and it shows up more than we realize.
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H&W |Speak Life Into…
Words carry weight. When spoken with intention, they can heal, strengthen, and remind someone — including yourself — that they matter. A gentle wellness reminder to speak life into the spaces that need it most.
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RealTalk|Are Ethics, Morals, and Values Being Left to Interpretation?
Have ethics, morals, and values become flexible concepts left open to interpretation? This reflection explores what feels lost, what still anchors us, and why shared principles matter more than ever in how we communicate, connect, and build trust.
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H&W| Winter, Sleep, and the Aches
Winter has a way of speaking through our bodies. If you’re sleeping well but waking up sore, it might not be the sleep — it might be how your body is settling through the night. This winter taught me to listen more closely, make gentler shifts, and lean into comfort without guilt. 🌻
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ASipOfFlava|The Art of the Gentle Nudge
Not all guidance comes with instructions. Some of it shows up as a quiet nudge that lets others think it was their idea. ☕🌻
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Blog Challenge|Life Before The Internet
Before Wi-Fi and scrolling took over our days, connection looked different — slower, richer, and rooted in showing up for each other. This is my little walk back to a time when a rotary phone, a TV antenna, and a stack of books were all we needed.

