(for your dog)
Monday, June 15, 2026
Muscle loss and protein needs in older adults
Unfortunately, many older adults aren't meeting their daily protein needs. A study published in the Journal of Nutrition, Health & Aging that looked at the diets of nearly 12,000 individuals ages 51 and older found that approximately 46% didn't meet daily protein recommendations. Lower protein intake makes it more challenging to build muscle mass.
While consuming enough protein to support muscle gains is important for overall health, too much protein can also lead to health issues. Consuming very high amounts of protein per day - anything over 0.907 grams per pound; or about 150 grams per day for a 165-pound person - can be harmful. More than that can cause dehydration or aggravate kidney problems for individuals with pre-existing kidney conditions such as chronic kidney disease or a history of kidney stones.
A wide variety of foods, both plant- and meat-based, are high in protein. These include beans, peas, and lentils; nuts and seeds; lean meats; fish; dairy products; and soy products. Incorporating more of these foods into your diet is the easiest way to up your protein intake.
In addition to eating high-protein food sources, when you consume protein is also important. Experts recommend spreading protein consumption throughout the day, with good protein sources at each meal.
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the Mediterranean-style diet gets its name from the foods available to various cultures located around the Mediterranean Sea. It heavily emphasizes minimally processed fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts, and whole grains. It contains moderate amounts of yogurt, cheese, poultry, and fish. Olive oil is its primary cooking fat. Red meat and foods with added sugars are only eaten sparingly. Besides being an effective weight loss method, eating a Mediterranean-style diet is linked to a lower risk of heart disease, diabetes, depression, and some forms of cancer.
https://www.health.harvard.edu/topics/diet-and-weight-loss#diet-weight-loss0
― Alice Miller, Thou Shalt Not Be Aware: Society's Betrayal of the Child
“The true opposite of depression is neither gaiety nor absence of pain, but vitality—the freedom to experience spontaneous feelings. It is part of the kaleidoscope of life that these feelings are not only happy, beautiful, or good but can reflect the entire range of human experience, including envy, jealousy, rage, disgust, greed, despair, and grief. But this freedom cannot be achieved if its childhood roots are cut off. Our access to the true self is possible only when we no longer have to be afraid of the intense emotional world of early childhood. Once we have experienced and become familiar with this world, it is no longer strange and threatening.”
“The truth about our childhood is stored up in our body, and although we
can repress it, we can never alter it. Our intellect can be deceived,
our feelings manipulated, and conceptions confused, and our body tricked
with medication. But someday our body will present its bill, for it is
as incorruptible as a child, who, still whole in spirit, will accept no
compromises or excuses, and it will not stop tormenting us until we stop
evading the truth.”
―
Alice Miller
“Many people suffer all their lives from this oppressive feeling of guilt, the sense of not having lived up to their parents' expectations. This feeling is stronger than any intellectual insight they might have, that it is not a child's task or duty to satisfy his parents needs. No argument can overcome these guilt feelings, for they have their beginnings in life's earliest periods, and from that they derive their intensity and obduracy.”
“Without realizing that the past is constantly determining their present actions, they avoid learning anything about their history. They continue to live in their repressed childhood situation, ignoring the fact that is no longer exists, continuing to fear and avoid dangers that, although once real, have not been real for a long time.”
Trust your pattern recognition. When someone values your presence, you usually feel more settled after being with them. You feel seen. You feel considered. You feel like you do not have to audition for a seat at the table.
12 Quiet Signs Someone Is Leaving You Out Without Starting a Fight
I remember standing in a kitchen full of people I knew, smiling at the right moments, holding a drink I barely touched and feeling strangely invisible. Everyone was warm on the surface. Nobody rolled their eyes. Nobody said anything rude. Still, I had the steady feeling that I was floating just outside the circle.
At first, I talked myself out of it. I told myself I was tired. I told myself I was reading too much into things. Then I noticed how often conversations picked up after I walked away, how often plans seemed half-formed when I was near and fully formed when I was not.
The thing is, social exclusion often arrives quietly. It can look polite. It can even look accidental. That is why it can be so confusing. You keep searching for one clear moment, but what you actually get is a pattern.
Years ago, a friend said something that stayed with me. “Being left out rarely begins with one big scene.” I hated how true that felt. A lot of the time, distance builds through tiny signals, small hesitations and missing pieces that keep landing in the same place.
Psychologists have studied this kind of experience for years. One Annual Review article on ostracism explains that being ignored or excluded can hit hard because humans are deeply wired for connection. Once you know what to look for, the pattern gets easier to name and that can help you respond with more clarity and self-respect.
1. Plans Happen Around You
I once sat through a whole lunch where people talked about “Saturday” as if everyone already knew the details. I nodded along for a while, waiting for someone to turn and include me. That moment never came. By the end, I knew there had been a plan and I knew I was orbiting it rather than inside it.
Sometimes social exclusion shows up through logistics. People mention restaurants, rides and start times in front of you, yet nobody directly says, “Want to come?” That leaves you holding a strange kind of uncertainty. You heard enough to feel involved, but never enough to actually join.
I’ll be honest, this one can make you question yourself. Maybe they assumed you were busy. Maybe they thought someone else invited you. A single slip happens in every group. Repetition tells the real story.
When plans keep forming in your presence without a clear place for you, it often signals low social priority. That sounds harsh, but it matters because priority shapes behavior. People usually make room for those they genuinely want there.
There was a time when I kept filling in the blank for others. I sent the follow-up text. I asked for the address. I acted casual so I would not seem sensitive. After a while, I noticed how tiring it felt to keep granting myself access where warmth should have been offered freely.
Healthy inclusion feels simple. People look at you when they discuss the plan. They check whether you are free. They make your presence part of the picture. You do not have to decode basic belonging.
2. You Hear About Things Late
A friend once told me, “Oh, I thought you knew,” after describing a dinner that happened the night before. That sentence can sting in a very specific way. It sounds harmless, yet it quietly reminds you that important information moved through the group without reaching you.
Hearing things late often means you are outside the first wave of communication. In close social bonds, news travels naturally and early. When you keep learning about birthdays, meetups, or changes after the fact, your role may be shifting to the edge.
I remember laughing off a missed invite and then feeling low all evening. What got to me was not the event itself. It was the realization that everyone else had shared a moment I was expected to absorb secondhand.
Delayed inclusion has a way of making you feel both visible and forgotten. People recognize you enough to mention the event later. They just did not think of you when it counted most. That gap carries information.
If this happens once, let it breathe. If it happens often, pay attention to the pattern. Consistent lateness around social information can reveal where you stand without anyone needing to say it out loud.
3. Group Chats Go Silent Around You
I have seen this happen in ways so subtle that you could miss it if you were not already feeling uneasy. The chat is lively all morning. You send a comment or a joke. Suddenly the thread goes still, only to spring back to life later with a new topic.
Digital spaces magnify social dynamics because the pauses are visible. In person, people can hide discomfort with a quick smile. In a group chat, silence leaves a clean outline. You can literally see the gap after your message.
My first instinct used to be self-blame. Maybe I sounded awkward. Maybe the joke fell flat. Sometimes that is true and it happens to everyone. Still, when your messages repeatedly land in dead air while others get quick reactions, it is worth noticing.
Conversation silence can become a soft form of exclusion. Nobody attacks you. Nobody removes you from the chat. The group simply stops giving your presence momentum.
But boy, was I wrong when I thought I had to win the energy back by trying harder. Sending more messages rarely fixes a dynamic built on indifference. A better move is to step back and observe who reaches toward you when you stop performing for attention.
4. Invitations Feel Vague
There is a special kind of discomfort that comes from an invitation with no shape. “You can come if you want.” “We might be there later.” “A few people are doing something.” You are technically included, yet there is no real landing place.
I remember getting one of those texts and reading it five times. I could not tell whether I was wanted, tolerated, or simply managed. That ambiguity stayed with me longer than an outright no would have.
Vague invitations often protect everyone from awkwardness. The other person avoids direct rejection. You are left doing the emotional labor of interpreting tone, timing and subtext. That creates a foggy kind of social stress.
Vague invitations usually feel different from genuine flexibility. When someone truly wants you there, the warmth comes through. They offer details. They make it easy to say yes. Their language gives you a place to stand.
If you keep receiving invitations that sound optional in a cold way, trust the emotional texture. Words matter and so does effort. Clarity is a form of care.
5. Inside Jokes Keep Passing You By
I once spent an evening smiling at references I did not understand. Everyone around me was laughing in that easy, familiar way that comes from shared history. I sat there trying to catch up from context clues, which is a lonely job in a loud room.
Inside jokes are often a sign of closeness. They create a little social shorthand. When you are included, they pull you closer. When you are outside them again and again, they can underline the gap.
Of course, every group has history. You will not know every story. The issue appears when people never pause to bring you in, explain the reference, or build new shared moments with you. Then the joke becomes a boundary marker.
Shared language is one of the ways groups create belonging. That is why repeated exclusion from the playful side of connection can feel sharper than people expect. Laughter tells you who feels safe with whom.
It took me a long time to realize that I was working harder to belong than the group was working to include me. Once I saw that, the room changed. I stopped treating every missed reference as a puzzle I had to solve.
6. Your Ideas Get Skipped
I have had moments where I suggested a place, a plan, or a simple fix and the idea landed with a thud. Ten minutes later, someone else said almost the same thing and suddenly the group loved it. That kind of thing can make you feel oddly small.
When your ideas are regularly ignored, the issue often reaches beyond the idea itself. It suggests your voice carries less weight in the group. People may still like you on the surface, but they are not orienting around your input.
Sometimes groups fall into lazy habits. Certain voices become central. Others become background. Once a pattern forms, people can repeat it without much awareness.
Being overlooked affects more than confidence. It also changes how much you speak up, how open you feel and how safe it seems to contribute. Over time, silence can start to feel easier than effort.
My own turning point came when I stopped chasing validation from the same people. I brought my ideas to spaces where curiosity was mutual. The relief was immediate and so was the difference in how alive I felt.
7. They Make Space for Everyone Else
This one can be painful because it is so visible. You watch someone pull up a chair for another person, save them a seat, ask them follow-up questions, or make sure they got home safe. Then you notice how rarely that same care comes your way.
I remember walking into a gathering and seeing everyone greet each other with that bright, leaning-in energy. My hello got a quick smile and a pivot. Nobody was cruel. The warmth simply traveled around me.
Social effort is a strong clue in any relationship. People create room for those they value. They shift their body, their time and their attention in small but meaningful ways.
This is why it helps to watch behavior instead of polished words. Plenty of people say “We should catch up” or “So good to see you.” The stronger signal is whether they actually make space for you in real time.
When others consistently receive the softer side of someone’s attention and you receive the leftovers, your nervous system notices. That reaction makes sense. Inclusion lives in details.
8. Eye Contact Starts to Shrink
There was a dinner where one person looked at everyone but me while telling a story. I could feel it as it happened. Each glance skipped over my face like I was part of the furniture.
Eye contact sounds small until it disappears. It helps create recognition, warmth and shared attention. When someone stops looking at you much, the interaction can start to feel thin and strangely impersonal.
Body language often reveals what words smooth over. A person might still act pleasant. They might even ask routine questions. Yet reduced eye contact can signal discomfort, disinterest, or emotional distance.
Body language cues matter because they are hard to fake for long. People tend to look toward those they feel engaged with. Their faces soften. Their attention rests there a little longer.
I admit I used to dismiss this sign because it felt too minor to count. Then I started noticing how accurate it was when paired with other signals. Your body often reads the room before your mind is ready to explain it.
9. Replies Turn Brief and Flat
You know the feeling. You send a thoughtful message and get back “Haha” or “Nice” or “Maybe.” The exchange ends before it begins. After enough of those, the relationship starts to feel like a door that only opens a few inches.
I once kept a conversation going almost by myself for weeks. Every reply from the other person was technically polite. Each one also felt like a tiny closed window.
Low-effort replies often reflect low emotional investment. People usually expand where interest exists. They ask another question. They add detail. They leave a little room for connection to continue.
Brief messages happen for innocent reasons too. People get busy. Energy dips. Life gets crowded. The important thing is consistency across time. A pattern of flatness says more than one dry Tuesday.
When I finally stopped overexplaining myself in those conversations, I noticed something important. The thread did not revive. That silence answered the question I had been trying to solve with more words.
10. You Only Get Contacted When They Need Something
A message pops up out of nowhere. For a second, you feel a rush of warmth. Then you read it and realize they need a favor, advice, a ride, a recommendation, or access to something you have. Suddenly the pattern becomes very clear.
I have been in relationships where I heard from someone only when they were stressed. I wanted to believe it meant they trusted me. Part of that was true. Another part was that I had become convenient.
Functional contact can drain you because it gives the shape of closeness without the nourishment of it. You are included for what you provide. You are absent from the lighter, more mutual parts of connection.
One-sided contact often leaves people feeling useful and lonely at the same time. That combination can be hard to name. It helps to ask a simple question. Do they reach for me in joy, curiosity and care, or only in need?
Once I started paying attention to who checked in without an agenda, my circle got smaller. It also got gentler. Reciprocity has a quiet way of restoring your dignity.
11. They Keep You on the Edge of the Group
Some groups never fully push you out. They keep you nearby. You are invited sometimes. You are included in part of the conversation. You remain present enough to maintain the appearance of connection.
I spent too long trying to earn my way from the edge to the center of one circle. I thought if I showed up enough, helped enough and stayed easygoing enough, the bond would deepen. Instead, my role stayed exactly where it started.
Peripheral belonging can be especially confusing because there are just enough positive moments to keep hope alive. That is what makes it sticky. You keep waiting for consistency that never quite arrives.
Groups often have layers and that is normal. Every acquaintance will not become a close friend. Trouble begins when you keep investing at a level that the group has no intention of meeting.
If you feel permanently half-in, stop measuring the relationship by its occasional highs. Look at the overall structure. Where do you reliably stand when it matters?
12. Your Gut Keeps Picking Up Distance
I used to think intuition was vague and dramatic. Then I noticed how often my body knew before my mind did. I would leave certain hangouts feeling tired, uneasy and strangely embarrassed, even when I could not point to one obvious reason.
Your gut often gathers tiny data points faster than your conscious thoughts can sort them. Tone changes. Delayed replies. Missed eye contact. Thin invitations. A hundred small moments collect into one clear feeling.
Emotional distance does not always arrive with proof you can present in a neat list. Sometimes it arrives as tension in your chest and the sense that you are always reaching. That internal signal deserves respect.
At the same time, your gut works best when paired with observation. Pause and look for patterns. Ask whether the distance shows up repeatedly, across settings and in ways that affect your sense of ease.
These days, I take that feeling seriously. I do not turn it into panic. I do not force it into a courtroom case either. I simply let it guide my attention toward relationships that feel mutual, warm and steady.
Trust your pattern recognition. When someone values your presence, you usually feel more settled after being with them. You feel seen. You feel considered. You feel like you do not have to audition for a seat at the table.
Sunday, June 14, 2026
You can’t bring meat into the European Union, but be damned if we were going to deprive David Sedaris and John Berger of elk backstrap from Montana’s Yaak Valley. We froze it, wrapped it in butcher paper, wrote the word “Tuna” on the outside — you can bring fish in — and carried it through security at Heathrow Airport, though it had thawed and was leaving behind a telltale splattering of red from our daypacks, like something from a Cormac McCarthy novel.
your vision of what you want your community to be
The future's so random, and so mobile, there's no way you're going to get to your vision of what you want your community to be just by chance alone. I really believe you have to let people know, to use your voice, to say, 'this is what I like about my place, I want to keep it this way, this is what I think can be improved, this is what I disapprove of.' That's the only way you can have a part in shaping the future.
Rick Bass
"Sycamores grow by running water," he sang, "cottonwoods by still water," and then he died, and I felt a century slip away.”
―
Rick Bass,
The Sky, The Stars, The Wilderness
― Rick Bass, Colter
“I do not concern myself with my inability to feel such comfort amidst
humans (other than with very few friends and family), but, rather, am
simply thankful that at least dogs exist, and I’m humbly aware of how
much less a person I’d be – how less a human – if they did not exist. ”
―
Rick Bass,
Colter: The True Story of the Best Dog I Ever Had – A Memoir of Raging Genius, Loyal Spirit, and Canine Companionship in Montana
If it's wild to your own heart, protect it. Preserve it. Love it. And fight for it, and dedicate yourself to it, whether it's a mountain range, your wife, your husband, or even (god forbid) your job. It doesn't matter if it's wild to anyone else: if it's what makes your heart sing, if it's what makes your days soar like a hawk in the summertime, then focus on it. Because for sure, it's wild, and if it's wild, it'll mean you're still free. No matter where you are.
