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10 Fitness Stocking Stuffers—All Under $25

stocking-stuffers

The exercise addict in your life may already have everything she needs to stay in tip-top shape, but these fun stocking stuffers are guaranteed to put a smile on her fitness-loving face. Best part: They’re all under $25.

Fruitinfusedbottle

Fruit Infused Water Bottle ($12; amazon.com)
Quench thirst and fight sugar cravings with this unique tumblr that easily turns bland water into a flavorful creation using your favorite fruits.

bodyglide

Body Glide ($9; amazon.com)
This lightweight and non-greasy balm glides on smooth creating an invisible barrier to protect your skin against chaffing and irritation.

stressballs

Neon Stress Balls ($8; amazon.com)
When a family member has had a little too much eggnog, reach for one of these super bright and squishy stress balls. It will relax you and keep your blood from boiling.

yogacookiecutter

Yoga Cookie Cutters ($9; yummyyogi.com)
Move over gingerbread man, there’s a new holiday cookie in town. Give your yogi extra Zen during dessert time with these cute cutters shaped like traditional yoga moves.

handwarmers

Reusable Hand Warmers ($25; amazon.com)
For runners eager to pound the pavement on a chilly winter morning, these reusable—and self-activating—hand warmers will provide instant heat right down to the fingertips.

minifoamroller

Mini Foam Roller ($25; amazon.com)
Toss it in your stocking or even in your suitcase! This compact version of the classic foam roller is perfect for soothing sore muscles on the go.

sweatyband

Sweaty Bands ($15; amazon.com)
These sassy sweatbands not only come in variety bright colors and fun patterns, but also guarantee you never have to worry about sweat or hair getting in the way of workouts.

runmug

Twas the Night Before the Race Mug ($12; amazon.com)
This festive red mug is a creative, tongue-in-cheek twist on the classic holiday poem. It’s sure to make your favorite running enthusiast smile.

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Burpee Socks ($10; amazon.com)
Keep your feet cool and dry during those intense CrossFit WODs with these fun, knee-high burpee socks.

fitnessjournal

Fitness and Nutrition Journal ($25; amazon.com)
Start the New Year off right by logging your fitness goals into this pint-sized planner featuring space to write down your healthy eats, daily workouts, fitspiration, and more.

 

 

 




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6 Things Shonda Rhimes Wishes You Knew About Overcoming Social Anxiety

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

It’s hard to believe that Shonda Rhimes was once afraid of small talk. As the creator and producer of Grey’s Anatomy, Scandal, and How to Get Away with Murder, Rhimes has spearheaded some of TV’s biggest and buzziest prime-time shows. And the female characters she’s introduced us to—from Grey’s Cristina Yang to Scandal‘s Olivia Pope—are certainly no shrinking violets.

Yet in her new memoir The Year of Yes ($25; amazon.com), Shonda describes her struggle with crippling social anxiety, writing that public appearances would turn her into “a walking panic attack.” (Her publicist’s job? To get her out of them.) When she did find herself compelled to speak at press events, she’d experience a full-on meltdown: “Every single time, before I got to the stage, there was mumbling, there was sweating, there was shaking,” Shonda writes. “There was the make-up artist charged with reapplying the mascara that washed off my face after the silent thirty-second crying jag required to quell my rising hysteria.”

It wasn’t just stage fright. Any event could make her freeze up. At Hollywood fêtes, she felt like an outsider with her nose pressed up against the glass. Meeting new people made her uncomfortable and awkward. Even children’s birthday parties were challenging. She writes of feeling “mom guilt” when she skipped them because she couldn’t handle the social interactions.

But all of that changed on Thanksgiving two years ago. Rhimes’ older sister made an offhand remark that “You never say ‘yes’ to anything.” What she really meant: Rhimes never ventured beyond her comfort zone. That casual (and dead-on) observation inspired a year-long experiment in which Rhimes vowed to say yes to every invitation and opportunity that came her way—especially the ones that scared her. Year of Yes chronicles that truly transformative experience as Rhimes faces (and ultimately conquers) her self-doubt. Here, six important lessons about social anxiety I learned from her memoir.

RELATED: 19 Natural Remedies for Anxiety

Living in fear is no way to live

Shortly after that Thanksgiving morning, Rhimes came to terms with just how unhappy she’d become. “I am miserable. Admitting this takes my breath away,” she writes. “I feel as though I am revealing new information to myself. Learning a secret I’ve been keeping from myself.”

Rhimes had surrendered to her anxiety. She was working long hours, and when she wasn’t immersed in the fictional worlds of Seattle Grace or Pope & Associates, she was with her daughters or her boyfriend. Or she was sleeping. That was it—she said no to everything else. “The years and years of saying no were, for me, a quiet way to let go. A silent means of giving up. An easy withdrawal from the world, from light, from life,” she writes. “Saying no was my own slow form of suicide. Which is crazy. Because I do not want to die.”

When you’re always hiding, you risk losing yourself

It doesn’t happen all at once, she explains. But if you’re not careful, you can lose yourself  “one ‘no’ at a time.” No to a meeting. No to catching up with friends. No to taking a vacation.

For Rhimes, losing herself also happened “one pound at a time.” She ate when she was stressed, and her size kept going up and up and up. Yet she was ambivalent about the weight gain, she says. Her body was just another place to hide: “Slowly I am coming to realize that is part of it. The shyness. The introversion. The layers of fat,” she writes.

But once Rhimes finally said yes to taking care of herself, those layers melted away. Between March of 2014 and the summer of 2015, she dropped 127 pounds (by exercising and eating right). And then, she says, being “seen” wasn’t so bad after all.

RELATED: The Best (and Worst) Ways to Cope with Stress 

Facing your fears really does make you stronger

Signing up for things that terrify you may seem nuts. But the challenge, the rush, and the sense of accomplishment makes the scary stuff worth doing. That’s what Rhimes discovered after she completed her first yes: filming an hour-long special for Jimmy Kimmel Live called Behind the Scandalabra. 

She was so freaked out, she became a “block of solid wood” on camera. As Rhimes tells it, all she did was hold an enormous glass of wine and laugh at Kimmel’s jokes. But what mattered was that it happened. “I said yes to something that terrified me. And then I did it. AND I DIDN’T DIE,” she writes.

Later in the book, Rhimes describes what it actually feels like to overcome a fear: “I race into the wilderness and it’s all darkness and thorny bushes and rocky uphill paths and I am spitting out swear words left and right and then suddenly—I break through in to the clearing and find I’m standing on the mountaintop. Air in my lungs. Sunlight on my face. It’s not insanity. It’s just tough.”

Being heard feels good 

About halfway through her Year of Yes, Rhimes gave the commencement speech at Dartmouth College, her alma mater. Leading up to ceremony, she became “[n]onsensical. Irrational. I stop speaking out loud. I make noises instead.” But when it comes time to address the class of 2014, she delivered a dose of well-earned wisdom:

“Stand up in front of people. Let them see you. Speak. Be heard. Go ahead and have the dry mouth. Let your heart beat so, so fast. Watch everything move in slow motion. So what. You what? You pass out, you die, you poop? No. (And this is really the only lesson you’ll ever need to know.) You take it in. You breathe this rare air. You feel alive. You are yourself. You are truly finally always yourself.”

Speaking up is more efficient than being silent

Even though saying yes all the time made her busier, Rhimes felt like she had more free time than ever before. The reason? She was no longer spending so much time in her head, feeling stifled and wrestling with frustration. “I realized I’d been wasting a huge amount of time and energy on complaining and feeling sorry for myself, being dark and twisty me,” she writes. “Now I wasn’t interested in being that person. Not when it was so much easier to just open my mouth and talk.”

RELATED: 12 Signs You May Have an Anxiety Disorder

The goal is swagger

According to Rhimes, swagger means loving oneself, and “not giving a crap what anyone else thinks about you.” It’s a great goal. Because the reality is—as Rhimes puts it—everyone’s got some greatness in them: “You do. That girl over there does. That guy to the left has some. But in order to really mine it, you have to own it. You have to grab hold of it. You have to believe it.” And you never, ever have to apologize for it. 




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4 Surprisingly Easy Ways to Try the Gold Hair Trend

Jimmy Carter Says Brain Scans Show No Signs of Cancer

MONDAY, Dec. 7, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Former President Jimmy Carter said on Sunday that brain scans have shown there are no longer any signs of the melanoma cancer that had spread to his brain.

The news comes roughly three months after he began treatment for four small lesions in his brain and had surgery to remove part of his liver. However, Carter said in a statement that he will continue to take Keytruda, an immunotherapy drug that helps his body recognize and fight any stray cancer cells.

“My most recent MRI brain scan did not reveal any signs of the original cancer spots nor any new ones,” Carter said in the statement.

Carter broke the news to a Sunday school class at Marantha Baptist Church in Plains. Ga., according to the Associated Press.

Carter, 91, first announced in August that he had been diagnosed with melanoma that had spread to his brain. Along with the liver surgery, he received a round of radiation and the drug Keytruda every three weeks, the AP reported.

Whether Carter’s medical team at Emory University’s Winship Cancer Institute in Atlanta has performed additional scans was unclear Sunday, the AP reported.

Dr. Len Lichtenfeld, deputy chief medical officer for the American Cancer Society, told the wire service that doctors will often scan other parts of the body in melanoma cases, to make sure the disease has not spread.

“Circumstances may change over time or he may be in a situation where it does not recur for many years or at all,” Lichtenfeld said.

During his treatment, Carter continued to do volunteer work, according to the AP.

“I’ve reacted well to the treatments,” Carter told the wire service in November. “I haven’t been uncomfortable or ill after the treatments were over. So that part of it has been a relief to me and I think to the doctors.”

More information

Find out more about brain tumors at U.S. National Cancer Institute.





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Researchers Focus on Risk Factors for Leukemia After Breast Cancer Treatment

MONDAY, Dec. 7, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Researchers say they’re zeroing in on factors that may increase the risk of leukemia after breast cancer treatment.

The findings are a step forward in determining ways to prevent this complication in breast cancer survivors. While the breast cancer treatments target malignant cells, they can also affect healthy cells and could increase the risk of leukemia later, the researchers said.

The scientists looked at 88 breast cancer survivors with treatment-related leukemia and found that many had a personal and family history of cancer, suggesting a genetic susceptibility to cancer.

Also, 20 percent of the women had an inherited gene mutation that increases the risk of breast cancer, according to the study published Dec. 7 in the journal Cancer.

“The findings justify a long-term, follow-up study of women with and without inherited breast cancer gene mutations who are treated with similar therapy for breast cancer,” said study leader Dr. Jane Churpek, from the University of Chicago.

“This would enable us to understand how these genes impact therapy-related leukemia risk, and whether specific treatments come with higher risks based on a woman’s inherited genetics,” Churpek said in a journal news release.

Doctors could then have patient-specific conversations about the possible risks and benefits of chemotherapy and radiation treatments for breast cancer, she added.

It can be difficult to determine whether leukemia in breast cancer survivors is or is not treatment-related, Dr. Judith Karp and Dr. Antonio Wolff, from Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine in Baltimore, noted in an accompanying journal editorial.

“Existing familial cancer registries that are prospectively following breast cancer patients and their families are uniquely positioned to ascertain the true frequency of subsequent leukemias and their associations with the therapies received,” they wrote.

More information

Cancer.net has more about breast cancer treatments.





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Living Together, Marriage Give Equal Boost to Women’s Mental Health: Study

MONDAY, Dec. 7, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Living together or getting married provides young adults — especially women — with a boost to emotional health, a new study finds.

Researchers analyzed data from 8,700 Americans who were born between 1980 and 1984, and interviewed every other year from 2000 to 2010.

The study authors found that single young women had a similar increase in emotional health whether they moved in with someone or got married for the first time. For men, marriage seemed to be the key to improving their emotional health.

When it came to finding love the second time around, both men and women had similar improvements in emotional health when they moved in with someone or got married, the findings showed.

The study was published online Dec. 3 in the Journal of Family Psychology.

As recently as the early 1990s, getting married gave people a bigger emotional lift than living with someone, the investigators found.

These findings suggest that living together no longer carries the stigma it did in previous generations, according to study co-author Claire Kamp Dush, an associate professor of human sciences at Ohio State University.

Today, about two-thirds of couples live together before marriage, she pointed out.

“At one time, marriage may have been seen as the only way for young couples to get the social support and companionship that is important for emotional health,” Kamp Dush said in a university news release.

“It’s not that way anymore. We’re finding that marriage isn’t necessary to reap the benefits of living together, at least when it comes to emotional health,” she added.

More information

The American Academy of Family Physicians has more about emotional health.





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Why Sharing Rx Drugs With Friends Is Never Okay

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

I used my friend’s leftover medication—I’ve been prescribed the same kind in the past, so I know it works for me. Is that OK to do?

No! While your friend may take the same medicine as you did, the dose could be different, or it might no longer be the appropriate medication for you. When it comes to prescription drugs, you should never take one that was not prescribed to you at the time when you needed it. Not only are you risking potential side effects or drug interactions, but you may also be missing the correct remedy for your condition by trying to diagnose and treat yourself. If you think you need an Rx drug, see a doctor.

Health‘s medical editor, Roshini Rajapaksa, MD, is associate professor of medicine at the NYU School of Medicine and co-founder of Tula Skincare.

RELATED:

What Belongs in Your Medicine Cabinet?

15 Tips for Saving Money on Prescription Drugs

21 Reasons You’ll Live Longer Than Your Friends




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Screen All Kids for Cholesterol, Depression and HIV, Pediatricians’ Group Says

By Amy Norton
HealthDay Reporter

MONDAY, Dec. 7, 2015 (HealthDay News) — All kids should be screened for high cholesterol, depression and HIV, with some tests starting as early as age 9, a leading group of U.S. pediatricians recommends.

The guidelines, from the American Academy of Pediatrics, are among some key steps the academy has recently taken to advise pediatricians on child health screenings. A summary of the recommendations is published Dec. 7 in the journal Pediatrics.

A recurring theme is that screenings are recommended for all children in certain age groups — and not only for those who might be at increased risk.

For example, all kids should be screened for high cholesterol between the ages of 9 and 11.

At one time, screening was done only when children were considered to be high-risk, based on factors like family history, said Dr. Geoffrey Simon, who chairs the academy’s Committee on Practice and Ambulatory Medicine.

But research has shown that targeted screening misses too many children with abnormal cholesterol. And it’s unnecessarily complicated, Simon said.

“Instead, we’re simplifying things by saying all kids should be screened around age 9 or 10,” he said.

Some parents may wonder why kids need cholesterol screening at all, Simon acknowledged. But according to U.S. government data, about 20 percent of U.S. teenagers have unhealthy cholesterol levels, and even younger children are affected.

Elevated cholesterol, often a byproduct of obesity, can lead to heart disease.

“We do see high cholesterol in kids as young as 9 or 10,” said Dr. Amanda Porro, a pediatrician at Nicklaus Children’s Hospital, in Miami. “It’s not just adults anymore.”

But while cholesterol-lowering drugs are often prescribed for adults, diet and exercise are the main way to the address the problem with kids, said Porro, who was not involved with the new recommendations.

Simon agreed. “In some cases,” he said, “we need to take a deeper dive and have the family work with a nutritionist.”

Two other key health screenings focus on depression and HIV: Kids should have annual screenings for depression from ages 11 through 21, the academy states. An HIV test should be done between the ages of 16 and 18.

“The incidence of depression starts to pick up in middle school and high school,” Simon said. And suicide is a leading cause of deaths among adolescents, the academy noted.

Almost 11 percent of 12- to 17-year-olds had at least one bout of major depression in 2013, according to the U.S. National Institute of Mental Health. That amounted to 2.6 million kids.

“If we catch depression symptoms early, we can intervene,” Simon said.

Again, he added, that does not have to mean medication. “We’re trying to get to kids before they reach the point where they might need medication,” Simon said.

Porro noted that depression in children may not always be obvious to parents, since it can manifest as sleep problems or poor appetite, for example.

When it comes to HIV, screening used to be more targeted — to kids who said they were sexually active or used drugs, for example.

According to Simon, one of the problems with selective screening — whether for HIV or depression — is that it creates a “stigma.” Universal screening helps remove that.

But the HIV recommendation for testing at some point between 16 and 18 is also a response to trends in infection rates, the academy says. Kids and young adults between the ages of 13 and 24 account for one-quarter of all new HIV cases in the United States.

“HIV can now be treated as a chronic disease,” Simon noted.

Porro added that universal screening can also raise teenagers’ awareness of HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases, and give them a chance to talk about those issues in a “safe environment.”

More information

The American Academy of Pediatrics has more on routine preventive care.





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How to Have a Healthy Holiday Season

SUNDAY, Dec. 6, 2015 (HealthDay News) — You’re at increased risk for colds and the flu over the holidays, but a few simple measures will help lower your chances of getting sick, an expert says.

“With all the hustle and bustle of the holidays, we come into contact with more germs, and even sugary treats, that can weaken the immune system,” Stacey Gorski, an assistant professor of biology and an immunology specialist at University of the Sciences in Philadelphia, said in a university news release.

Your first line of defense is a flu shot. The flu causes an average of 30,000 deaths and more than 200,000 hospitalizations every year, Gorski said.

You need to keep exercising over the holidays, because physical activity helps keep your immune system primed for action, she noted.

Getting enough sleep also keeps your immune system strong, she said.

It may be difficult, but you should limit holiday sweets because high sugar levels can weaken your immune system. Do not eat raw cookie dough, which can cause E. coli or salmonella infections, Gorski added.

It’s also important to stay warm. Research in mice found that just a slight drop in temperature significantly increased their susceptibility to the cold virus. Having a humidifier can also help. Lower humidity levels make it easier for viruses and bacteria to spread between people, Gorski said.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about holiday health and safety.





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Gene Therapy Shows Early Potential for Rare Immune System Disorder

SATURDAY, Dec. 5, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Gene therapy might restore immunity in children and young adults with a rare inherited immune system disorder called X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency, researchers report in a small study.

The condition, which primarily affects males, is caused by mutations in the IL2RG gene that prevent normal development and function of infection-fighting immune cells. Patients are at high risk for life-threatening infections, according to background information with the study.

This early study was designed to test the safety and effectiveness of the procedure. Much more work is needed before the treatment could be approved for patients.

Currently, the most effective treatment is a transplant of blood-forming stem cells from a genetically matched sibling. Patients without a matched sibling often receive transplants from a parent, but this only partially restores their immunity, researchers from the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases explained.

The new study included five patients, aged 7 to 24, with worsening immune systems despite one or more previous stem cell transplants from a parent. Stem cells were removed from the patients’ bone marrow, given a normal IL2RG gene, and then placed back in the patients after a low dose of chemotherapy. The chemo was meant to help the stem cells establish themselves and start producing new blood cells.

Substantial immune system improvements were seen in the first two patients to receive the gene therapy. One of them continues to improve three years after treatment. However, the second patient died of pre-existing, infection-related lung damage two years after treatment.

This study shows the importance of early treatment, before there is irreversible organ damage, the researchers said.

The other three patients underwent the gene therapy three to six months ago. They’re starting to show signs of improved immune function, according to the study authors.

The findings were scheduled to be presented Saturday at the American Society of Hematology’s annual meeting in Orlando, Fla., by principal investigator Dr. Suk See De Ravin. Data and conclusions presented at meetings are usually considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed medical journal.

More information

The U.S. National Library of Medicine has more about X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency.





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