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Probiotics Don’t Keep Bad Bugs at Bay in Critically Ill: Study

WEDNESDAY, Sept. 2, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Probiotics don’t protect the intestines of critically ill patients against antibiotic-resistant bacteria, a new study indicates.

“Probiotic use is an intriguing topic,” lead author Dr. Jennie Kwon, a clinical researcher in infectious disease at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, said in a university news release.

“With fewer therapies available to treat multidrug-resistant organisms, innovative methods to prevent or eliminate gastrointestinal colonization [by bacteria] are necessary,” she explained.

Colonization is the first step before a full-blown infection can develop, the study authors explained.

The current research included 70 patients in intensive care units who received either standard care or probiotics twice a day for up to two weeks.

Probiotics are live microorganisms — popularly called “good” bacteria. Probiotics are believed to boost a person’s resistance to harmful germs, the researchers said.

Antibiotic-resistant bacteria colonized the intestines of 10 percent of patients who received probiotics and 15 percent of those who got standard care. However, this difference was not statistically significant, the researchers noted.

The study was published online Aug. 27 in the journal Infection Control & Hospital Epidemiology.

Drug-resistant bacteria pose a serious threat to hospital patients because they increase the risk of hard-to-treat infections that spread easily, the researchers said.

Kwon said that further study should be done to see if other groups of people, such as those who are less ill, might be helped with probiotics.

More information

The U.S. National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health has more about probiotics.





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Light From Smartphones, Tablets May Lower Sleep Hormone in Kids

By Alan Mozes
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, Sept. 2, 2015 (HealthDay News) — New research offers a compelling reason for parents to ban smartphones, tablets and laptops in their children’s bedrooms at night: The bright light of these devices may lower levels of melatonin, a hormone that prompts sleep.

The effect was most pronounced for kids just entering puberty, with nighttime melatonin levels suppressed by up to 37 percent in some cases, the investigators found.

With a recent study suggesting that 96 percent of teens use at least one high-tech device in the hour before bedtime, the researchers have a suggestion for parents.

“The message is that we really have to be careful about protecting our especially young teens from light at night, which means parents need to get all screens out of the bedroom, because ultimately they can be quite damaging to a child’s capacity to get enough sleep,” said study co-author Mary Carskadon. She is a professor of psychiatry and human behavior at Brown University’s Alpert Medical School, in Providence, R.I.

Puberty and changing sleep habits go hand-in-hand, the study authors noted, as growing kids start to push for later bedtimes.

To some degree, the shift is likely prompted by several social factors, including the loosening of parental restrictions, budding friendships and media. But scientists believe that biological factors also play a role, as a child’s internal sleep clock starts to change.

At the heart of that change is light sensitivity, said Carskadon, who’s also director of the Sleep and Chronobiology Research Laboratory at the E.P. Bradley Hospital. Her team theorized that puberty increases a child’s sensitivity to light at night, causing melatonin levels to stay low and delay sleep.

But the researchers also suspected this natural process could be knocked out of whack when newly light-sensitive children are around the bright glare of modern technology.

So the study authors focused on 38 children between the ages of 9 and 15 (early puberty), along with 29 boys and girls between the ages of 11 and 16 (later or post-puberty).

For four nights, all were exposed to a single hour of light, involving four different brightness levels. Brightness levels ranged from near-dark “romantic restaurant lighting” all the way up to what Carskadon called “light you would find in the produce section of your favorite large supermarket.”

The exposures occurred either at 11 p.m. or 3 a.m., the authors said.

The result: While melatonin readings were uniform during the early morning light tests, late-night light tests caused much greater melatonin suppression among boys and girls at the earliest stages of puberty.

In that group, dim “mood” lighting suppressed melatonin by more than 9 percent, while “normal” room light triggered a 26 percent dip and “bright” light prompted a 37 percent plunge. Overall, older teens saw much smaller drops in melatonin levels, the study found.

The study did not prove that bright light before bedtime causes adolescents to get less sleep, however.

“We cannot say we found a sleep ‘disturbance,'” Carskadon said. “But what we did find was that young children exposed to light at bedtime saw their melatonin production suppressed. And this could cause sleep rhythms to be affected in a way that causes children to stay up later, which is exactly what adolescents need not to be doing.”

Dr. Jim Pagel, director of Rocky Mountain Sleep in Pueblo, Col., agreed with the finding.

“It doesn’t surprise me,” he said. “At puberty onset, the circadian pattern is very unstable and very sensitive to light. So the problems they’re finding make sense.”

That opinion was seconded by Kelly Baron, director of the Behavioral Sleep Medicine Program at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine in Chicago.

“This study didn’t actually test how light affected sleep itself, but it did find that it causes a problem on the pathway to sleep by suppressing melatonin,” Baron said.

“At the same time, other studies have consistently shown that electronics in the bedroom are detrimental to sleep for both parents and kids, frankly, which means we all really should be thinking about ways to limit our exposure to electronics, and light in general, before we go to bed,” Baron said.

The study findings were published online recently in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism.

More information

There’s more on teens and sleep at the National Sleep Foundation.





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Chewing Tobacco Kills More Than 250,000 People Each Year: Report

WEDNESDAY, Sept. 2, 2015 (HealthDay News) — While cigarette smoking is a known killer, many people don’t realize that smokeless tobacco is linked to more than a quarter of a million deaths worldwide each year, British researchers report.

The University of York team said its analysis of data from 113 countries and other sources is the first study to assess the international impact of smokeless tobacco on adults.

“It is possible that these figures are underestimated, and future studies may reveal that the impact is even bigger. We need a global effort to try and address and control smokeless tobacco,” lead researcher Kamran Siddiqi, a senior lecturer in epidemiology and public health at York, said in a university news release.

The researchers estimated that in 2010 alone, smokeless tobacco caused more than 62,000 deaths due to cancers of the mouth, pharynx and esophagus, and more than 200,000 deaths from heart disease.

India is a particular hotspot, and accounts for 74 percent of smokeless tobacco-related disease worldwide, according to the study published online recently in the journal BMC Medicine.

“We have got no international policy on how to regulate the production, composition, sale, labeling, packaging and marketing of smokeless tobacco products,” Siddiqi said.

“The international framework to control tobacco doesn’t seem to work to control smokeless tobacco. It doesn’t get the same regulation as cigarettes,” he added.

But past efforts to curb cigarette smoking could inform the creation of policies to reduce the use of smokeless tobacco, Siddiqi concluded.

More information

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has more about the health dangers of smokeless tobacco.





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The 5 Best Stretches to Finish a Workout (And Stop Soreness)

Gallery_5StretchesToDoAfterEveryWO

You made it! You got through your final set, you’re sweating bullets, and you can finally head home for a great meal. But before you do, there is one crucial step that you must not forget: the cool down.

It could be what makes or breaks that workout you just crushed.

Why? Just as you took the time to properly warm your muscles up, they need to be cooled down as well. By stopping abruptly or not stretching your muscles out after a strenuous workout, they end up getting cold too quickly, which can cause you to feel extra sore the next day. This, in turn, often leads to backsliding on your goals.

RELATED: 3 Foam Roller Moves to Help You Recover After a Run

While dynamic stretches are best for the warm-up, static stretching is best for the cool down. Here are five stretches you can do after your workout to help ward off soreness, and finish your sweat session out like a champ.

Repeat each stretch 2-3 times.

Seated Hamstring Stretch

Credit: Jen Cohen

Credit: Jennifer Cohen

Sit on the floor with your legs straight out in front of you. While keeping your chest out and shoulders back as much as possible, reach for your toes and hold for 30-45 seconds.

Quad Stretch

Credit: Jen Cohen

Credit: Jennifer Cohen

Stand with your feet together and hands by your sides. For help with balance, hold on to a nearby chair or table with your left hand and grab your right foot behind you. Hold for 30-45 seconds before switching sides.

RELATED: How to Tell You’re Working Out Too Much

Shoulder Stretch

Credit: Jen Cohen

Credit: Jennifer Cohen

While keeping your chest out and shoulders back, pull your right arm across your chest until you feel a good stretch and hold for 30-45 seconds. Repeat with your left arm.

Arm Stretch

Credit: Jen Cohen

Credit: Jennifer Cohen

Stand with your feet together, chest out, and shoulders back. Reach your right arm straight up in the air and drop it down behind your head. Use your left arm to hold your elbow in place. Hold for 30-45 seconds before switching arms.

RELATED: How to Become an Exercise Addict

Sky Stretch

Credit: Jen Cohen

Credit: Jen Cohen

Stand with your feet together and reach up for the sky as high as you can. Hold for 10-15 seconds and repeat 2-3 more times.

Looking for a great way to warm-up before a workout? Check out The Only Warm-Up Routine You Need to Get the Best Workout

Jennifer Cohen is a leading fitness authority, TV personality, entrepreneur, and best-selling author of the new book, Strong is the New Skinny. With her signature, straight-talking approach to wellness, Jennifer was the featured trainer on The CW’s Shedding for the Wedding, mentoring the contestants to lose hundreds of pounds before their big day, and she appears regularly on NBC’s Today, Extra, The Doctors, and Good Morning America. Connect with Jennifer on Facebook, Twitter, G+, and Pinterest.




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3 Ways You’re Applying Eye Cream All Wrong

Credit: Getty Images

Credit: Getty Images

Slathering, tapping, massaging—does it really matter how you apply the stuff? Actually, yes, says Christy Cella, vice president of education at Clarins. You’re not smearing a bagel after all. “The right technique will help target all signs of aging— puffiness, lines, shadows and sagging,” she says. Just avoid these common mistakes, which can have the opposite effect on eyes.

OD’ing on eye cream

Too much could be the cause of irritation and swollen undereyes. A pea-size amount is generally all you need to treat both eye hollows. If yours are on the drier side, let the cream sink in for two minutes before applying a little more.

Rubbing it in

Repeated pulling can loosen the delicate skin around the eyes. Pressing lightly with your pointer, middle and ring fingertips is a much gentler approach. Pro tip: First warm up the product between the balls of your fingers so it better sinks into skin.

Applying the cream right under your eyes and directly on lids.

This can cause the product to pool and create puffiness. Instead, press along the orbital bone, working from inner corners up to temples to stimulate microcirculation. Repeat on the brow bone and above brows to prevent dreaded eyelid droop that comes with age. “From there, it will naturally migrate to lids and undereyes,” Cella explains.

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Here’s How To Find Out Your Real Heart Age

Photo: Getty Images

Photo: Getty Images

TIME-logo.jpg

The age on your birth certificate may say one thing, but the age of your heart is likely significantly older.

A new report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released on Tuesday reveals that three out of four Americans have a predicted heart age that’s older than their real age, which means they are at a greater risk for heart issues like attacks and strokes.

A person’s heart age is based on risk factors like blood pressure levels, whether they smoke and how much they weigh.

(Calculate your heart age here, if you’re between ages 30 and 74.)

In the new study, the researchers analyzed data collected from every state and from the Framingham Heart Study and estimated that about 69 million U.S. adults had a heart age older than their actual age. For men, the average heart age was about eight years older than their chronological age; for women, their hearts were an average of five years older than their real age.

The researchers found some notable demographic differences. Heart age was highest among black men and women: black men had hearts three to four years older than white and Hispanic men, while black women had hearts five to seven years older than white and Hispanic women. Southern adults also had notably higher heart ages overall.

In the report, the study authors argue that heart age is a simple way to convey heart disease risk to their patients—one that might motivate Americans to adopt heart-protective lifestyle changes like quitting smoking, eating better or exercising more often.

This article originally appeared on Time.com.




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Two Large U.S. Aquifers Tainted With Natural Uranium: Study

WEDNESDAY, Sept. 2, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Two major aquifers in the Great Plains and California are contaminated with natural uranium that’s been mobilized by farm-related pollution, a new study reveals.

Nearly 2 million people live above these aquifers, which provide drinking water and irrigation for crops in numerous states, the researchers said.

“Uranium is a widespread contaminant. And we are creating this problem by producing a primary contaminant that leads to a secondary one,” study author Karrie Weber, an assistant professor of biological, earth and atmospheric sciences at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, said in a university news release.

“These two aquifers are economically important — they play a significant role in feeding the nation — but they’re also important for health. What’s the point of having water if you can’t drink it or use it for irrigation?” Weber said.

The study team took about 275,000 groundwater samples from the aquifers. They found that 78 percent of the uranium-contaminated sites were associated with the presence of nitrate, a common contaminant that comes mainly from chemical fertilizers and farm animal waste.

Through a series of bacterial and chemical reactions, nitrate releases naturally occurring uranium, making it soluble. This allows uranium to seep into the groundwater, the researchers explained.

The High Plains aquifer contains uranium concentrations up to 89 times the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) standard. And, nitrate concentrations were up to 189 times greater than the EPA standards, the researchers reported. This aquifer provides water to eight states, the researchers said.

California’s Central Valley aquifer contains uranium concentrations up to 180 times the EPA threshold. Nitrate concentrations were up to 34 times greater than the EPA threshold, the study revealed.

The study was published in the August issue of the journal Environmental Science and Technology Letters.

Previous studies have suggested that long-term consumption of uranium-contaminated water may be associated with increased risk of kidney damage and high blood pressure. Research has also shown that food crops can accumulate uranium when irrigated with water that contains high concentrations of the substance, the study authors said.

“We hope that this study serves as a catalyst to get other people interested in this issue,” Weber said. The researchers added they were limited by the data that had been collected, and because uranium isn’t often monitored.

More information

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has more about drinking water.





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FDA Issues Warning About Skin Lighteners

WEDNESDAY, Sept. 2, 2015 (HealthDay News) — Injectable skin-lightening products are potentially unsafe and ineffective, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration warns.

The agency has not approved any of these products, and they may contain unknown harmful ingredients or contaminants.

“These products pose a potentially significant safety risk to consumers. You’re essentially injecting an unknown substance into your body — you don’t know what it contains or how it was made,” FDA pharmacist In Kim said Tuesday in an agency news release.

Not only do the products themselves pose risks, improper or unsafe injection methods can transmit disease, cause infection and lead to serious injury, according to the FDA.

Injectable skin-lightening or -whitening products claim to lighten the skin, correct uneven skin tone and clear up blemishes. Some even claim to treat conditions such as liver disorders and Parkinson’s disease, the FDA pointed out.

The agency said the products — marketed for injection into a vein, a muscle, or under the skin — are sold online and in some retail stores and health spas. Some products have continued to be offered for sale even after being recalled as unapproved drugs, the FDA said.

“In general, consumers should be cautious of any product marketed online with exaggerated claims on safety and effectiveness,” Kim said. “They also should consult their health care practitioner before deciding to use any new product.”

If you have side effects after using an injectable skin-lightening product, you should seek medical help as soon as possible, the FDA said. To report problems, call the FDA at 1-800-FDA-1088 or go to the agency’s website.

Injectable skin lighteners aren’t the only products of concern to the FDA. The agency said that noninjectable over-the-counter skin-bleaching products can pose safety risks, too.

More information

The American Academy of Dermatology offers skin health tips.





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Type 2 Diabetes Linked to More Alzheimer’s Brain ‘Tangles’

By Amy Norton
HealthDay Reporter

WEDNESDAY, Sept. 2, 2015 (HealthDay News) — People with type 2 diabetes may be more prone to developing the brain “tangles” associated with Alzheimer’s disease, a new study suggests.

The study found that people with type 2 diabetes had a greater accumulation of brain tangles — even if they were free of dementia or milder problems with memory and thinking.

The findings, reported Sept. 2 in the journal Neurology, hint at one explanation for why people with type 2 diabetes have an increased risk of Alzheimer’s disease.

That is, type 2 diabetes may cause brain abnormalities that pile on to other degenerative changes that ultimately lead to dementia, explained study senior researcher Dr. Velandai Srikanth, a geriatrician at Monash University in Melbourne, Australia.

However, he said, this study shows only a correlation between type 2 diabetes and brain tangles. It’s not clear whether the type 2 diabetes is the cause, since there are many other factors to consider.

Obesity is one example, Srikanth said. People with type 2 diabetes are often obese, and other research has linked obesity to a greater accumulation of brain tangles.

On the other hand, diabetes might directly contribute — by causing chronically high blood sugar levels, for instance. But more research is needed to clarify the cause, Srikanth said.

Studies have found that people with type 2 diabetes have nearly twice the risk of developing Alzheimer’s or other forms of dementia as people without diabetes, background information in the study noted. That could partly be due to their higher rates of stroke and narrowing in the arteries supplying blood to the brain, according to Srikanth’s team.

But it could also be related to degeneration in brain tissue. In an earlier study, the current study’s researchers found that older adults with diabetes tended to show more brain “shrinkage” than those without the disease.

The new findings are based on 124 older adults with type 2 diabetes and almost 700 without the disease. Some had Alzheimer’s, others had milder problems with memory and thinking, and others were mentally sharp.

All of the study participants underwent MRI brain scans, and about half had samples taken of their cerebrospinal fluid to measure levels of beta-amyloid and tau — proteins that make up the plaques and tangles seen in Alzheimer’s-affected brains.

Overall, the study found, people with diabetes had more thinning in the brain’s cortex, the area with the highest concentration of nerve cells. People with type 2 diabetes also had higher levels of tau protein in their spinal fluid — which indicates more tangles in the brain, the study found.

An Alzheimer’s researcher who reviewed the study called it “important.”

“It clearly shows that type 2 diabetes is associated with an increase in [tau] and a decrease in cortical thickness,” said Kalipada Pahan, a professor of neurological sciences at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago.

The implication, according to Pahan, is that preventing or better controlling diabetes could be one way to combat tangle formation in the brain.

But for now, it’s not clear why diabetes is connected to tau buildup.

“Several factors may play a role,” Srikanth said.

Chronically high blood sugar is one possibility, he noted. Another is low-grade inflammation throughout the body — a state that is seen in diabetes and other chronic health conditions.

Obesity could be part of the puzzle, too, Srikanth said. There is “an interesting body of evidence” tying obesity to tau, he explained.

Just this week, a U.S. study in Molecular Psychiatry reported a link between middle-age obesity and earlier Alzheimer’s onset. Brain autopsies also revealed that Alzheimer’s patients who’d been heavy at age 50 had more brain tangles than those who’d been at normal weight.

“Type 2 diabetes cannot be the only mechanism for tau pathology,” Pahan said. “Obesity, abnormal fat metabolism and many other health issues may lead to tau pathology via different pathways.”

He also noted that diabetes boosts a process called “glycation,” where sugar molecules latch onto proteins.

“It’s possible that glycation of an important brain protein is involved in tau buildup,” Pahan said. But that, he added, has yet to be shown.

More information

The Alzheimer’s Association has more on Alzheimer’s and the brain.





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6 Things That Happen When You Turn 40

Credit:Getty Images

Credit:Getty Images

I keep seeing someone’s old lady hands sticking out of my sleeves. There I am, just going about my work, and Bam! Old lady hands typing. Reaching for my dishes and Kapow! Old lady hands cooking. These hands are quite confusing, with their veins and sunspots and loose skin. What in the actual heck? Whose grandma is wearing my jewelry?

I turned 40 this year.

Forty! Which is so weird because I’ve always been young. I’ve been young my whole life, as a matter of fact. No matter how I dissect this, I’ve aged out of the “young” category and graduated to the “middle” group. My brain feels confused because I was just in college a minute ago. But much like Shakira: These hands don’t lie. And they’re not the only harbingers of change.

Through extremely scientific research like looking in a mirror and talking to my friends over wine, I’ve come up with a few telltale signs you’ve entered your forties—and no, not all of them are bad news.

RELATED: 11 Secrets of People Who’ve Lived to 100

You can no longer quit eating bread for a day and lose six pounds

Once upon a time, I could make some minor adjustment, maybe go for a jog, and my too-snug jeans would fit by Tuesday. Apparently, a body gets over this by 40. It just wants to be fat and happy.

After you turn 40, you can eat 400 calories a day for six weeks and your body will release three pounds. The next day you eat half a tortilla and gain 17. Your body isn’t interested in your diet or those jeans. It wants yoga pants and your husband’s stretched out T-shirts, and it will have them.

I should’ve enjoyed my young body more. I would have worn my bikini to the grocery store had I known my days with those smooth thighs were numbered.

But you finally get a decent handle on who you are

Once you turn 40, you shed the skin of the existential dread. You know what you are good at, what you love, what you value, and how you want to live, and you don’t worry about anything else.

These questions used to keep me up at night. I once worried endlessly about purpose and trajectory, identity and worth, but 40 brought me security I couldn’t imagine. I know what I am good at now and I do it. I’m not apologetic and uncertain and aw-shucks about running my race. I no longer tiptoe through my own life, doubting my gifts and my place, too scared to go for it, seize it, pray for it, dream it. When you’re 40, you no longer wait for permission to live. As Maya Angelou said, “Life loves the liver of it.”

RELATED: Happiness Linked to Longer Life

Something weird happens to your brain

This brain has served you well for so long, but it starts punking you when you turn 40. You can’t remember directions. You forget why you walked into a room. And for the life of you, you can’t recall your third kid’s name (“Take out the trash…Um, you!”). You will talk on your cell phone while looking around your house for your cell phone. This is unfortunate because about this time you go back to middle and high school with your spawn. You are expected to help with algebra and chemistry and the remembering of All The Things, but your brain resembles the bottom of your purse: lost pen caps and congealed, undefined filth. It will take a nap while those children work their own stuff out. Your brain already completed 11th grade. It has done its time.

But you also develop resiliency

I used to desperately need approval. Criticism crushed me. Conflict paralyzed me. Consequently, I took the safest path through every scenario to avoid reproach. As an approval addict, the younger me would have been shocked to find that once I hit 40, I would quit caring so much what others think of me, my parenting, my marriage, my career, my politics, my house, my hair, my church, my dog, my new red front door, my comfortable flats, my stretchy pants, my daughter’s hair, my son’s weird interest in vintage ska, my new resolve to go vegan, my consistent purchase of Lunchables, my decision to work, my decision to quit, and so on.

If people don’t like it, well, whatever. It’s not that you become set in your ways. Differing opinions just stop shaking every decision. And critical words won’t send you to bed. You develop chops.

RELATED: 21 Reasons You’ll Live Longer Than Your Friends

Your skin… changes

When you see a picture of yourself, this is the thought process: “That was terrible lighting, and also the angle is tragic. Plus the shadows made my neck look weird, and do my friends not know how to use Instagram filters?!”

Sometimes I baby-talk parts of my body into resisting gravity’s charms: “Come on, shins. I’m counting on you. You’ve always been good to me. You don’t want to be like Neck and Eyelids and Chest, those loose floozies. Hang in there, baby, and you’ll be the last part of me to see the light of day.”

But you also learn what’s important

These kids, this husband, this little life I’ve built, that’s what matters.

After 40, you are slower to tell everyone how wrong they are, and quicker to gather your folks and take deep breaths of gratitude. This is your place. These are your people. This is your beautiful, precious life. Probably about halfway through your time here on earth, you lay down angst and pick up contentment.

Annie Dillard was right: “How we spend our days is, of course, how we spend our lives.” You realize insecurity, striving, jealousy, and living in comparison will eventually define your entire life, and that is not the legacy you want. You decide your days should contain laughter and grace, strength and security.

RELATED: The Best Time of Day to Do Everything

So sure, our bodies and minds get whack, but we wouldn’t return to our twenties for all the unwrinkled skin on earth. At our age, we love better, stand taller, laugh louder. Real life has tempered our arrogance and fear, and this is the best version of us yet.

But damnit, I wish I had worn more sunscreen in my 20s.

Jen Hatmaker’s new book is called For The Love: Fighting for Grace in a World of Impossible Standards ($23, amazon.com). Read more from her at jenhatmaker.com.




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