feature
Longevity featured post, a Longevity Media favorite.
Date Day And Night
We have some fun local events that we have only recently started attending, because of our now regular date night. We went to see Georgette Jones, and she was great. She sang like her mother and sang songs by both her mother and father.
By Denise E Lindquist3 months ago in Longevity
Concussion Party
Forgive me for everything I am about to write. I have a concussion. Truly, genuinely. I fell, rather spectacularly, down a medieval staircase. It wasn’t actually the clumsiest thing I did that day, but regardless, it had an equally spectacular impact, literally, on the back of my head. It was quite a shock when the headache hadn't faded 3 days later, and my wit with friends seemed to be lagging by a full minute delay.
By Kirstyn Brook4 months ago in Longevity
Whispers of the Heart**
Love rarely announces its arrival. It does not enter like a storm or thunderclap. Instead, it slips into one’s life the way dawn touches the horizon—softly, steadily, almost secretively. One moment the heart is calm, the next it begins to flutter in ways it cannot explain. This mysterious, delicate unfolding is what makes love one of the most enchanting experiences of the human soul.
By The Insight Ledger 4 months ago in Longevity
The Unholy And Diabolical Truth Of The Western Medicine Establishment And Their Pseudoscientific Approach
If there is one thing that makes me angry in life... It is when people profit from the suffering of others... And purposefully do everything in their power to prevent real solutions from seeing the light of day.
By Dr. Cody Dakota Wooten, DFM, DHM, DAS (hc)4 months ago in Longevity
The Breath Remembers: Returning to What Never Left
It’s strange how easy it is to forget something that never stops happening. Breath — the most constant companion of our lives — moves quietly beneath the noise of thought, steady and patient, asking nothing from us except permission to be felt. It keeps us alive, yes, but also reminds us, in its subtle way, of what it means to belong to the present moment.
By Jonse Grade4 months ago in Longevity
The Slow Art of Returning: Coming Back to This Moment
We often imagine awakening as a single, luminous moment — a great unveiling, a sudden clarity that changes everything. But for most of us, the real practice is quieter, humbler. It’s the slow art of returning — again and again, breath after breath, to the simplicity of now.
By Garold One4 months ago in Longevity
The Quiet Work of Trust: Surrender in Everyday Living
Trust has never come easily to me. I like to know where I’m going, to map the path before taking a step. There’s a comfort in control — or at least in the illusion of it. But life, patient as it is, keeps offering the same lesson in different forms: every time I think I’m steering, something larger reminds me that the current has its own direction.
By Black Mark4 months ago in Longevity
Make November a Month to Remember: Healing Pain Harvesting Pleasure
6:30 am this morning, I grabbed my coffee and sat on my balcony, my daily routine. Meditation after vivid dreams centered on the number 5 and a window view of a deciduous yellow birch, revealed this week's spiritual message about pain and its opposite, pleasure. Guided by nature and the divine, "Make November a month to remember" came to me with harvest-specific downloads. Personally related events inspire today's huddle, but the message is deeper and not limited to only me.
By Marilyn Glover4 months ago in Longevity










