Monica Buck

Have a Drink
You’ve no doubt heard that moderate drinking often defined as not
more than a drink a day for women can do a body good. But did you
know that it can even make you smarter? A recent study by researchers
at Columbia University found that women who drink moderately scored
about 20 percent higher on a mental-skills assessment than women who
consumed less than one drink a week. Add that little fact to the many
studies showing that moderate drinking may help reduce the risks of
heart attack, heart disease, and stroke as well as other research
indicating a lower risk of gallstones and type 2 diabetes and it all
amounts to a pretty great excuse to imbibe. Cheers.
Talk to Yourself
That little voice in your head is actually an indication of a mind working
well. Talking to yourself helps you figure out what you’re doing and
where you’re going, says Peter Carruthers, chair of the department of
philosophy at the University of Maryland. Research has shown that children use self-talk to help themselves master new skills, and
numerous studies of adults point to the importance of inner speech whether muttered out loud or not in problem-solving and the ability to
switch quickly between different tasks.
Hide Something from Your Significant Other
“People in a couple need to have an individual identity,” says Geri Kerr, a
marriage and family therapist in Hackettstown, New Jersey. “It’s healthy
and important to have things you keep to yourself.” That said, there are
certain conditions. Whether or not you need to share the fact that you
got an e-mail from your ex, for example, depends on your response. “If
you just reply, ‘Hey, great to hear from you see you at the reunion,’ you
don’t have to say anything if you don’t want to. But if there’s a
substantive response and you begin sharing yourself, that’s something
to talk about,” says Kerr. How to decide? If you know that not telling
would cause distress between the two of you, that’s a good sign you
need to talk about it.