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WebMD Health - Emotional Wellness
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WebMD Health - Trustworthy, Credible and Timely Health Information
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Change Lifestyle, Change Genes
Men with prostate cancer whose only treatment was the Ornish Diet had 500 genes -- some of them anti-cancer genes -- change for the better, a study shows.
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Massage Therapy for Stress Relief and Much More
Experts describe massage tips you can try on yourself to ease headaches, back pain, and to help you relax.
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Personality Clues for Teenagers
Teens who know their tolerance for stress can make the best choices for themselves about how much to take on. Here?s how to tell what kind of stress-personality trait you have.
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Blissing Out: 10 Relaxation Techniques To Reduce Stress On-the-Spot
If your hectic lifestyle has got you down, experts say relaxation techniques can bring you back into balance -- some in five minutes or less. Here's what to try.
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Managing Marriage and Money Problems
Experts offer WebMD tips for investing in your marriage so you can worry less about your money.
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10 Ways to Catch a Liar
Experts have 10 tips that can let you know if someone isn't telling you the whole truth.
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The Secret: Is It the Real Deal?
The Secret -- a book and DVD on the power of positive thinking -- is drawing both support and controversy.
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Why We Love Scary Movies
Horror films are scarier than ever. Why do we watch, and what do scary movies do to us?
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What to Say When a Pet Dies
How children react when a pet dies depends largely on your reactions and explanations. WebMD asked the experts to offer advice about how to help your child deal with the loss of a pet.
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Why Misery Isn't Miserly
Sad, self-focused people spend more money for the same thing than other people, a study shows.
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Unselfish Spending Boosts Happiness
Spending money on other people or charities boosts happiness more than spending it on yourself, researchers report in the journal Science.
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Treated Unfairly? Here's Why You're Sore
Research shows that being on the receiving end of fair treatment is inherently rewarding, activating the portion of the brain associated with happiness.
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Too Many Choices Exhaust The Brain
Making choices, as opposed to just thinking about options, can be mentally draining, research shows.
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Teen Stress at Home Lingers in School
A stressful situation at home can affect teenagers' performance at school for days, according to a new study.
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Robotic Dog a Hit With Lonely Seniors
Aibo, a robotic dog, cheered lonely nursing home residents as much as a living dog, say experts at St. Louis Univ. School of Medicine.
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Pretty Is as Pretty Does
How physically attractive you are to the opposite sex partly depends on what they know about your personality, a new study shows.
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Negativity May Change Your Mind
Negativity may be catching among consumers, especially among those with a personal connection, a new study shows.
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Most U.S. Adults are "Morning People"
Most U.S. adults say they're "morning people" who are at their best between 5 a.m. and noon, according to a new Gallup poll.
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Most People Happy at Work
Despite the complaining, most Americans are actually satisfied with their jobs, report University of Chicago researchers.
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Money-Minded Workers Slack on Interaction
Exposure to money has a profound psychological impact, on the one hand encouraging people to work harder and more independently, but on the other possibly causing personal relationships to suffer, according to a study.
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Meditation Swiftly Cuts Stress
Meditating for 20 minutes a day for 5 days may be all it takes for people to tame their stress response, a Chinese study shows.
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Loneliness May Affect Genes
Certain genes may be more or less active in lonely people, increasing their health risks, researchers report in Genome Biology.
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Husbands Do Less Housework
It may not come as a shock to most couples, but a new study shows that men, especially married men, do less housework than women.
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High Self-Esteem Isn't Always Healthy
A new study suggests that high self-esteem isn't necessarily healthy self-esteem because there are different types of high self-esteem.
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Happy Marriage Soothes Job Stress
Happily married wives may recover faster from a rough day at work than women in unhappy marriages, UCLA and UC Davis researchers report.
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