4 Ways the Weather Makes You Crazy


The full moon is famed for everything from spookiness to magic to downright insanity. (Ever wonder where the term “lunatic” came from?) But new French research suggests it may not be all folklore: Fewer E.R. visits for anxiety disorders occur in the last lunar quarter—when only the left side of the moon is visible in the Northern Hemisphere.

Unsurprisingly, researchers don’t have a concrete answer for the connection (besides the fact that a million other factors could be at play). But they’re not the only ones who have made crazy connections between the weather and the world around us. Here are three other strange astrological or meteorological findings that we couldn’t help but share. Just believe them at your own risk.

Score Big During the New Moon
Need to make a quick buck? Forget a financial advisor—just invest your money toward the end of the month during the new moon! According to research in the Harvard Business Review, your annualized daily returns—how much you made each day extrapolated out to a year—are up to eight times greater when you invest on a new moon instead of a full one. Even freakier: The results have held across stock markets in all but one of the world’s 25 most industrialized countries (Norway)—in some cases up to 100 years. Study authors speculate people become more pessimistic and risk averse around the full moon, leading to a weaker stock market. The better plan: Invest when you’re happy. Harvard research has shown that feeling down can result in raking in 60 percent less than when you’re happy.

Watch Your Back in the Summer
Do criminals enjoy an ice cream cone during the hot summer months? According to researchers at the University of Pittsburgh, both a city’s crime rates and ice cream consumption peak during warmer periods. But the ice cream shops aren’t harboring thieves—it’s the weather that’s to blame. Assaults more than triple between 0-degree and 80-degree temperatures, researchers say. Summer breeds crime more so than a frigid winter: more people are outside, people often leave their homes unattended, and you’re more likely to bring easily stolen items like bikes outdoors.

Blame Stormy Weather for Your Mood
Russian scientists report that solar storms may be behind your mood swings. The researchers looked at solar activity records dating between 1948 and 1997 and found stormy periods matched up with the number of suicides in a Northern Russian town throughout that period. And researchers in the field will tell you Russians aren’t the only ones suffering: A South African study showed a 34 percent increase in the number of hospital admissions for depression in the second week after large solar storms. So if you’re sick of blaming your bad mood on work, friends, or your husband’s complaining, you could always side with the researchers and blame your pineal gland, which releases melatonin and acts as your body’s internal clock. It’s sensitive to magnetic fields and thrown off by solar storms!

Image: Stockbyte/Thinkstock

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The Nighttime Habit That Makes You Depressed

You probably know that light from your TV or computer can keep you awake. But new research suggests that exposure to bright lights at night can make you depressed and forgetful, even if it doesn’t impact your sleep patterns, according to a new study published in the journal Nature.

Researchers exposed rodents to alternating periods of light and dark for 14 days. Then, researchers tested the mice for behavioral and hormonal signs of depression and brain functioning. The altered-light cycle caused a spike in the stress hormone cortisol, which led to depression-like symptoms, delayed learning, and adverse effects on the rodents’ memory—even though the mice got sufficient sleep throughout the experiment.

Researchers have long known that altered cycles of bright light exposure (i.e., little natural light during the day, and artificial light from your laptop or TV at night) can affect sleep patterns, and that sleep deprivation can cause depression. “What shocked me was that you could get a depression-like effect without sleep deprivation or circadian-rhythm change,” says Samer Hattar, Ph.D., a biology professor at the Krieger School of Arts and Sciences at Johns Hopkins University.

According to Hattar, because both mice and humans perceive light using the same type of optical photoreceptors, it’s possible that the study findings could apply to humans, too. Meaning: Getting too much light after the sun sets, but before you go to sleep, could be putting a damper on your mood, mind, and behavior–even if you’re sleeping like a baby.

Ideally, you should get as much light as possible when the sun is out, and shut out all light sources when the sun goes down. Of course, that’s not always realistic, particularly in the winter when the sun sometimes sets before 5 p.m. Luckily, you don’t have to eliminate all light sources to sidestep adverse effects. Instead, dim the depressing effects of light after dark with these tips:

Take a lunch break. Exposure to higher intensity, natural light during the daytime will activate your photoreceptors to reinforce your intrinsic light cycle. Even shaded areas will provide some natural sunlight, which will have a positive impact, says Hattar. While longer exposure time is better, aim to escape from your office for at least a fifteen-minute mid-day walk around the block every day.

Ditch the dark sunglasses. Shades with light-colored lenses will help let the light into your photoreceptors when you step outside when the sun’s still shining.

Power down. “At night our vision is more sensitive,” says Hattar, who recommends candlelight as a less-harsh alternative to artificial light. While candles might set the mood for a romantic meal, they won’t be much help when you need to navigate the kitchen, or do other after-dark tasks. Instead, turn off any lights and devices you don’t really need to see after night fall: Switch off harsh overhead lights while watching TV, and opt for lamp light or diffused task lighting pointed away from you when you do need to see.

Opt for red or brown lampshades. Diffuse artificial lights with a lampshade in a warm color to prevent exposure to the bulb’s bluish glow. Our eyes are less sensitive to red light than blue, which reduces the sleep hormone melatonin, according to 2010 study published in the International Journal of Endocrinology.

Dim your device. Fifty percent of workers read or respond to work emails from bed, according to a 2012 poll by Good Technology, a Sunnyvale, Calif., mobile-security software company. To minimize adverse effects if you’re on call after dark, read your iPad, iPhone, or computer screen in the dark, and reduce its brightness by half. Then hold it as far away from your face as you can while still being able to read.  

photo: Photo.com/Thinkstock

 

More from WH:
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The Trait That Makes You Happier

 

how to be happy: piggy bank

Quit looking for happiness in here

Science has found the key to happiness—and it’s not a big, fat paycheck. Instead, making a good, respectable name for yourself leads to the most satisfaction, according to a new study in Psychological Science.

Researchers surveyed 80 college students on their happiness levels, then calculated the students’ levels of “respect” through peer ratings, and how many leadership positions the students held. And after researchers also asked the students about income, the old saying held true: Money didn’t make them happy—respect did.

You can adjust to financial fluctuations, say researchers, but losing the respect of others is a detriment to self-esteem, and it’s harder to re-build. So how can you be the person everyone looks up to? Here’s how some big—and certainly well-respected—names made it to the very top.

Make It a Two-Way Street
Donald Trump, chairman and president of The Trump Organization
For The Donald, respect works both ways: “Acknowledge someone with respect, and it’s much more likely they will respect you,” he says. Seems easy enough, but when it comes to workplace politics, it’s hard to lose sight of the big picture.

Steal Trump’s trick: Be honest—and be open to others’ honesty. “It includes being blunt at times, but I think it’s appreciated,” says the host of The Apprentice. Plus, employers see better performance from employees when they treat team members with honesty and respect, finds research from North Carolina State University.

Communication Is Key
Maria Rodale, CEO and chairman of Rodale, Inc.
She’s the chairman and CEO of the largest independent publisher left in America. (And our boss!) Today, Rodale continues to work to be a trusted source of health, fitness, and wellness information. The first step to keeping your brand respectable? Believing in yourself, she says. Step two: Setting firm goals and following through.

“You can never demand respect, but you earn it by being clear and firm with your expectations.” And she’s on to something. Communication is one of the most important things in the workplace, according to a study by Missouri State University. A newsletter, bulletin board, or weekly face-to-face meeting to discuss goals and progress mean a lot in the long run.

Remember Your Roots
John Mackey, co-CEO of Whole Foods Market
Instead of hyperfocusing on other people, look to yourself, says this supermarket guru, who is now one of the most influential advocates in the organic food movement—a hard thing to stick to in an environment where mass-produced items are the easy way out. “I think respect works the other way around,” Mackey says. “Remaining true to my purpose and values has had the unintended consequence of usually getting and keeping the respect of others.”

Makes sense: Masking your true identity, or being who you think others want you to be, leads to lower job satisfaction, says a study published in Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology.

photo: iStockphoto/Thinkstock

 
More from WH:
Meaning is the New Money
How to Tell if Your Boss Likes You
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The Dressing That Makes Your Salad Healthier

Salad is right up there with diamonds on a girl’s list of BFFs. But drizzling it with fat-free dressing could be drowning out your good intentions. A new Purdue University study published in Molecular Nutrition & Food Research shows that eating fat—the right kind of fat—can drastically increase how many nutrients we absorb from food.

What Can Fat Do For You?
Combining dietary fat with foods that contain certain fat-soluble vitamins and other essential nutrients help our bodies absorb those nutrients, says study co-author Shellen Goltz. Without fat, all the good stuff in lettuces, tomatoes, peppers, carrots, and other salad staples can’t get into your bloodstream and go to work warding off cancer, eye disease, and other ailments. A 2004 study published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that our bodies absorb essentially none of the carotenoids (a natural pigment and potent antioxidant found in vibrant-colored veggies) we eat when we don’t wash it down with fat. So while our muffin tops may not need calorie-rich, fat-laden dressings, the rest of our bodies do. The question is: How much?

When to Say When
The Purdue University study found that people who ate salads dressed with as little as 3 grams (a little less than a teaspoon) of monounsaturated fat (the good kind that’s found in food sources such as olive oil and nuts) absorbed just as many nutrients from their food as those whose dressing had more fat. Even better, far smaller amounts of monounsaturated fats were required to boost nutrient absorption, compared with all other kinds of fat (including polyunsaturated fat, the kind found in fish oil).

Keeping all this in mind, here are three ways to get more out of your next visit to the salad bar:

Use full-fat dressing. Just make sure it’s monounsaturated fat. Scan the ingredients label for canola, vegetable, sunflower, or olive oil. Just one teaspoon of any of these will replicate the nutrient absorption that occurred in the Purdue study, at a cost of only around 40 calories.

OR Toss in avocado, nuts, or olives. These foods contain the same kind of monounsaturated fats that promote absorption, says Goltz.

OR Hold the dressing now, indulge in dessert later. Although you’ll absorb the most nutrients from food by eating fat with your meal, you can achieve the same result (to a lesser degree) by having a high-fat meal–or dessert–later in the day. So if you’d prefer to put a cap on the condiments and savor something sweet instead, choose a meal-ender made with monounsaturated fat, such as walnut shortbread, orange-olive-oil cake with fresh berries, or avocado ice cream.)

photo: iStockphoto/Thinkstock

More from WH:
Build a Better Salad
Salad Dressing Recipes
Salad: Low-Calorie Recipes

Take control of your appetite! The Belly Melt Diet is designed to keep hunger hormones in control. Buy the book!

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The Lowest-Cal Dressing That Makes Your Salad Healthier

Salad is right up there with diamonds on a girl’s list of BFFs. But drizzling it with fat-free dressing could be drowning out your good intentions. A new Purdue University study shows that eating fat— the right kind of fat—can drastically increase how many nutrients we absorb from food.

What Can Fat Do For You?

Dietary fat helps our bodies absorb certain fat-soluble vitamins and phytochemicals, says study co-author Shellen Goltz. Without fat, all the good stuff in lettuces, tomatoes, peppers, carrots, and other salad staples can’t get into your bloodstream and go to work warding off cancer, eye disease, and other ailments. A 2004 study published in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that our bodies absorb essentially none of the carotenoids (health-boosting compounds found in fruits and veggies) we eat when we don’t wash it down with fat. So while our muffin tops may not need calorie-rich, fat-laden dressings, the rest of our bodies do. The question is: How much?

When to Say When

The Purdue University study found that people who ate salads dressed with as little as 3 grams (about half a teaspoon) of monounsaturated fat (the good kind that’s found in food sources such as olive oil and nuts) absorbed just as many nutrients from their food as those whose dressing had more fat. Even better, far smaller amounts of monounsaturated fats were required to boost nutrient absorption, compared with all other kinds of fat (including polyunsaturated fat, the kind found in fish oil).

Keeping all this in mind, here are three ways to get more out of your next visit to the salad bar:

Use full-fat dressing. Just make sure it’s monounsaturated fat. Scan the ingredients label for canola, vegetable, sunflower, or olive oil. Just one teaspoon of any of these will replicate the nutrient absorption that occurred in the Purdue study, at a cost of only around 40 calories.

OR Toss in avocado, nuts, or olives. These foods contain the same kind of monounsaturated fats that promote absorption, says Goltz.

OR Hold the dressing now, indulge in dessert later. Although you’ll absorb the most nutrients from food by eating fat with your meal, you can achieve the same result (to a lesser degree) by having a high-fat meal–or dessert–later in the day. So if you’d prefer to put a cap on the condiments and savor something sweet instead, choose a meal-ender made with monounsaturated fat, such as walnut shortbread, orange-olive-oil cake with fresh berries, or avocado ice cream.)

photo: iStockphoto/Thinkstock

More from WH:
Build a Better Salad
Salad Dressing Recipes
Salad: Low-Calorie Recipes

Take control of your appetite! The Belly Melt Diet is designed to keep hunger hormones in control. Buy the book!

javahut healthy feed