How Garbo Learned to Stand on Her Head
By MAUREEN DOWD
NYT
WASHINGTON
SOMETIMES it feels as though I spend half my time working and the other half trying to ameliorate the strain of working.
Ever since one particularly clenched day of columnizing years ago, when I found myself curled up on the floor of my house davening, I’ve tried various remedies for the ravages of stress: better nutrition, caramels, gym, green tea Popsicles, kavakava, kale, kombucha, cupcakes, chocolate, chardonnay — sometimes in concurrent combinations.
The one that works best is yoga.
So I was intrigued to open my mail on Friday and find the galley of an upcoming book by the Times science writer William Broad, who made his name reporting about space weapons and biological warfare, on “The Science of Yoga: The Myths and the Rewards.”
(More here.)
NYT
WASHINGTON
SOMETIMES it feels as though I spend half my time working and the other half trying to ameliorate the strain of working.
Ever since one particularly clenched day of columnizing years ago, when I found myself curled up on the floor of my house davening, I’ve tried various remedies for the ravages of stress: better nutrition, caramels, gym, green tea Popsicles, kavakava, kale, kombucha, cupcakes, chocolate, chardonnay — sometimes in concurrent combinations.
The one that works best is yoga.
So I was intrigued to open my mail on Friday and find the galley of an upcoming book by the Times science writer William Broad, who made his name reporting about space weapons and biological warfare, on “The Science of Yoga: The Myths and the Rewards.”
(More here.)
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home