OurChemist

Our Chemist – Health

Main menu

Skip to primary content
Skip to secondary content
  • Health & Wellbeing
  • Pregnancy
  • Parenting
  • Fitness
  • Food
  • Depression
  • Disability

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

I do not need a £100 hairbrush. So why have I spent so long fantasising about one?

I think it’s my way of avoiding my feelings – and that whatever they are, I’d be better off facing up to them

‘Life is brutal. Running helps’: the 17-year-old who faced despair – and ran the length of Britain

Marcus Skeet has dealt with a lot: diabetes, anxiety, depression, OCD and the pressures of being a young carer. A few years ago, he reached his lowest point. Then he began working towards an extraordinary goal

Terrible things happen in life – but it is possible to recover from them

We go to all sorts of lengths, often unconsciously, to hide from what has hurt us. But only by attuning to pain can we hope to heal

The one change that worked: I stood up to my inner critic and I’ve never looked back

In my teenage years I had an eating disorder and a voice in my head criticised everything I did. But then I took control

A moment that changed me: I went to a death cafe – and learned how to live a much happier life

I felt peace flood over me as I realised I no longer needed to seek validation from others. Rather than saying yes to everything, I became more open, present and patient

The one change that worked: meditation cured my insomnia – and transformed my relationships

The practice that helped me to sleep also gave me the clarity to end my marriage, and to begin dating again

Meet the members of the Dull Men’s Club: ‘Some of them would bore the ears off you’

An international club where dull people meet online to share the tedium of everyday lives is immensely popular. But for one man it’s a place of poignant connection

Cancer experts warn of coffee enemas and juice diets amid rise in misinformation

Oncologists say patients rejecting proven treatments are dying needlessly because of increase in online ‘cures’

Therapy isn’t about life hacks. The best solutions are simpler – and more complex

What we want is quick, clever fixes. What we need is quite different: the ability to tolerate intolerable feelings, to sustainably change and grow

I found myself Googling: can brain cancer cause hiccups? How I fell into a hypochondriac rabbit hole

Begging doctors for tests, I worried that I was missing something and heading for an early death. Would understanding the roots of my health anxiety lead me to a cure?

Post navigation

← Older posts
Newer posts →

Tags

  • Beauty
  • Books
  • Business
  • Cancer
  • Childbirth
  • Children
  • Culture
  • Education
  • Environment
  • Family
  • Fitness
  • Food
  • Health
  • Health & wellbeing
  • Health, mind and body
  • Health, mind and body books
  • Health and fitness holidays
  • Health policy
  • Higher education
  • Life and style
  • Media
  • Medical research
  • Mental health
  • Money
  • NHS
  • Nutrition
  • Obesity
  • Parents and parenting
  • Politics
  • Pregnancy
  • Psychology
  • Research
  • Science
  • Sex
  • Sexual health
  • Sleep
  • Society
  • Sport
  • Technology
  • Travel
  • UK news
  • US news
  • Women
  • Work & careers
  • World news
  • The best UK Christmas gifts for dads (that aren’t whisky or novelty socks)
  • Death of Irish mother in ‘free birth’ reveals how poor maternity care is pushing women towards extreme influencers
  • It’s entirely reasonable to be in awe of surgeons – but patients need someone they can talk to
  • Magazine Dreams review – powerful bodybuilding drama dogged by star Jonathan Majors’ assault conviction
  • Victoria could become first Australian state to ban unnecessary surgery on intersex children
  • Is it true that … a glass of wine a day is good for your heart?
  • Reciting the names of the dead: how Australia’s response to HIV/Aids was emotionally – and politically – powerful
  • If toxic humility is a thing, I definitely have it. But perhaps there’s another way
  • Does ‘laziness’ start in the brain?
  • Failure to diagnose treatable male infertility leading to unnecessary IVF, experts say
  • I want to become a single mum, but feel envious of peers with partners
  • ‘I tried to capture her inner world – but couldn’t’: Tom de Freston on painting his wife pregnant and nude
  • I got an epidural for all three of my births – none of them worked as expected
  • Does methylene blue really have wellness benefits or will it just leave you with the blues?
  • Two-sip martinis – and IV infusion drips: Soho House’s CEO on how wellness replaced hedonism
  • NHS directed pregnant women to controversial Free Birth Society via charity
  • Rage rooms: demand is surging – and 90% of customers are women
  • The one change that worked: I was trembling with anxiety when I found a fun, free way to get calm
  • Monday briefing: What a new Guardian investigation reveals about a group ‘radicalising’ women into unassisted birth
  • The 36 best gift ideas for US teens in 2025 – picked by actual teens
  • The loneliness fix: I wanted to find new friends in my 30s – and it was easier than I imagined
  • Five key findings from our investigation into the Free Birth Society
  • Being labelled a Highly Sensitive Person was validating and empowering – until it wasn’t
  • The 163 best holiday gift ideas for 2025, vetted by the Guardian US staff
  • My schoolmates mocked me for being a UPF-free, ‘weird lunchbox’ kid. Turns out my mum was right all along
  • Influencers made millions pushing ‘wild’ births – now the Free Birth Society is linked to baby deaths around the world
  • The 12 best US gifts for the fitness fan in your life, vetted by a CrossFit coach
  • She was pregnant and addicted to fentanyl. Getting to keep her baby saved them both
  • Hold an ice cube – and shake like a dog: therapists on 16 simple, surprising ways to beat stress
  • Welcome to Trump’s America! A place where people can’t afford to call an ambulance
  • Wednesday briefing: Why strangulation during sex has become so common among teenagers
  • ‘I knew I was starting to have a seizure’: women describe lasting effects of being ‘choked’ during sex
  • Nearly half of sexually active young people in UK have experienced strangulation, study shows
  • Stephen Dawson obituary
  • The one change that worked: I had Sad and felt desperate – until a scientist gave me some priceless advice
  • Is it true that … you burn more fat by working out on an empty stomach?
  • The 10 best shower curtains, including plastic-free options
  • Is there a dark side to gratitude?
  • After I burned out, physics helped me understand what had happened to me – and to move on
  • The best self-care gifts in the UK for Christmas, from cosy PJs to massagers
  • I tried 10 laundry baskets to find the best hamper in the US – these are my favorites after at-home testing
  • I thought there was something wrong with my body – until I shared a shower with 50 strangers
  • Pregnancy after loss has shown me that love doesn’t end – it just changes shape
  • Peanut allergies have plummeted among US kids since 2017 – what happened?
  • Recharging station: can at-home mats provide the same benefits as PEMF therapy?
  • The perplexing rise of protein shakes: how a ‘meaty sludge’ became a billion-dollar industry
  • Which travel pillow gets the high score? I found out at the amusement arcade
  • The one change that worked: I was burned out and stressed – then I found a steamy solution
  • Why do people love spicy food – even when it hurts to eat it?
  • Is it true that … the harder you work out, the more you sweat?

Contact www.ourchemist.com   Terms of Use