Much like contemplating death can neutralize the fear of it, it can help to acclimate yourself to the idea of losing professional skills before it happens.
You have shared a post that offers payment for clicks.
To receive credit and payment, please sign in.
Learn more about paid sharing
sign in
by signing in you agree to the terms of use
create your account
I just want to read stuff
Awesome. Browse pages and subscribe to the ones you like.
I want to post and earn money
Create a page about something you're passionate about and post links to articles, stories and more. Trunqd is 100% free to use, and we will pay you 80% of all ad revenue on your pages. It takes less than 60 seconds to sign in and create your first post.
I want to advertise
You can create an ad on any page within seconds.
sign in with facebook
If you prefer to sign in with email, click here.
create new subaccount
Much like contemplating death can neutralize the fear of it, it can help to acclimate yourself to the idea of losing professional skills before it happens.
A pandemic puppy can increase your well-being—if you choose one for the right reasons.
“Without this hike … it would have been one of those college friendships where you get together and talk about the old days.”
What can hunter-gatherer societies teach us about work, time, and happiness?
New York’s cemeteries have overflowed before. In the 1850s, the people filling the cemetery were not all dead. Throughout the hot days of summer, New Yorkers flocked to Brooklyn’s sprawling Green-Wood Cemetery in order to breathe and move. The city’s population had increased fivefold in five decades, and people needed a place to escape from their tiny homes. Despite warnings to disperse, people continued picnicking among the mausoleums. But instead of punishing the cemetery-goers, city officials took a different approach. To accommodate the demand, they built a park a few blocks away. It would come to be one of the most effective public-health measures in the city’s history. For the past 150 years, Prospect Park has occupied more than 500 acres in the heart of Brooklyn. Just within the perimeter stretches a wide road that’s closed to traffic, divided in half for bikes and pedestrians. It’s more than three miles around. In the center of America’s largest and densest city, you can run as far as you like, surrounded by trees, without crossing a single street or seeing a single car.