The Lighter Side
The Lighter Side

The Lighter Side

@thelighterside

7 legit, expert-backed reasons to count travel as a healthy habit
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7 legit, expert-backed reasons to count travel as a healthy habit

Travel is often viewed as an indulgence or a luxury, one of life’s “extras” that make life more enjoyable. But what if travel were beneficial enough to be considered a healthy habit, right alongside eating well, exercising, and getting enough sleep? Getting away from home is certainly not a necessity for survival (though avid travelers may argue otherwise). But travel offers a range of mental, emotional, social, and physical health benefits that might shift how we see it. If you’re on the fence about taking the trip or trying to justify it to yourself, we talked to some health experts to back you up. Take the trip. It’s good for you. Photo credit: Canva The mental health benefits of travel A boost in neuroplasticity Dr. MaryEllen Eller, a board-certified psychiatrist with Radial Health, tells Upworthy that being in a new environment and exploring new things reinforces our sense of self-efficacy and builds our confidence. It also affects our brains. “The process of going to new places and seeing new things improves our brain’s ability to pay attention to the things that matter most,” she said. “The process of novelty and exploring new experiences increases the release of dopamine and helps boost neuroplasticity.” Getting away from stuck patterns and mental chatter “What I see consistently in my work is that travel does something therapy alone sometimes can’t,” said Emily Woods, a licensed psychotherapist and co-owner of Pure Direction. “It physically removes people from the environments and routines that reinforce their stuck patterns. The nervous system responds to novelty, and getting out of a familiar context can interrupt anxiety loops, low-grade depression, and the kind of emotional numbness that creeps in when life feels too predictable.” Woods tells Upworthy that navigating a new place can also help quiet the “mental chatter” that often runs in the background of our minds. @itsahmadtalks Hear your desires for once. ♬ original sound – AhmadTalks The social health benefits of travel Strengthening relationships Anyone who’s been on a family trip might question whether it had a positive or negative effect on their relationships. Travel often comes with challenges that can test our patience with one another. However, clinical counselor supervisor and founder of Therapy Trainings, Matt Grammer, LPCC-S, tells Upworthy that the shared experiences and uninterrupted connections that travel facilitates help strengthen relationships. Additionally, a University of Massachusetts Amherst literature review on the benefits of travel for families and relationships found that the body of existing studies “showed travel as a means to improve communications within a relationship, reduce the possibility of divorce, strengthen lifelong family bonds and increase a sense of well-being in adults and children.” Travel helps build shared memories with others, which in itself helps us feel more connected. We’ve started talking about a possible family trip to Antarctica.It would be the last continent for us, which feels surreal even typing.Travel has always been something we’ve prioritized as a family because it slows us down and gives us shared memories we wouldn’t otherwise… pic.twitter.com/4KjJhhpHCG— Alan Stalcup | CRE Investor (@alan_stalcup) March 8, 2026 Boosting communication skills “Travel even changes how people communicate,” Grammer told Upworthy. “Travel provides the opportunity for people to communicate in a new, refreshing, and purposeful way, away from the distractions and habits of daily life.” Going someplace new also forces us to interact with new people. If we travel far enough, we may have to communicate with people who speak a different language as well. “Even attempting to speak a new language can improve your communication skills and show respect to locals,” Dr. Ravi Gill, a health psychologist, told The Travel Psychologist. “If communication causes some nerves, perhaps explore communication through body language and learn to express yourself without words.” Conversations with your travel companions and strangers alike can help you feel more connected to others, which is key to health and longevity. The physical health benefits of travel Doing the basics better Nutrition, exercise, and sleep are the fundamental building blocks of physical health, and travel can help us with all three. “Physically, many trips allow us to prioritize sleep, nutrition, and in some cases, movement, all of which support energy regulation and overall health,” Erin Clifford, a licensed professional counselor and author of Wellness Reimagined: A Holistic Approach to Health, Happiness, and Harmony, told Upworthy. “When we sleep and eat better, we often experience improvements in focus, resilience, and sustained performance.” Grammer agrees that travel tends to inspire healthy behaviors. “People sleep differently and rest, engage in activities that get them moving, and spend more time outdoors,” he said. @kirstenalexisadventures Did you know that hiking can improve your mood, cardiovascular fitness, endurance, and strength? That’s right! It’s more than good views and vibes. Here are some of the many benefits: It can boost your mental and physical well-being. It’s a great way to decrease stress! It can improve your cardiovascular health, coordination, endurance, strength, and balance. It can help keep your bones and joints healthy and strong. It can help regulate your sleep cycle. And, you can do this into your older age! That’s why I am so motivated to train to be strong for my future, so I can enjoy activities like this. Why do you hike? What benefits do you see? #yosemite #yosemitenationalpark #upperyosemitefalls #hikingadventures #outdoorfitness ♬ April Showers – ProleteR Stress reduction Not all travel is created equal when it comes to physical health, of course. Some trips naturally increase your daily step count and have you eating better than you do at home. But if your travels mostly involve lounging around and binging on heavy foods, you may not experience all the potential benefits. However, stress reduction has its own health benefits. Clifford says certain kinds of travel can maximize health benefits: “Many of my clients are seeking experiences that help them reset their nervous systems, improve sleep and create space for reflection. Destinations that offer a blend of structure and flexibility are the best for mental and physical well-being, long after the trip is over. When places offer things like guided movement, mindfulness practices, access to nature and opportunities to unplug, people tend to have the best outcomes and get the most of those mental and physical benefits.” Travel brings your awareness and attention to the present Most of the experts we talked to mentioned that travel helps us live in the now and be mindful of the present moment. Stephanie Grunewald, PhD, a former clinical psychologist who focuses on holistic, nature-based practices, expands on that idea: “Travel is good for you, but not for the reason most people think. At home, your brain runs on autopilot. You stop noticing the route to work, the taste of your morning tea, and the sounds of your own backyard. Your senses go quiet because nothing is new. Travel reverses that. In an unfamiliar place, your brain has to pay attention again. You notice the little details: the smell of the air and the texture of the ground beneath your feet. That sensory re-engagement is the actual mechanism behind why people feel more alive when they travel. Travel helps you live in the moment. Photo credit: Canva There’s science behind this. Studies on travelers show measurable increases in openness and a greater willingness to change long-held patterns. There’s also a growing body of research showing that time in nature lowers cortisol and calms the stress response. This happens because time outdoors and in novel surroundings effortlessly capture your attention, so your brain isn’t burning energy to stay focused. A landscape you’ve never seen before captures your attention without any conscious effort on your part. While I love and encourage travel, the healthy habit isn’t traveling more. It’s learning to bring that same attention home… to your garden, your morning walk, to ten minutes outside every day. Travel reminds you what it feels like to be awake to your surroundings. The real health benefit is refusing to lose that the moment you unpack.” There you go. If you needed an excuse to say yes to the trip, you now have plenty of health reasons to go for it guilt-free. The post 7 legit, expert-backed reasons to count travel as a healthy habit appeared first on Upworthy.

A lost 1787 letter shows George Washington short on cash months before the Convention
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A lost 1787 letter shows George Washington short on cash months before the Convention

It turns out that George Washington gracing the dollar bill may be a small, historical irony. In the spring of 1787, the man whose face is on the dollar was conspicuously short on them. In 2023, the Raab Collection announced a letter that had sat unknown to scholars for more than two centuries. It shows Washington in a distinctly un-mythic moment: land-rich, cash-poor, and trying to fix the problem by selling off a piece of the frontier. In February 2023, CNN reported the letter is dated March 1787, a couple of months before Washington reluctantly agreed to preside over the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia. He wanted to be a private citizen at Mount Vernon, tending a long-neglected estate. What complicated that wish was money. He had spent years away commanding the Continental Army, and his plantation’s finances had eroded badly in his absence. View this post on Instagram Credit instead of cash His solution was a 1,644-acre tract along the Youghiogheny River in western Pennsylvania, known as Washington’s Bottom. The would-be buyer was Israel Shreve, a New Jersey farmer who had served under him as a colonel at Valley Forge. Shreve wanted the land but hoped to pay with military certificates, a form of credit. Washington was not interested in credit. “The land you mention is for sale, & I wish it was convenient for me to accommodate you with it for military certificates; but to raise money is the only inducement I have to sell it,” Washington wrote, adding that certificates, “if they cannot be converted into cash, will not answer my purpose.” The detail that makes the letter land is the gap between the man and the myth. According to WHYY, Joseph Stoltz of the George Washington Presidential Library explained that Mount Vernon’s agricultural business had declined while Washington was off winning the war, leaving the general in a serious cash hole. Nathan Raab, president of the Raab Collection, put it more plainly. Washington “was in a situation where he was helping family, entertaining people at his home, and he needed money,” Raab said. “It shows him having the kinds of problems that anybody might have, which is, ‘I need cash.'” Washington’s debt didn’t just go away There is a harder edge to the picture that the “relatable money problems” framing tends to skip. Washington at times controlled as many as 70,000 acres of land, and the wealth he did have was built and maintained by enslaved people, more than 300 of whom lived at Mount Vernon by the end of his life. His was not experiencing poverty in any meaningful sense. It was illiquidity, the particular bind of the landed gentry whose fortunes were locked up in acreage and crops rather than coin. The letter is a window into that structural problem as much as into one man’s wallet. Letter from George Washington to Israel Shreve concerning Shreve’s delinquent bond payments to Washington. Photo credit: George Washington Presidential Library at Mount Vernon. It also helps explain why a wealthy planter would hesitate at a summons to Philadelphia. The financial strain was real, the estate needed attention, and selling distant land for cash was a slow, uncertain business. Washington went to the Convention anyway, chaired it, and two years later became the first president. His money troubles followed him into office. Benjamin Huggins of the University of Virginia’s Washington Papers project called it a genuine discovery, a small but real addition to the record of a man we mostly remember in marble. There’s one more detail that the years quietly arranged. Washington eventually did sell Shreve the full 1,644 acres, closing the deal during his second term as president, and this time Shreve paid in cash. The two men, the cash-strapped general and the colonel who finally bought his land, died on the same day: December 14, 1799. The post A lost 1787 letter shows George Washington short on cash months before the Convention appeared first on Upworthy.

10 Upbeat Songs For Your Summer Road Trip
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10 Upbeat Songs For Your Summer Road Trip

Taking a summer road trip brings unexpected adventures and memories you won’t soon forget, whether they include eating the world’s largest piece of cherry pie or taking a shortcut that brings you to a dead end.

High School Throws Their 90-Year-Old Well-Loved Janitor a Birthday Party
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High School Throws Their 90-Year-Old Well-Loved Janitor a Birthday Party

Students and staff at a high school came together to celebrate their beloved 90-year-old janitor with a surprise birthday party. The heartfelt event honored his years of dedication and the positive impact he has made on the school community.

10 Upbeat Songs For Your Summer Road Trip
Favicon 
www.godtube.com

10 Upbeat Songs For Your Summer Road Trip

Taking a summer road trip brings unexpected adventures and memories you won’t soon forget, whether they include eating the world’s largest piece of cherry pie or taking a shortcut that brings you to a dead end.