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News & Dispatches

Shorter pieces. Faster thinking. The notes that don't wait for the next essay.

Dispatch — a working note from the field, written in real time.

Finding — something from recent research worth passing on.

Note — a quick observation, a paper read, a thought half-formed.


DispatchJuly 2026 · 9 min read

Water: The Eight Glasses Are a Myth

Where the rule came from, what your body actually needs, and how to measure it without a chart on the fridge. The number was never science — it was a sentence everyone stopped reading halfway through.

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DispatchJuly 2026 · 8 min read

The 3 A.M. Charley Horse

The cramp that yanks you out of sleep is a different animal from the one that hits mid-match — and the banana fails it for a different reason. Why your calf seizes in the dark, and what actually stops it.

FindingJuly 2026 · 9 min read

Eduball: The Lesson That Refuses to Sit Down

We ask children to learn while sitting perfectly still — then wonder why their handwriting, spelling, and creativity stall. A Polish method does the opposite: it prints letters and numbers on soft balls and teaches maths, language, and writing while the body moves. The peer-reviewed evidence is harder to argue with than you'd expect.

DispatchMay 2026 · 9 min read

I Don't Have Time to Exercise (And Other Lies the Calendar Tells)

You don't need an hour. You don't need a gym. You don't even need to change clothes. The science of what actually counts — and why it counts more than you think.

DispatchMay 2026 · 7 min read

White Bread, Brown Bread, and the Math Nobody Does

Why the bread you buy might matter less than how much of it you eat — and what the price tag is actually paying for.

DispatchMay 2026 · 8 min read

Why Your Banana Won't Stop the Cramp

What's actually happening when your muscle locks up — and the strange truth about what makes it stop.

DispatchMay 2026 · 7 min read

Sugar, Honey, and Brown Sugar Walk Into a Bar

Three sweeteners, three prices, three reputations. The actual difference between them is smaller than you've been led to believe.

Some thoughts arrive fully formed. Most arrive in fragments — and the fragments are often where the real work begins.