Learning how to deal with the slob...
Even if you’re not necessarily a neat freak, living with a slob isn’t fun.
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Even if you’re not necessarily a neat freak, living with a slob isn’t fun.
Dear Dr. D,
Student: A role that is rarely sold separately. As if attending school isn’t stressful enough, students also can be friends, employees, siblings, roommates and parents. Whether additional responsibilities are assigned or selected, they often yield additional stress. As a single parent to 14-month-old Talon and a family community services senior, Tina Sniegowski is no stranger to the stress caused by conflicting roles. Despite the pressure she was under while trying to find a balance in her double life, Sniegowski said she never once considered dropping out of school.
Dr. D.,
Dr. D.,
Insight Recovery
While college drinking and drug use in the media are not new concepts, there are plenty of arguments about which stereotypes give students a worse name.
To many students, the end of summer means cold weather is on the way. But it also means harvest time for farmers and gardeners, and many local food banks look at this time of year as a great opportunity to get donations.
They are in bars, gas stations, fraternities and restaurants, not to mention pretty much every corner store on and around campus.
Find a gym around East Lansing
Jessi Ruselowski has avoided the gym ever since she found herself lagging in the back of a packed jazzercise class. However, a new addition to the video game world has since allowed her to stay in shape on her own terms.
With classes beginning and more unpacking to do, the little things in life can be more annoying to deal with. Although there are plenty of tips out there about study habits, how to take notes or success strategies for exams, little issues that come up along the way might seem worse than they really are when time is limited and schedules are packed. Stress doesn’t have to overtake other priorities of everyday life. Remembering simple solutions to common problems can help take the edge off. Here are some quick fixes to life’s little stressors to keep in mind when everything else seems overwhelming.
“The past and the future do not matter; all that matters is now, this moment.” This passage from the “Peaceful Warrior” series of books — and originally attributed to Socrates — is really at the foundation of what you need to know to live a life of health and wellness here at MSU.
Cory Pitzer, an MSU studio art sophomore, said HIV isn’t constantly on his mind, but it is something he is concerned about.
The Michigan Department of Community Health released the 2008 Michigan Family Fish Consumption Guide on Thursday to educate people on safe fish consumption, but experts say the health benefits of moderate fish consumption outweigh the risks for most.
The quote from Matthew Doak should have read “A non-alcoholic person has a choice and they can stop themselves at any point.”
Prices of parking permits on campus for faculty, staff and students will rise 19 percent for next year, said Lynnette Forman, MSU parking operations manager.
Residents living in the central Michigan area now have HIV/AIDS services available on a local level after this month’s expansion of the MSU HIV/AIDS clinic.
Although many MSU students may not consider themselves smokers, MSU health experts said that when it comes to social situations, students are more likely to pick up a cigarette than they typically would.
On Friday, The Lantern, The Ohio State University’s newspaper, reported that 39 percent of Ohio State students used a condom the last time they had sex.