Dr. Mark Rowe
9.9K posts

Dr. Mark Rowe
@DrMarkRowe
I encourage & support people to live their best lives through optimising wellbeing, vitality & health span. Podcast: In the Doctors Chair 🪑
Waterford, Ireland Katılım Eylül 2012
503 Takip Edilen29K Takipçiler
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A commercial jet takes off just as the full Moon rises behind the runway near Los Angeles, California. ✈️🌕
Photographed from miles away with a super-telephoto lens, the compressed perspective makes the Moon appear enormous behind the aircraft — a striking real-world effect of long-distance photography.
The perfect alignment lasted only seconds before the jet vanished into the night sky.
A breathtaking blend of aviation, astronomy, and timing. ✨
📍Los Angeles, California

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Best of both, caring for others AND self to support an interconnected web of wellbeing.
🙏♥️🦋📘
#WorldHealthDay
All On The Board@allontheboard
It isn’t selfish to care about yourself, it’s essential. #WorldHealthDay
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NEW: NASA's Artemis II has successfully blasted off, launching toward the Moon for the first lunar voyage in 53 years.
Here is what to expect next:
- Mission is 10 total days.
- The crew will get 5000 miles from the Moon's surface.
- The crew will sleep in two four-hour periods.
- On Day 2, Orion engines will accelerate the spacecraft to escape velocity and send them toward the Moon.
- On Days 3-5, the crew will fine-tune the approach to the Moon.
- Day 6 is when the crew flies by the Moon. They will be about 250,000 miles from the Earth.
- Days 6-7, the crew will fine-tune their approach back to Earth.
- On Day 10, the crew will put on their proper suits and get ready for reentry.
- They will reenter Earth's atmosphere at 25,000 miles per hour.
- Two parachutes will slow the capsule to 17 miles per hour.
- They will splash down off the coast of San Diego, California.
Video: @GuyFieri
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@DrKristieLeong @forgedmedicine How do you distinguish fast/slow metabolisers … ? clinically based on presence/abeense ‘side fx’
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Coffee doesn’t just wake you up—it’s already fighting inflammation deep inside your body through its powerful polyphenols, especially chlorogenic acid.
But you can boost its healing power with these simple additions:
• Protein (soy or dairy) — creates stronger polyphenol binding for deeper protection
• Cinnamon — powerfully reduces inflammatory markers and calms your system
• Cocoa — crushes harmful ROS and quiets raging cytokines
• Turmeric — delivers potent curcumin that fiercely battles inflammation at the source
For maximum benefit, choose light or medium roast coffee. It best preserves those precious chlorogenic acids packed with antioxidant power.
This isn’t just another morning habit. It’s a simple, science-backed ritual that creates real physiological impact—helping your body feel stronger, calmer, and more resilient every single day.
Start tomorrow and feel the difference.
#Wellness
#HealthyLiving
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Kenny Dalglish is undoubtedly Liverpool's greatest player ever.
In 1986, as player-manager, he brought himself on away at Chelsea, scored a stunning volleyed winner, and clinched the league title.
Next-level stuff.
Imagine Klopp or Guardiola doing that to seal the Premier League 🫢
He also helped deliver 3 European Cups and 8 league titles.
That's why they call him The King. 👑
x.com/AntiqueFootbal…
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I'm not in Prague but I am taking solace from the words of Con Houlihan "I missed Italia '90. I was in Italy at the time."
#coybig
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Wild blueberries aren’t just a “healthy berry." They’re biochemical overachievers.
Wild blueberries deliver:
2× the antioxidants
72% more fiber
33% more anthocyanins
than regular ones.
They support your blood vessels and metabolism.
If you want a daily habit that moves the needle, add a half‑cup of wild blueberries to your morning routine.
Blend them, sprinkle them, freeze them. Most of all, enjoy them!
#FoodAsMedicine
#MetabolicHealth
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Former RTÉ Sport broadcaster Michael Lyster has died at the age of 71. He joined RTÉ in 1979 and was best known for presenting The Sunday Game Live for over three decades.
rte.ie/sport/football…
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A US national survey found only 3% of adults with Down syndrome had a full-time paid job, not because they can’t work, but because almost nobody will hire them.
This coffee shop is Kopi Kamu in Jakarta. 7 of its 10 employees have Down syndrome, ages 17 to 33. They take orders, brew coffee, serve customers, clean tables. One of them, a 23-year-old named Ikhlas, does latte art. The owner started the program in December 2023 after watching kids with Down syndrome brew coffee at a charity festival and thinking, wait, why don’t they have a real place to do this? Sales grew beyond what he expected.
I looked up what actually happens when companies hire people with disabilities, and the data is hard to argue with. A food company called Carolina Fine Snacks saw turnover collapse from 80% every six months to under 5%. Absenteeism dropped from 20% to under 5%. The non-disabled employees started performing better too. DuPont ran a 30-year study and found disabled employees matched or beat their peers on every metric.
Accenture studied 346 companies in 2023. Businesses leading in disability inclusion had 1.6x more revenue, 2.6x more net income, and double the economic profit of their peers. Every time someone actually runs the numbers on this, the same answer comes back.
In the US, Bitty & Beau’s Coffee, founded by two parents of kids with Down syndrome, started in 2016 with 19 workers in a 500-square-foot shop. Within six months they needed a space ten times bigger. They’re now at 18+ locations, 11 states, 450+ employees with intellectual disabilities. Profitable.
80% of people with intellectual disabilities in the US are unemployed. In Europe, only 5 to 13% of adults with Down syndrome hold regular jobs. Indonesia has roughly 300,000 people with Down syndrome. Kopi Kamu employs seven of them.
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Perhaps the best definition of happiness I’ve come across is having someone to life, something useful to do, something to be grateful for and something to look forward to.
🙏♥️🦋📘
#InternationalDayOfHappiness

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Well there can be only one Irish phrase for today 🇮🇪🇮🇪
"Lá Fhéile Pádraig sona duit" 💚
"Law Ale-yeh Pawd-rig Sunna Ditch"
"Happy Saint Patrick's day to you"
📍 Co. Waterford, Ireland ☘️
#StPatricksday #Irish #Waterford #Ireland

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This stunning image captures a near-perfect Einstein Ring—a rare gravitational lens effect—revealing a distant galaxy teeming with complex organic molecules at the dawn of cosmic history.
The galaxy in question is SPT0418-47 (also known as SPT-S J041839-4751.9), situated more than 12 billion light-years from Earth. Due to the finite speed of light, we're observing it as it appeared when the universe was less than 1.5 billion years old (roughly 10% of its current age of about 13.8 billion years).
Normally, such a remote galaxy would be far too faint to study in detail. However, nature provided an extraordinary assist: the immense gravity of a foreground galaxy (about 3 billion light-years away) warps spacetime, bending and magnifying the background light by a factor of roughly 30–35 times. When the alignment is this precise, the distorted light forms a glowing ring-shaped structure—an Einstein Ring, predicted by general relativity.
This natural telescope allowed the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) to peer deep into SPT0418-47 with exceptional clarity. Using JWST's Mid-Infrared Instrument (MIRI), astronomers detected prominent emission from polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs)—large, carbon-rich organic molecules containing dozens to hundreds of atoms, often arranged in fused rings.
On Earth, PAHs are familiar as components of soot, smoke, and smog, but in space, they form in the interstellar medium and fluoresce brightly under ultraviolet light from hot, young stars. Their detection in SPT0418-47 marks one of the earliest known instances of such complex organic chemistry, showing that the building blocks for these molecules—and potentially more intricate prebiotic structures—were already assembling surprisingly quickly after the Big Bang.
The findings highlight how rapidly galaxies could enrich their environments with heavy elements and foster diverse molecular chemistry during the universe's youth, offering clues about the chemical evolution leading toward life-friendly conditions.
[Spilker, J. S., Phadke, K. A., Aravena, M. et al. (2023). Spatial variations in aromatic hydrocarbon emission in a dust-rich galaxy. Nature, 618(7966), 708–711.
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-05998-6]

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Fun fact.
The Switzerlands largest supermarket, Migros, doesn’t sell alcohol or tobacco in stores, pays no dividends, caps profits by lowering prices if earnings exceeds 5%, is a cooperative with 2M+ members, and donates 1% of revenue to social projects, purely out of the founders moral philosophy

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