Episódios
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Helping you figure out all the big stuff in life: relationships, health, money, work and the world.
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As Australian society contemplates its ongoing problem with gendered violence, what are the best strategies for families, schools, and broader society to use when raising teenage boys?
And finding a job or career that matches your values, and even your passions, is the dream for many, but how do you begin to figure out what that means in practice?
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Are proposed changes to HECS-HELP and paid placements enough to stop the 'debt spiral' that some students are describing? And will they attract new students to degrees that have previously seemed unaffordable?
And Nova Weetman shares her thoughts on how we grieve when life and personal responsibilities will not go away, but also reflecting the ups and downs that any relationship inevitably goes through.
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Social prescribing is a treatment system where healthcare providers connect people with social activities in their local community to improve their mental and physical health. So how does it work? And could it be coming to a GP near you?
And what do we know for sure about how Ozempic affects fertility, and pregnancy? While it's early days, we get some helpful advice about using semaglutide and family planning.
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Is what you wear an expression of your emotions, your identity, your past, your future? And how do those clothes make you feel?
And in Ask Aunty, what to do when your poly boyfriend plays you a very personal voicemail from another person he's seeing.
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So how did a ‘by-product' of the wool industry become what historian Barbara Santich calls a 'cultural superfood' and how did the farming of this food forever alter the Australian landscape?
And Professor Rosalind Dixon looks at different models of job sharing, how it work for both businesses and employees, and whether this presents a new model for leadership.
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Professor Steven Faux shares what we know, and what we still need to know, about the symptoms, the treatment, and the policies around Long Covid.
And Bryan Washington talks about food as an act of caring and the way that our relationship with certain meals can be defined by our personal relationships.
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Helping you figure out all the big stuff in life: relationships, health, money, work and the world.
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Helping you figure out all the big stuff in life: relationships, health, money, work and the world.
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Helping you figure out all the big stuff in life: relationships, health, money, work and the world.
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Angie Chong, her mother Elizabeth Chong and daughter Tessa Duddy-Chong share their food stories and traditions, and their connection to the dim sim. Plus actor Geraldine Turner on confidence, and the evolution in formal dressing.
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