Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Why drinking hot coffee might be better for your body, even during the summer

 Every summer morning, the urge to down a tall glass of iced coffee right after waking up would hit me like a train. Iced coffee was not just a beverage I enjoyed; it had become a part of who I was. I'd find myself reaching for multiple glasses of ice-cold  coffee throughout the day, thinking it would help me keep cool. But for some reason, last summer, that effect didn't last as much as the unsettling restlessness I was getting from all the caffeine. It started making me jittery all over. I was left feeling dehydrated and my caffeine consumption had reached alarmingly high rates. So I cut back on the amount and returned to my trusty cup of hot coffee in summer.

Why hot coffee can feel more satisfying than iced coffee

“Hot coffee is easier to digest, supports circulation and aligns better with the body’s natural digestive fire,” says Payal Kothari, a Mumbai-based gut health nutritionist, author of The Gut and founder of GutAvatar. “Iced coffee, on the other hand, can slow digestion and constrict blood vessels, particularly in individuals with sensitive guts, bloating or sluggish metabolism.” Which explained why my beloved iced coffee didn't feel as harmless as it looked. It was cold, convenient and Instagram-friendly, but my stomach seemed to have other opinions.

We're more likely to sip hot coffee slowly, but are quick to guzzle down iced coffee. According to Luke Coutinho, an integrative lifestyle expert, this is the real challenge. “Coffee is a physiological stimulant and can irritate digestion in sensitive individuals, especially when consumed the wrong way.” Slower sips can help not only keep your gut happy, but also with high-stress levels and anxiety that some of us might experience when consuming caffeine.

How does hot coffee help us function better?

“Cold brew is usually steeped for longer and may have a higher caffeine content,” explains Coutinho. “Because it tastes smoother and less bitter, many people drink more of it without realising how much caffeine they are consuming. This can aggravate anxiety, jitters, acidity, dehydration and poor sleep in some people."

"Hot coffee tends to offer a more balanced and sustained energy release. The warmth improves blood flow and supports nervous system activation without shocking the system,” adds Kothari. “From a functional medicine lens, warm fluids signal the body to 'wake up gently,' supporting focus, clarity and metabolic efficiency, especially when consumed in the morning.”

 

How hot coffee can help cool us down

My strangest discovery, however, was that hot coffee didn’t make summer feel worse. In some ways, it made the heat feel easier to sit with. As a child, it always amazed me to see my parents drink garam chai in the intolerable Indian heat. Turns out, desis had it right.

“When we consume something hot, it leads to vasodilation of blood vessels, which is the expansion of the blood vessels and that leads to dissipation of the heat. Our skin's blood vessels dilate and heat dissipates. This is the usual way by which our body cools off in the summer,” explains Dr Prashant Makhija, neurologist at Wockhardt Hospital, Mumbai. “It sounds counterintuitive, but hot drinks can actually help regulate body temperature,” adds Nmami Agarwal, a Delhi-based nutritionist and founder of Nmami Life. “Warm beverages trigger a mild sweating response, which promotes natural cooling as sweat evaporates.”

Of course, this is not a breakup letter to iced coffee. It's more of a boundary-setting exercise. Iced coffee isn't inherently bad, as per Coutinho. “Many iced coffees today are loaded with sugar, syrups, whipped cream, artificial sweeteners and processes creamers. A sugar loaded iced coffee behaves very differently from a simple brewed coffee. That combination can affect blood sugar balance, gut health, inflammation, appetite and energy levels,” he elaborates.

“A simple iced coffee without sugar load or additives can absolutely be part of a balanced routine,” according to Agarwal. If you still prefer cold coffee over a steaming hot mug, remember to keep it simple and control the amount you consume.

What is the best way to consume coffee?

“The best way to have coffee is one that supports both energy and metabolic balance, not just a quick caffeine hit,” according to Agarwal. “Freshly brewed warm coffee is better for extraction of antioxidants. Along with that coffee should be timed smartly. Ideally after your first meal or mid-morning, rather than on an empty stomach or alongside meals in order to reduce cortisol spikes and acidity.”

I didn’t give up iced coffee altogether; I simply stopped treating it like hydration and started treating caffeine like something that needed structure. I cut back to one or two cups of hot coffee in summer, had my first cup after breakfast instead of immediately after waking up and swapped the constant refills for water through the day. Slowly, the shaky, over-caffeinated feeling began to fade. I felt less wired, less dehydrated and more evenly energised—proof that, at least for me, the answer wasn’t quitting coffee, but learning how to drink it better.

 

This is only for your information, kindly take the advice of your doctor for food, medicines, exercises and so on.   

 

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Tuesday, May 26, 2026

How Painting, Dancing, and Other Creative Hobbies Help Keep Your Brain Young, According to New Research

 Key Points

  • Regularly engaging in creative activities—like painting, dancing, or gaming—can help keep your brain biologically younger, regardless of your actual age.
  • Creativity boosts brain health by enhancing neuroplasticity, the brain’s ability to form new connections and stay mentally nimble over time.
  • You don’t need to be a pro; simply participating in creative challenges can lead to real, measurable benefits for long-term brain function.
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    We’ve all heard of different ways to keep our brains healthy, whether it’s eating more foods with antioxidants or doing sudoku puzzles daily. Though those are important ways of maintaining your brain function, research suggests that something a bit more joyful might also be the key to long-term brain health: creativity. 

    A new study published found that engaging in creative activities can actually make your brain act younger. Flexing your creative muscles may be a powerful tool in keeping your brain healthy and youthful.

    “This research provides powerful, large-scale scientific validation for something we've intuitively known but have struggled to quantify,” shares a neuroscientist. “Engaging our minds in creative ways is one of the most powerful interventions we have for our long-term brain health.”

    The Research Simplified

    The scientists behind the study wanted to understand how creativity could protect the brain’s function over time. The study talks about “brain age” the way we talk about our “chronological age,” which is the number of candles we blow out when we celebrate our birthdays. But your brain age doesn’t always match up with your biological age and different factors can impact it. It all depends on how efficiently your brain’s regions communicate with each other.

    “Think of it like this: your driver’s license has your chronological age, but the ‘mileage’ on your brain can be younger or older depending on how you’ve used it,” Alcaide says. A younger brain, biologically speaking, tends to have faster connections between the regions. An older brain would have slower communication.

    In this study, researchers used EEG to analyze brain function in over 1,200 participants. They used machine-learning to analyze the EEG data collected. The models learned to predict “brain age” based on the brain’s communication patterns, then the researchers compared those predictions to each subject’s chronological age.

    When the results were compared, it was found that people in creative fields—professional dancers, musicians, artists, and expert gamers—had brains that were significantly younger than their chronological age. “Across the board, the creative experts had brains that were biologically younger,” says Alcaide. “An expert tango dancer, for example, had a brain age that was, on average, seven years younger than their non-expert counterparts.” 

    The Science Behind It

    So why exactly does creativity have this effect? The researchers say it’s because of something called neuroplasticity, which is the brain’s ability to strengthen and reorganize connections based on new experiences. Every time you learn something new, there are connections that form between the different regions of your brain, keeping communication fast and ensuring they are in good shape. Creative tasks push the brain to problem-solve and adapt, which strengthen this internal wiring.

    “Creativity acts as a constant workout for your brain,” Alcaide says. “It strengthens neural connections and makes your brain’s communication networks more efficient. This is the direct opposite of what normally happens as we age, when those connections can weaken.”

    But this doesn’t mean you have to be a gifted artist or perfect a skill to take advantage of the neuroplasticity of your brain. One of the most exciting findings of the research is that these effects were “domain-independent,” meaning it wasn’t about the specific skill or talent, but the process of engaging in the creative activity itself. In a follow-up study, participants who trained on a complex strategy video game for a short amount of time saw their brain age decrease by an average of three years. “That shows how adaptive the brain really is,” says Alcaide. “It responds to creative challenges almost immediately.”

    The Takeaway

    The main takeaway is simple: making time for creativity in your life is a science-backed way to support your brain. “This is the scientific permission to invest time in that hobby you’ve been putting off,” says Alcaide. “It’s not just for fun, it’s a critical part of your long-term health.”

    So dust off that old guitar, try your hand at watercolor painting, or take a salsa class at the community center. The research shows that these activities don’t just make life more vibrant, but they may help your brain stay sharper for longer. 

     

     

    This is only for your information, kindly take the advice of your doctor for food, medicines, exercises and so on.   

     

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