I Don’t Want to Do It All Anymore!

Can an over-committed, over-achieving adult lean into boredom—and even cherish it? Writer Fiorella Valdesolo gives it a try. FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS Read original article here Denial of responsibility! Trusted Bulletin is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong … Read more

Scottie Scheffler’s second Masters win is what greatness looks like

AUGUSTA, Ga. — The statistical models had it all mapped out. The narrative told in his recent form was the world’s most obvious foreshadowing. His pre-tournament news conference — in which he once again spoke of golf as something that he “does” and not as something that defines his life — practically solidified it. Scottie … Read more

Rebecca Tomkinson: Secrecy around new environmental laws means many stakeholders left in the dark

if the Federal Government gets it wrong, it risks… $93 billion in future investment projects and associated jobs. FOLLOW US ON GOOGLE NEWS Read original article here Denial of responsibility! Trusted Bulletin is an automatic aggregator of the all world’s media. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong … Read more

Auerbach: World Athletics’ new Olympic prize money rule is a chance for NCAA to right a wrong

The latest dent in the NCAA’s bedrock principle of amateurism came from an unlikely place: Monaco. Track and field gold medalists will become the first athletes to earn international prize money at the Olympics, the sport’s international governing body said Wednesday. Each gold medalist will receive $50,000 for individual wins. World Athletics, which governs track … Read more

South Carolina and Iowa prove if ‘given an opportunity, women’s sports just thrives’

CLEVELAND — Everyone wanted to talk about the game, which was expected after the South Carolina women’s basketball team held off Iowa for an 87-75 victory and second national championship in three years. But Dawn Staley also wanted to talk about the other game. Actually, that’s not strong enough. She was going to discuss it. … Read more

‘No losers in peace’: Taiwan’s Ma Ying-jeou sends anti-war message in Beijing

Former Taiwanese president Ma Ying-jeou called on younger generations to learn from the past to “resolve disputes peacefully” during a visit on Monday to a museum in Beijing commemorating the second Sino-Japanese war. “People in both the mainland and Taiwan had been bullied by Japanese warlords, and suffered heavy casualties. Although we were lagging behind … Read more

Gary Martin: Humility a lost virtue in modern leadership, a toxic force

Nations in conflict, climate change, a cost-of-living crisis, public health emergencies, cybersecurity threats, unstable economies — the list keeps growing. At a time when effective leadership plays a vital role in shaping the fate of nations, businesses and local communities, we find ourselves teetering on the brink of a crisis. The modern-day concept of effective … Read more

Ben Harvey: Why Cook Government should fund the skin cancer bus that’s saving West Aussies

This column is about skin cancer. It’s a subject that’s close to my heart, or rather close to my arse, because that’s where they found the melanoma. Lower back actually, not that the exact location matters. It’s not where a melanoma is found that’s important, it’s that it is found. Premium Subscribers with digital access … Read more

Caitlin Clark Is Making Me—An Avowed Hater of Team Sports—Appreciate Women’s Basketball for the First Time

This might sound weird for a lesbian to say (we famously like sports, right?), but I’ve been avoiding women’s basketball for most of my life. I grew up visiting my dad’s parents in West Hartford, Connecticut, not far from where the legendary UConn women’s basketball team practiced, and my grandfather was a big fan of … Read more