When Autumn Puts Immunity to the Test

The body also changes seasons: why defenses weaken and how to keep them awake.   By Any Altamirano HoyLunes – The air turns colder, the afternoons grow shorter, and the parks are painted in golden leaves. With autumn also comes a silent challenge: keeping the immune system alert against viruses, colds, and a fatigue that seems to drift in with…

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Where Beauty Is Eaten: The Invisible Art Behind Every Dish

In the age of screens, food has ceased to be merely a pleasure of the palate to become a visual and emotional language. The presentation of a dish—once a mere detail—has today transformed into an act of respect, identity, and aesthetic communication that redefines the very meaning of cuisine.   By Ziead Soltan HoyLunes – For decades, gastronomy was defined…

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Paper Jewels: Julio Camba, the Man Who Turned Humor into Literature

Between lucidity and irony, “Millones al horno” (“Millions in the Oven”) reveals the talent of a journalist who turned the newspaper column into a literary gem. His writing—light, precise, and sharp—transforms the everyday into an x-ray of the modern soul.   By Jorge Alonso Curiel HoyLunes – Without solemnity, without dogmas, and with simplicity, clarity, wit, elegance, lucidity, critical insight,…

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László Krasznahorkai, New Nobel Laureate in Literature 2025

The author of Satantango and The Melancholy of Resistance represents one of the most unique and demanding voices in contemporary literature.   By Jorge Alonso Curiel HoyLunes – The Hungarian writer László Krasznahorkai (Gyula, 1954) has been awarded the 2025 Nobel Prize in Literature, as announced this Thursday, October 9, by the Swedish Academy in Oslo, which praised his work…

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Critical Thinking: Our Last Defense Against the Obsolescence of Thought

Between algorithms and consciousness, an urgent invitation to regain control of human thinking in the face of accelerating automation.   By Claudia Benitez HoyLunes – I received a comment on last week’s article in which someone spoke to me about the importance of critical thinking and how it serves as a defense against the obsolescence of thought imposed by today’s…

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Wardrobe Treasures. Rescuing Wonderful Films: Our Mother’s House (1967), by Jack Clayton

In 1967, Jack Clayton crafted a disturbing and profoundly human story about orphanhood, fragility, and the resilience of children facing an adult world that threatens to consume them.   By Jorge Alonso Curiel HoyLunes – Films starring children have a special charm. They provoke a more intense emotional response, to which we open our hearts with fewer doubts or reservations.…

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The Drug that Promises to Slow Forgetting

An experimental antibody therapy offers the possibility of slowing the advance of Alzheimer’s, while thousands of families in Spain live daily with the disease that erases memories and consumes identities.   By Ehab Soltan HoyLunes – “My mother looks at me, smiles, but she doesn’t always know who I am”, says Laura, 48, as she adjusts a blanket over her…

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Colours that Heal: How a Home can Restore our Joy

Designing with Heart: When Tones, Textures and Scents Turn Spaces into an Intimate Act of Self-Care That Reconnects Us with Who We Are and Who We Long to Become. By Diana Stjepandić Hoylunes- There’s a moment, after a long day, when the front door clicks shut and silence embraces you. The bags fall to the floor. You kick your shoes…

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