The Grumpy Doc

Grumpy opinions about everything.

The Curious Art of Pointing: Late 18th-Century Portraiture and the Language of Gestures

I spend a lot of time studying the period of American history from the late 18th century to the early 19th century, particularly the events and the people surrounding the American Revolution. One of the things I like to do is study portraits of the main characters to try to get a sense of what they may have been like.  When you examine portraits from that period, you’ll notice something peculiar: people are constantly pointing at things. I couldn’t help but wonder: “What’s that all about? “

 English aristocrats extend their fingers toward their estates, American founding fathers gesture toward constitutional documents, and wealthy merchants direct our attention to symbols of their success. This wasn’t accidental theatrical posing—it was a sophisticated visual language where hand gestures functioned as a kind of shorthand, acting as indicators of the subject’s station, qualities and character.

The pointing gesture had become such a convention by the late 18th century that it almost seemed compulsory. But unlike today’s selfie poses, these carefully orchestrated hand positions required subjects to hold them for hours while painters worked. So why would anyone endure such discomfort just to point at seemingly empty space or distant objects?

Where They Were Pointing—And Why It Mattered

The objects of these pointing gestures reveal what late 18th-century society considered worth advertising. In Gainsborough’s painting of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Andrews, the landscape performs a much more important role than mere background—it depicts the Andrews’ estate and is intended to represent their wealth and status. Mr. Andrews doesn’t just stand near his property; he actively directs the viewer’s attention to it, essentially saying “Look at what I own.”

This was particularly important in England, where portraits became public records of status and position during the 18th century, and images of opulently attired figures were a means to affirm the authority of important individuals. Property ownership defined social standing in ways modern Americans might find difficult to fully appreciate. Your land wasn’t just where you lived—it was your identity, your political power, and your legacy rolled into one.

Sometimes the gesture proved unintentionally ironic.  In his 1768 portrait, General Thomas Gage points to imagined military success—an outcome history would later deny him.

American portraiture developed its own flavor of pointing symbolism, though it borrowed heavily from English conventions. After the Revolution, the United States looked for a new identity and history, a capacity for visual communication aimed at all citizens. American subjects often pointed toward documents, books, or symbols of their professional achievements rather than ancestral estates they didn’t possess. A lawyer might gesture toward law books, a scientist toward instruments, a founding father toward constitutional documents. The gesture said, “This is what I’ve accomplished” rather than “This is what I inherited.”

The Multiple Meanings of a Pointed Finger

The act of pointing served several simultaneous purposes in these portraits, which made it remarkably efficient for painters and patrons working within the constraints of canvas and paint. First, it created visual movement and prevented the deadly sin of portrait painting: making your subject look like a corpse propped up in fancy clothes. Long fingers were a sign of elegance and beauty, which signified culture, and hence intelligence, wealth and benevolence in the convention of these pictures.

Second, the gesture connected the subject to their accomplishments and possessions without requiring them all to fit within the frame. A merchant pointing toward a distant ship implied maritime trade; a landowner gesturing toward rolling fields suggested vast holdings beyond what any canvas could contain. The pointed finger became a visual ellipsis, suggesting “and more besides.”

Third, pointing engaged viewers in a way static poses couldn’t. When Thomas Gainsborough’s subjects point at their estates, or when artist Angelica Kauffman depicts herself with art personified pointing the way forward, they’re creating a relationship with anyone looking at the painting. The gesture says, “Let me show you something,” turning passive viewing into a guided tour.

The Curious Case of Pointing at Nothing

Here’s where things get genuinely weird: many portrait subjects from this period appear to be pointing at absolutely nothing of consequence. There’s an abundance of important people pointing at nothing, which most likely has meaning, but it’s impossible to know what. King James II appears in multiple portraits pointing off-canvas at no identifiable object. English courtesans and French aristocrats extend elegant fingers toward empty space. What gives?

Several theories attempt to explain this phenomenon. Some art historians argue these portraits once formed diptychs or larger compositions where the pointing made sense in context. Others suggest the gesture had become so conventionalized that it persisted even without specific referents—it simply meant “I am important enough to be painted pointing at things.” Perhaps the ambiguity was intentional. It invited the viewer to imagine: the future, moral principles, destiny, or duty. This wasn’t symbolism in the modern sense—it was rhetorical suggestion.

Still others propose that the elegant display of hands was itself the point. During the Renaissance and into the 18th century, hands were as important a focus of attention as the face was, because they were the only other visible area of the body, and representation of the position of the hands became a decorative element that was almost as important as the face. Showing refined, aristocratic hands in graceful poses demonstrated genteel breeding regardless of where they pointed.

The Anglo-American Divergence

American portraits, by contrast, celebrated individual achievement in a republic supposedly free from hereditary privilege. In the New World, portraits were created by the people, the ordinary settlers and citizens of the developing countries, and portraits began to make a move from a false pretense to almost exact likeness in the 1730s. John Singleton Copley’s American subjects pointed toward symbols of their professions, their intellectual pursuits, or occasionally toward landscapes that represented American natural abundance rather than private ownership.

This difference wasn’t just aesthetic—it reflected fundamentally different answers to the question “What makes someone worth painting?” In England, the answer remained largely “birth and property.” In America, it was increasingly “accomplishment and character,” even if wealthy Americans proved just as eager to commission portraits displaying their property as any English lord.

The Practical and the Symbolic

There were also wonderfully mundane reasons for the pointing convention. With the invention of photography, the pose continued but may have had an additional purpose in preventing blurring by maintaining the sitter’s hand in a single place. Even in painted portraits, giving subjects something to “do” with their hands solved the age-old problem of what to do with idle limbs during hours of sitting still. The pointing gesture was energetic enough to look dynamic but simple enough to hold for extended periods.

Artists also recognized that pointing could subtly advertise their own skills. German artist Albrecht Dürer’s earliest self-portrait, drawn when he was only thirteen, depicts him pointing with his finger, suggesting that even at that age he knew that a pointing finger was an important symbol. The gesture reminded viewers that what they saw was created by an artist’s hand, a commentary woven into the composition itself.

Those pointing fingers weren’t quirks or affectations. They were a shared visual grammar that told viewers how to understand power, intellect, and legitimacy in an Enlightenment world that cared deeply about appearing rational, purposeful, and morally grounded.

Once you see it, you can’t unsee it—and you’ll start noticing how modern leaders use subtler versions of the same visual cues today.

Image Sources

Gilbert Stuart – George Washington – Google Art Project.jpg Copy, via Wikimedia Commons,  public domain

John Singleton Copley – General Thomas Gage – Google Art Project.jpg Copy, via Wikimedia Commons, public domain

Angelica Kauffmann –  Self Portrait of the Artist Hesitating between the Arts of Music and Painting; National Trust, Nostell Priory, via Wikimedia Commons, public domain

Sir Peter Lely – James II and Anne Hyde, Copy, National Trust, via Wikimedia Commons, public domain

John Trumbull – Alexander Hamilton, full-length portrait, standing, facing left, left hand on hip, right arm extended outward, books and papers beside him LCCN89706847.jpg Copy, via Wikimedia Commons, public domain

Text Sources

·  Baetjer, Katharine. “Portrait Painting in England, 1600–1800.” Metropolitan Museum of Art. https://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/bpor/hd_bpor.htm

·  Gustlin, Katherine and Gustlin, Mark. “Portraits (18th Century).” A World Perspective of Art Appreciation. Humanities LibreTexts. https://human.libretexts.org/Courses/Evergreen_Valley_College/A_World_Perspective_of_Art_Appreciation_(Gustlin_and_Gustlin)/10:_The_New_World_Grows_(1700_CE__1800_CE)/10.2:_Portraits_(18th_Century)

·  Lazzeri, D., Nicoli, F., Zhang, Y.X. “Secret hand gestures in paintings.” Acta Biomedica 2019; Vol. 90, N. 4: 526-532. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/338457261_Secret_hand_gestures_in_paintings

·  “Pointing and Touch.” Every Painter Paints Himself. https://www.everypainterpaintshimself.com/theme/pointing_and_touch

·  “Pointing in portraits.” History Forum. https://historum.com/t/pointing-in-portraits.83092/

·  “Portrait painting.” Wikipedia. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait_painting

·  “Portraits in the Landscape.” Photo-graph. https://photo-graph.org/2013/01/09/portraits-in-the-landscape/

The Accidental Footnote: Heel Spurs, the Vietnam Draft, and American Inequality

If you’ve ever winced taking your first steps out of bed in the morning, you may have already made an involuntary acquaintance with heel spurs — or more precisely, with the condition that often travels with them. The term itself sounds alarming, and for a brief but colorful stretch of American political history, it became something far more charged than a footnote to podiatry. But before we get to the politics, it’s worth understanding what a heel spur actually is, because the medical reality is both more mundane and more complicated than the caricature.


What Exactly Is a Heel Spur?
A heel spur is a small bony outgrowth — technically called a calcaneal spur — that extends from the underside of the heel bone (the calcaneus). It forms at the spot where the plantar fascia — the thick ligament running the length of your foot from heel to toe — attaches to the heel bone. The spur is not, despite what the name implies, a sharp spike. It is typically smooth and rounded, though it can still cause irritation if it presses into surrounding soft tissue.


The image depicts a comparison between a healthy foot and one with a prominent foot ulcer, highlighting the condition's visible effects.

AI-generated content may be incorrect.
 
Heel spurs affect about 10% of the population, making them one of the more common foot conditions around, though most people who have one don’t know it. The spur develops gradually — usually over months or even years — as the body deposits calcium in response to chronic stress at that heel attachment point. Think of it less as damage and more as your skeleton’s attempt at reinforcement.

What Causes Them?
The underlying driver is repetitive mechanical stress on the foot. Heel spurs are particularly associated with strains on foot muscles and ligaments, stretching of the plantar fascia, and repeated small tears in the membrane covering the heel bone. Athletes who do a lot of running and jumping are especially prone.

But you don’t need to be an elite runner to develop one. Walking gait problems — particularly overpronation, where the foot rolls inward — place uneven stress on the heel with each step. Worn-out or poorly fitted shoes, which fail to absorb shock or support the arch, compound the problem. Obesity increases the mechanical load on the heel. Occupations that require prolonged standing or walking on hard surfaces put the plantar fascia under constant tension. And as people age, tendons and ligaments lose their elasticity, making the tissues more vulnerable to micro-tears and the subsequent bony repair response.

Heel spurs are also closely connected to a condition most people have heard of: plantar fasciitis. The two are related a but not identical. Plantar fasciitis is inflammation of the plantar fascia itself, usually from overuse. A heel spur can develop as a downstream consequence of that inflammation — the body lays down extra bone in response to the ongoing stress at the fascia’s attachment point.

Symptoms — or the Lack Thereof
Here’s the part that surprises most people: the majority of heel spurs cause no symptoms at all, and many are discovered incidentally on X-rays taken for other reasons. Only about 5% of heel spurs are estimated to be symptomatic.

When a heel spur does produce symptoms, the experience is heavily intertwined with plantar fasciitis. The classic description is a sharp, stabbing pain on the bottom of the foot first thing in the morning, or after any prolonged rest. Many people compare it to stepping on a tack. Paradoxically, this pain often eases somewhat after walking around for a few minutes, only to return after extended time on the feet or after another rest. It’s that “worse in the morning” quality that tends to be the giveaway.

Other symptoms, when present, can include localized swelling, warmth, and tenderness along the front of the heel, as well as increased sensitivity on the underside of the foot. It’s worth noting that the pain associated with a heel spur is not generally thought to come from the bony spur itself, but from the irritation it causes in the surrounding soft tissue — tendons, ligaments, and bursae.

How Is It Diagnosed?
Diagnosis typically begins with a physical exam. Your doctor or podiatrist will ask about when the pain started, what activities preceded it, and what makes it better or worse. They’ll examine your foot for tenderness at specific points, assess your range of motion, and check foot alignment and press on key areas to locate the source of pain.

Imaging confirms the picture. An X-ray can clearly show the bony spur and is the most commonly used test. That said, the size of the spur on an X-ray doesn’t necessarily correspond to how much pain a patient is experiencing — a small spur can be quite painful while a large one may cause no trouble at all. In more complex cases, an MRI may be ordered to assess the soft tissues more closely and evaluate whether plantar fasciitis or another condition is also in play.

Treatment Options
The reassuring news is that the vast majority of cases resolve without surgery. More than 90% of patients improve with nonsurgical treatment. The catch is that conservative management requires patience — improvement typically takes weeks, and more stubborn cases can take months.

The cornerstone of treatment is rest and reducing the activities that provoke pain. This doesn’t necessarily mean completely stopping exercise; low-impact alternatives like swimming, cycling, or rowing allow you to stay active while giving the heel a break from impact. Icing the bottom of the foot after activity helps manage inflammation. Over-the-counter anti-inflammatory medications like ibuprofen or naproxen can provide relief, though they’re intended for short-term use.

Footwear matters enormously. Supportive shoes with good arch support, cushioning, and a slight heel rise reduce the strain on the plantar fascia. Custom orthotics with molded insoles designed to redistribute pressure across the foot are often recommended, particularly for people with gait abnormalities or flat feet. Physical therapy can be part of the treatment plan, focusing on stretching the calf muscles and plantar fascia, strengthening the foot’s intrinsic muscles, and correcting biomechanical issues.

For cases that don’t respond to these initial measures, the next tier of treatment includes corticosteroid injections to reduce inflammation at the spur site, and extracorporeal shockwave therapy — a non-invasive procedure that uses sound waves to stimulate healing in chronically inflamed tissue. Surgery is reserved for the minority of cases where conservative treatment fails after nine to twelve months. Possible complications include nerve pain, infection, scarring, and — with plantar fascia release — the risk of foot instability or stress fracture. Most orthopedic surgeons regard surgery as a last resort.

Are Heel Spurs Debilitating?
For most people, the honest answer is: no.  Heel spurs are a common condition with a favorable prognosis, especially with early diagnosis and appropriate management. Many people live with heel spurs for years without ever knowing it, and even those who develop pain typically find substantial relief with conservative treatment within four to eight weeks.
That said, the pain at its worst — particularly in conjunction with plantar fasciitis — can be genuinely disruptive to daily life. Athletes may find their training significantly limited. People who spend long hours on their feet at work may struggle with sustained discomfort. And a small percentage of patients do end up with prolonged, treatment-resistant pain that affects mobility. So, the more accurate framing might be: heel spurs have the potential to be significantly uncomfortable and functionally limiting during flare-ups, but with proper treatment most people recover well and return to normal activity.

Heel Spurs and the Vietnam-Era Draft
Which brings us to an improbable chapter in heel spur history. During the Vietnam War era, heel spurs became — for at least one famous case — a ticket out of military service. Understanding how that worked requires a brief detour into the draft system of the 1960s and 1970s, and what it meant to receive a medical deferment.
According to the National Archives, of the roughly 27 million American men eligible for military service between 1964 and 1973, about 15 million were granted deferments — mostly for education, and some for mental or physical problems — while only 2,215,000 were actually drafted into service—another eight million volunteered. Some of those who later served had previously had deferments. The system was sprawling, complex, and — as was widely acknowledged even at the time — deeply unequal.
Roughly 60% of draft-eligible American men took some sort of action to avoid military conscription. There were many routes: college deferments, fatherhood, conscientious objector status (170,000 men received those alone), National Guard enlistment, and medical exemptions. Medical deferments covered a wide range of conditions — from serious chronic illness to conditions that, in a different context, most people would consider minor. Flat feet, poor eyesight, asthma, and yes, bone spurs all appeared on the list of potentially disqualifying ailments.
The system was known to favor men with access to money, education, and well-connected physicians. American forces in Vietnam were 55% working-class and 25% poor — reflecting those who didn’t have the means to navigate the deferment labyrinth. A working-class kid from rural West Virginia was far more likely to end up in the Mekong Delta than the son of a New York real estate developer.

The Most Famous Heel Spur in American History
Which leads, inevitably, to Donald Trump. As confirmed by Selective Service records obtained and reported by multiple news outlets, Trump received five Vietnam-era draft deferments — four for college attendance at Fordham and the Wharton School, and a fifth in 1968, recorded as a medical deferment for bone spurs in his heels. The medical classification left him disqualified for military service.

The circumstances surrounding the diagnosis have been contested ever since. Reporting by the New York Times included accounts from the daughters of a Queens podiatrist named Larry Braunstein, who alleged that their father had provided or vouched for the diagnosis as a professional favor to Trump’s father, Fred Trump — a landlord to whom Braunstein reportedly owed a debt of gratitude. Trump’s former lawyer Michael Cohen also testified that Trump had admitted to fabricating the injury. Trump himself has maintained that the diagnosis was legitimate, stating that a doctor “gave me a letter — a very strong letter — on the heels.” The underlying medical records that would resolve the dispute are, conveniently, not publicly available; most individual Selective Service medical records from that era were subsequently destroyed.

It’s worth noting that Trump’s pattern — using legal channels, including a medical deferment of questionable validity, to avoid Vietnam service — was not unique to him. Historians have pointed out that numerous prominent figures on both sides of the political aisle received deferments of various kinds, including Joe Biden (asthma), Dick Cheney (student deferments), Bill Clinton (navigated the ROTC system), and George W. Bush (National Guard). The heel spur episode became politically charged in part because of Trump’s later hawkish rhetoric and his outspokenness in questioning the military service of others — most notably Senator John McCain, who spent years as a prisoner of war in North Vietnam.

How Many People Got Heel Spur Deferments?
This is where the historical record hits a hard wall. No reliable statistics exist specifically for heel spur deferments. The Selective Service tracked broad categories — student deferments, hardship deferments, conscientious objector status, medical disqualifications — but it did not publish a breakdown by specific diagnosis, and most individual medical records from that era no longer exist.

What we can say is that bone spurs were a recognized medical disqualifier under Selective Service regulations, that medical deferments broadly were a commonly used — and commonly abused — avenue for avoiding service, and that the process was heavily influenced by access to sympathetic physicians. A man with means, connections, and a cooperative podiatrist had options that a man without those resources did not.

The honest answer, then, is that we don’t know how many men received deferments citing heel spurs specifically, and we almost certainly never will. The data either wasn’t tracked at that level of granularity or was long since destroyed. What we do know is that the condition became, for a time, a lens through which Americans examined something much larger: who serves, who doesn’t, and whether the systems meant to govern those decisions are applied fairly.

For most people, a heel spur is a manageable, if annoying, footnote in the story of their health. For at least one person, it became a footnote in the history of American politics.
 
Personal Note: I have heel spurs; I wish I’d known about them in 1967.
 
Images generated by author using AI.

Medical Sources
Cleveland Clinic — Heel Spurs overview
https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/21965-heel-spurs
WebMD — Heel Spur Causes, Symptoms, Treatments, and Surgery
https://www.webmd.com/pain-management/heel-spurs-pain-causes-symptoms-treatments
Hackensack Meridian Health — Bone Spurs in the Heel: Symptoms and Recovery
https://www.hackensackmeridianhealth.org/en/healthier-you/2024/01/02/bone-spurs-in-the-heel-symptoms-and-recovery
OrthoArkansas — Heel Spurs
https://www.orthoarkansas.com/heel-spurs-orthoarkansas/
EmergeOrtho — Heel Bone Spurs: Causes, Symptoms, Treatment
https://emergeortho.com/news/heel-bone-spurs/
American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons — Plantar Fasciitis and Bone Spurs
https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/diseases–conditions/plantar-fasciitis-and-bone-spurs/
Vietnam Draft & Military Service Sources
History.com — 7 Ways Americans Avoided the Draft During the Vietnam War
https://www.history.com/articles/vietnam-war-draft-avoiding
Wikipedia — Draft Evasion in the Vietnam War
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Draft_evasion_in_the_Vietnam_War
Wikipedia — Conscription in the United States
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conscription_in_the_United_States
Students of History — The Draft and the Vietnam War
https://www.studentsofhistory.com/vietnam-war-draft
University of Michigan — The Military Draft During the Vietnam War
https://michiganintheworld.history.lsa.umich.edu/antivietnamwar/exhibits/show/exhibit/draft_protests/the-military-draft-during-the-
Vietnam Veterans of America Chapter 310 — Vietnam War Statistics
https://www.vva310.org/vietnam-war-statistics
Vietnam Veterans of Foreign Wars — Fact vs. Fiction: The Vietnam Veteran
https://www.vvof.org/factsvnv.htm
New York City Vietnam Veterans Plaza — Interesting Facts About Vietnam
https://www.vietnamveteransplaza.com/interesting-facts-about-vietnam/
 
 
Medical Disclaimer
The information provided in this article is intended for general educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. It should not be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
Always seek the guidance of a qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition or treatment. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you have read here.
If you are experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or your local emergency number immediately.
The author of this article is a licensed physician, but the views expressed here are solely those of the author and do not represent the official position of any hospital, health system, or medical organization with which the author may be affiliated.
 

Lady Liberty: The Statue We Think We Know

Collection of the author

Ask most Americans what the Statue of Liberty means and they’ll say the same thing: she welcomes immigrants. She is the “Mother of Exiles,” keeper of the golden door. That image is so deeply woven into the national identity that it has been quoted, protested, and debated for more than a century. The only problem is that it wasn’t what her creators originally intended.

The story begins in 1865, just weeks after the Civil War ended, at a dinner party near Versailles. The host was Édouard de Laboulaye, a French historian and president of the French Anti-Slavery Society. Laboulaye was one of France’s most passionate admirers of American democracy and was deeply moved by both Lincoln’s assassination and the abolition of slavery. He proposed that France present the United States with a colossal monument — one that would celebrate two things at once: the centennial of American independence and the end of slavery.

Sculptor Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi was at that dinner and took the idea and ran with it. Early models from around 1870 show Lady Liberty with her right arm raised — familiar enough — but in her left hand she holds broken shackles, not a tablet. The anti-slavery message was unmistakable.

That symbolism didn’t entirely disappear from the final design — it just got moved. According to the National Park Service, Bartholdi placed a broken chain and shackle at the statue’s feet, hidden beneath the copper drapery. Most visitors never notice it. The left hand now holds a tablet inscribed with the date of the Declaration of Independence.

Why the change? NYU historian Edward Berenson points to the political climate of the 1880s. By the time the statue was dedicated in October 1886 — more than 20 years after Laboulaye’s dinner — Reconstruction had collapsed, Jim Crow was spreading, and the country was trying to paper over sectional wounds by quietly forgetting the war’s racial roots. Nobody at the dedication mentioned slavery. The abolitionist origins were simply buried.

The statue was formally named Liberty Enlightening the World and the message broadened toward Franco-American friendship and American liberty in general rather than emancipation specifically.

Then came Emma Lazarus, and the second transformation. In 1883, a fundraiser struggling to pay for the statue’s pedestal asked prominent writers to donate works for an auction. Lazarus, a Jewish-American poet, initially declined as she was then deeply involved in aiding Jewish refugees fleeing wide-spread and organized violence in Russia. A friend persuaded her that the statue, sitting at the entrance to New York Harbor, would inevitably be seen as a beacon by arriving immigrants. She wrote “The New Colossus” — fourteen lines that reimagined Lady Liberty entirely, as a “Mother of Exiles” beckoning the world’s tired and poor to America’s golden door.

Not like the brazen giant of Greek fame,
With conquering limbs astride from land to land;
Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.
“Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!” cries she
With silent lips. “Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”

Strangely, the poem then vanished. It played no role at the statue’s 1886 dedication. Lazarus died in 1887, before Ellis Island even opened. It wasn’t until 1903 that a friend had the entire poem cast onto a bronze plaque that was mounted inside the pedestal——not engraved on the outside as many believe. By then, millions of immigrants had already sailed past the statue on their way to Ellis Island, and the association with immigration had taken hold in the public imagination.

The immigration meaning deepened through the early 20th century as the government used the statue’s image in campaigns to assimilate immigrant children, many of whom lived in ethnic enclaves in large eastern cities. Meanwhile, the abolitionist symbolism that had inspired the project in the first place faded almost entirely from public memory.

The broken shackles are still there, tucked under her robe, mostly invisible. Lady Liberty has been continuously reinterpreted for 160 years — by abolitionists, by a poet responding to a refugee crisis, by politicians, and by millions of people who looked up at that torch from the deck of a ship. Will Lady Liberty and her words continue to offer welcome and hope and be a source of national pride or is her meaning once again being rewritten as a symbol of American identity, dominance, and, perhaps, exclusion?

The Statue’s shackles and feet. National Park Service, Statue of Liberty NM, Public Domain

Sources

National Park Service – Statue of Liberty history: https://www.nps.gov/stli/learn/historyculture/statue-of-liberty.htm Library of Congress – Dedication and speeches: https://www.loc.gov/item/ihas.200197394/ Cleveland, Grover. Dedication Address (1886): https://www.nps.gov/stli/learn/historyculture/cleveland.htm Smithsonian Magazine – History of the Statue of Liberty: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/statue-liberty-180970340/

The Art of Rigging Democracy: A Close Look At Gerrymandering

Wikimedia Commons: Elkanah Tisdale (1771-1835) (often falsely attributed to Gilbert Stuart), public domain


Picture this: It’s 1812 in Massachusetts, and Governor Elbridge Gerry has just approved a redistricting plan that creates such a bizarrely shaped legislative district that when a local newspaper editor saw it on a map, he thought it looked like a salamander. The editor sketched wings and claws onto the district, and someone quipped that it looked more like a “Gerry-mander” than a salamander. The term stuck, and more than two centuries later, we’re still dealing with the same problem that inspired that joke.
What Gerrymandering Actually Means
At its core, gerrymandering is the practice of drawing electoral district boundaries to give one political party or group an unfair advantage over its opponents. It’s a form of political manipulation that allows those in power to essentially choose their voters, rather than letting voters choose their representatives. Think of it as a sophisticated form of gaming the system—perfectly legal in many cases, but profoundly anti-democratic in spirit.
The mechanics are surprisingly straightforward. There are two main techniques: “cracking” and “packing.” Cracking involves splitting up concentrations of opposing voters across multiple districts so they can’t form a majority anywhere. Packing does the opposite—cramming as many opposing voters as possible into a few districts so they waste their votes winning by huge margins in just a couple of places, leaving the rest of the districts safely in your column. These techniques can be deployed together to engineer a decisive partisan advantage.
A History of Creative Mapmaking
The practice didn’t start with Gerry, of course. The Founding Fathers—for all their lofty rhetoric about representative democracy—weren’t above putting their thumbs on the electoral scales. But gerrymandering really came into its own in the 20th century as advances in census data, and statistics combined with the addition of newly available computing power made it possible to draw districts with surgical precision.
The 2010 redistricting cycle marked a watershed moment. Single-party control of the redistricting process gave partisan line drawers free rein to craft some of the most extreme gerrymanders in American history often down to the level of individual city blocks. Republicans, having won control of many state legislatures in the 2010 midterms, used sophisticated computer modeling to create maps that locked in their advantages for a decade. Democrats did the same where they had the power, though Republicans controlled more state legislatures and thus wielded greater gerrymandering capability overall.
The 2024-2025 Gerrymandering Wars
Here’s where things get really interesting—and deeply concerning. The situation has exploded into what some are calling “gerrymandering wars” following the 2020 census and a critical Supreme Court decision in 2019. In Rucho v. Common Cause, the Supreme Court ruled that partisan gerrymandering constitutes a non-justiciable “political question” where federal court intervention is unsuitable. Translation: The federal courts won’t stop partisan gerrymandering because they claim there’s no objective standard to measure it.
This opened the floodgates. The Brennan Center estimates that gerrymandering gave Republicans an advantage of around 16 House seats in the 2024 race to control Congress compared to fair maps. But here’s the kicker: we’re not even done with this decade’s redistricting.
In an unprecedented move, President Donald Trump has pushed Republican state lawmakers to further gerrymander their states’ congressional maps, prompting Democratic state lawmakers to respond in kind. In August 2025, during a special session, Texas’s legislature passed a redistricting plan that weakens electoral opportunities for Black and Hispanic voters.  California has threatened to respond with its own gerrymander, creating a tit-for-tat dynamic that could spiral out of control.
North Carolina provides perhaps the most dramatic example. After the state supreme court reversed its position on policing partisan gerrymandering, the Republican-controlled legislature redrew the map, and after the 2024 election, three Democratic districts flipped to Republicans—enough to give control of the U.S. House to the GOP by a slim margin.
The situation has gotten so extreme that both parties are now openly engaging in mid-decade redistricting—something that traditionally only happened after each ten-year census. California, Missouri, North Carolina, Ohio, Texas and Utah have all adopted new congressional maps in 2025, with new maps also appearing possible in Florida, Maryland and Virginia.
The Racial Dimension
It’s crucial to note that gerrymandering comes in two flavors: partisan and racial. While partisan gerrymandering is currently legal thanks to the Supreme Court, racial gerrymandering—drawing districts specifically to dilute the voting power of racial minorities—violates the Voting Rights Act of 1965. The line between the two can get blurry, though, since partisan voting patterns often correlate with race.
In May 2025, a federal court ruled that Alabama’s 2023 congressional map not only violates Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act but was enacted by the Alabama Legislature with racially discriminatory intent. Similar battles are playing out in Louisiana, Mississippi, and other states. The legal landscape here is complex, with courts sometimes walking a tightrope between ensuring fair representation for communities of color and avoiding the creation of what could be challenged as racial gerrymanders.
What Can Be Done About It?
The most popular reform proposal is the creation of independent redistricting commissions—bodies of citizens (not politicians) who draw district maps according to neutral criteria.  Currently, several states including Colorado, Michigan, Ohio and Virginia use redistricting commissions to draw congressional and state legislative maps, ranging from political commissions with elected officials to completely independent commissions that bar all elected officials from serving as commissioners.
Do they work? The evidence is mixed but generally positive. According to a Redistricting Report Card published with the Princeton Gerrymandering Project, the states that had some form of commission drew “B+” maps on average, while states where partisans controlled the process drew “D+” maps.  California’s independent commission is often held up as the gold standard, though it’s not perfect—even fairly drawn maps can produce lopsided results due to how voters cluster geographically.
Another proposal focuses on clear, enforceable criteria: compactness, contiguity, respect for existing political boundaries, and transparency in the mapping process. Advances in statistical analysis also make it possible to compare proposed maps against thousands of neutral alternatives to detect extreme outliers, a method increasingly discussed in academic and legal circles.
Federal legislation has been proposed repeatedly. The Redistricting Reform Act of 2025 would prohibit states from mid-decade redistricting and would require every state to adopt nonpartisan, independent redistricting commissions. Similar provisions were included in the “For the People Act” that Democrats passed in the House in 2021, but it died in the Senate. Getting such legislation through Congress would require bipartisan cooperation, which seems unlikely given that both parties see gerrymandering as a political weapon and they believe they can’t afford to unilaterally disarm.
Some reformers advocate for more radical solutions. Proportional representation systems, where the share of votes equals the share of seats, would end boundary-drawing battles altogether and make democracy more representative. Under such a system, if Democrats win 60% of the vote in a state, they’d get roughly 60% of that state’s congressional seats. It’s intuitive and fair, but it would require a fundamental restructuring of American electoral systems—something that’s probably not politically feasible in the near term.
State courts have emerged as a potential backstop. At least 10 state supreme courts have found that state courts can decide cases involving allegations of partisan gerrymandering, even though federal courts won’t touch them.  This means that state constitutional provisions against gerrymandering could provide meaningful protection—though as North Carolina demonstrated, state court compositions can change, and with them, their willingness to police gerrymandering.
The Bottom Line
Gerrymandering represents a fundamental tension in American democracy: How do we draw districts fairly when the people drawing them have every incentive to rig the game in their favor? The problem has ancient roots but ultra-modern manifestations, powered by big data and sophisticated computer modeling that would make Elbridge Gerry’s head spin.
The current moment feels particularly precarious. With Republicans’ razor-thin majority in the House and midterm elections traditionally being unfavorable for the party in power, the Republicans’ action amounts to a preemptive move to retain control of Congress. The Democrats threatened response could trigger an escalating cycle of partisan map manipulation that further entrenches our political divisions and makes elections less responsive to actual voter preferences.
Independent commissions offer a promising path forward, but they’re not a silver bullet. They work better than partisan control, but they can’t eliminate all the inherent challenges of translating votes into seats through geographic districts. More ambitious reforms like proportional representation could solve the problem more completely, but they face enormous political and practical obstacles.
For now, gerrymandering remains what that newspaper editor saw in 1812: a monstrous distortion of democratic principles, hiding in plain sight on our electoral maps. The question is whether we have the political will to slay the beast, or whether we’ll keep feeding it for another two centuries.
 
Sources:
Brennan Center for Justice – Gerrymandering Explained
https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/gerrymandering-explained
 
Brennan Center for Justice – How Gerrymandering Tilts the 2024 Race for the House
https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/research-reports/how-gerrymandering-tilts-2024-race-house
 
American Constitution Society – America’s Gerrymandering Crisis
https://www.acslaw.org/expertforum/americas-gerrymandering-crisis-time-for-a-constructive-redistricting-framework/
 
ACLU – Court Cases on Gerrymandering
https://www.aclu.org/court-cases?issue=gerrymandering
 
Stateline – State Courts and Gerrymandering
https://stateline.org/2025/12/22/as-supreme-court-pulls-back-on-gerrymandering-state-courts-may-decide-fate-of-maps/
 
Campaign Legal Center – Do Independent Redistricting Commissions Work?
https://campaignlegal.org/update/do-independent-redistricting-commissions-really-prevent-gerrymandering-yes-they-do
 
RepresentUs – End Partisan Gerrymandering
https://represent.us/policy-platform/ending-partisan-gerrymandering/
 
Senator Alex Padilla – Redistricting Reform Act of 2025
https://www.padilla.senate.gov/newsroom/press-releases/watch-padilla-lofgren-introduce-legislation-to-establish-independent-redistricting-commissions-end-mid-decade-redistricting-nationwide/
 
Protect Democracy – How to End Gerrymandering
https://protectdemocracy.org/work/how-to-end-gerrymandering/

Ramps: The Pungent Pride of Appalachian Spring

It’s time for my annual column about ramps.

Every spring, something remarkable happens on the forest floors of the eastern United States. Before most of the world has shaken off its winter coat, before the first wildflowers have dared to show their faces, a small, broad-leafed plant quietly pushes up through the leaf litter and announces that the season has changed. That plant is the ramp — and if you’ve never heard of it, you probably don’t live in Appalachia, where its annual arrival is something close to a religious event.

What Are Ramps?

Ramps (Allium tricoccum) are a wild, perennial plant belonging to the same family as onions, garlic, and leeks — the Amaryllidaceae, or amaryllis family. Botanically speaking, they’re sometimes called wild leeks or wood leeks, and they share the pungent, sulfur-driven flavor profile of their cultivated cousins. But ramps carry something extra: a garlicky wallop layered on top of the onion bite, bold enough to clear a room. The plant produces two or three broad, smooth, bright green leaves in spring, growing 8 to 12 inches long, attached to a slender stalk that narrows into a small white bulb underground. By late spring, the leaves die back and a flower stalk emerges, producing small white blossoms.

From a nutritional standpoint, ramps belong firmly in the vegetable category — specifically among the allium vegetables — and are genuinely impressive in what they deliver. They’re low in calories (around 30 per 4 ounces) but rich in vitamins A, C, and K, along with minerals including selenium, chromium, iron, and folate. A single cup provides about 30% of the daily recommended value of vitamin A and roughly 18% of the daily value of vitamin C. They also contain sulfur compounds like kaempferol and allicin — the same bioactive chemicals found in garlic — that are associated with cardiovascular health, anti-inflammatory effects, and even some cancer-protective properties.

Historically, ramps also carried a reputation as a kind of folk remedy. After months of limited fresh produce, their arrival was thought to “cleanse the blood” and restore vitality—a belief rooted more in tradition than modern science but not entirely disconnected from their nutritional value.

Where and How They Grow

Ramps have an enormous native range, stretching from Nova Scotia down through Georgia and west to Iowa and Minnesota. But they’re most densely concentrated — and most enthusiastically celebrated — in the Appalachian Mountain corridor. They thrive in rich, moist, well-drained soil under the shade of deciduous trees: maple, beech, poplar, and birch are favorite neighbors. You’re most likely to find them carpeting the floor of a hardwood forest near a stream or on a hillside slope that holds moisture.

The timing of their emergence is part of what makes ramps so culturally charged. They’re spring ephemerals — plants that exploit the brief window between winter’s end and the closing of the forest canopy, when sunlight still reaches the ground in quantity. The leaves typically appear in early April and last only through mid-May before yellowing and dying back. That’s it. A few weeks. You either catch them or you wait another year.

Growing ramps from scratch is not a project for the impatient. Seeds can take 6 to 18 months to germinate and require both a warm moist period and then a cold period to break dormancy. The plants themselves take 5 to 7 years to mature. This slow reproductive cycle is one reason that overharvesting has become a serious concern. The Smoky Mountains National Park banned ramp harvesting entirely in 2002, citing studies showing that ramp populations need years to recover from even a single harvest. Some parts of Canada now limit foragers to 50 bulbs per person.

Many enthusiasts now recommend not harvesting the bulb at all and picking only a single leaf from the plant to allow continued growth.

How They’re Prepared

Ramps are famously versatile — every edible part of the plant can be used. The leaves are milder and wilt down beautifully when cooked. The stalks carry more punch. The bulbs are the most potent part, with an intensity that can outlast the meal and the evening— and sometimes days. That lingering quality, by the way, is a significant part of ramp lore. Eating them raw is a commitment. Even cooking them doesn’t fully tame the aftermath.

The classic Appalachian preparation is almost aggressively simple: fry them in butter or bacon fat alongside sliced potatoes and scrambled eggs. That combination — earthy, fatty, pungent, satisfying — is the dish most associated with the tradition. But ramps also appear in soups, pancakes, and hamburgers. Modern chefs have expanded the repertoire considerably, featuring ramp pesto, ramp butter, pickled ramps, ramp-infused oils, and even ramps on pizza. High-end restaurants began showcasing them in the late 1990s and early 2000s, turning a humble Appalachian forage vegetable into a coveted seasonal ingredient.

Pickling is a popular preservation method, extending the ramp season well beyond the brief spring window. Pickled ramps retain a pleasant tang and a gentler bite than raw ones, making them an easy addition to charcuterie boards or grain bowls. Ramps can also be blanched and frozen for up to six months, though freezing softens the texture.

Cultural Significance in Appalachia

To understand what ramps mean to Appalachia, you have to appreciate what they meant historically. For communities in the mountains that went months without access to fresh vegetables, ramps were among the first green things to appear after winter. They weren’t just food — they were a signal that the hard season was ending. Native American groups including the Cherokee, Iroquois, and Chippewa had long used them as both food and medicine—treating colds, earaches, intestinal parasites —and as a springtime tonic. European settlers learned from those traditions and wove ramps into their own seasonal pattern.

The word “ramp” itself has deep roots. Botanist Earl L. Core of West Virginia University traced the term to the Old English word “ramson,” a dialectical variant used across the southern Appalachian region in contrast to the “wild leek” terminology used elsewhere. That linguistic distinction is itself a marker of regional identity — ramps aren’t just what you call the plant, they’re a signal of where you’re from.

In Appalachia, ramps are far more than an ingredient—they are a tradition. For generations, families have ventured into the woods each spring to gather them, often returning to prepare communal meals that celebrate the end of winter. These gatherings, commonly known as ramp feeds or ramp festivals, remain a fixture in many communities.

Ramp festivals have anchored spring calendars in Appalachian communities for a century. The ramp festival in Haywood County, North Carolina has drawn as many as 4,000 participants per year since around 1925. Richwood, West Virginia — whose newspaper editor once famously mixed ramp juice into the printer’s ink as a prank, drawing the wrath of the U.S. Postmaster General — hosts one of the most well-known celebrations. True confession, as teenagers, a friend and I twice visited the Richwood festival because the street vendors would sell us beer without checking to see if we were 18 yet. Flag Pond, Tennessee holds its annual festival on the second Saturday each May. Whitetop, Virginia does the same the third weekend of May, complete with live music from local legends and a ramp-eating contest for children and adults. Huntington, West Virginia hosts what it calls the Stink Fest, organized by an indoor farmers’ market called The Wild Ramp.

These festivals aren’t just excuses to eat pungent vegetables (and drink beer). They’re expressions of place and belonging. Academic researchers who’ve studied ramp culture describe the plant as “an important symbol of Appalachian regional identity, providing rural mountain communities with a sense of place.” The ramp’s reputation for extreme smell — the kind that follows you out of the room and through the next day — has become something worn with pride rather than embarrassment. It’s the badge of someone who knows the land, who grew up digging bulbs out of a hillside with a grandparent, who understands that the best things have seasons.  Their strong odor lingers on the breath and skin, creating a shared experience that borders on communal initiation. In some Appalachian communities, it has long been joked that eating ramps together ensures that no one notices the smell—because everyone smells the same. And, if you were lucky, it might get you sent home from school the next day.

The ramp’s recent rise in fine dining circles has introduced a complicated tension into that identity. National demand has strained wild populations, raised prices (sometimes to $20 per pound or more at specialty markets), and prompted genuine concern about sustainability. There’s a real question about whether the ramp can remain a community food when it becomes a luxury ingredient. For now, those spring festivals still draw crowds who know the difference between a ramp pulled from familiar woods and one that traveled a thousand miles to appear on a white-tablecloth menu.

 The ramp is, in the end, a small plant carrying an outsized story. It’s a vegetable, yes — a nutritious allium with impressive micronutrient credentials. But it’s also a calendar marker, a community ritual, a flavor memory, and a contested symbol of who gets to claim a landscape as their own. If you ever get the chance to try them fresh in April, take it. Just don’t plan anything important for the next 24 hours.

Illustration generated by author using ChatGPT.

Sources

Botany, Natural History & Range

1. Wikipedia. “Allium tricoccum.” Wikimedia Foundation. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allium_tricoccum     Botanical overview, common names, Appalachian cultural history, ramp festivals.

3. Conzit. “The Allure of Ramps: A Culinary Springtime Delight.” https://conzit.com/post/the-allure-of-ramps-a-culinary-springtime-delight     Seasonal availability, native range, sustainability concerns, and culinary significance.

7. Davis, Jeanine M. and Jacqulyn Greenfield. “Cultivating Ramps: Wild Leeks of Appalachia.” Purdue University New Crops & New Uses, 2002. https://hort.purdue.edu/newcrop/ncnu02/v5-449.html     Definitive agricultural source on ramp cultivation, seed germination, growing conditions, festival traditions, and the Smoky Mountains harvesting ban.

8. WildEdible.com. “Ramps: How to Forage & Eat Wild Leeks.” March 2022. https://www.wildedible.com/blog/foraging-ramps     Foraging identification, historical role as a spring tonic, preparation methods, and seed propagation advice.

11. American Indian Health & Diet Project. “Ramps.” University of Kansas. https://aihd.ku.edu/foods/Ramps.html     Native American uses of ramps (Cherokee, Iroquois, Chippewa), etymology of the word ‘ramp,’ and historical range.

Nutrition & Health

12. SnapCalorie. “Ramps Nutrition.” https://www.snapcalorie.com/nutrition/ramps_nutrition.html     Nutritional overview: vitamins A and C, iron, magnesium, caloric content.

13. Facts.net. “20 Ramps Nutrition Facts.” October 2024. https://facts.net/lifestyle/food/20-ramps-nutrition-facts/     Detailed micronutrient breakdown including vitamins A, C, E, K, folate, potassium, calcium, and anti-inflammatory compounds.

14. Precision Nutrition. “Ramps Recipe & Nutrition.” Encyclopedia of Food. https://www.precisionnutrition.com/encyclopedia/food/ramps     Nutritional analysis, beta-carotene and selenium content, culinary preparation techniques, and storage guidelines.

15. Eat This Much. “Melissa’s Ramps Nutrition Facts.” https://www.eatthismuch.com/food/nutrition/ramps,139795/     Macronutrient breakdown per cup serving; vitamin A as 30% of daily value.

16. Specialty Produce. “Ramps Information and Facts.” https://specialtyproduce.com/produce/Ramps_775.php     Comprehensive botanical and culinary profile; vitamins A, C, K; selenium, chromium, iron, folate content.

17. Instacart. “Ramps – All You Need to Know.” February 2022. https://www.instacart.com/company/ideas/ramps-all-you-need-to-know     Seasonal availability, storage, Canadian foraging limits, and commercial market pricing.

18. Healthline. “10 Health and Nutrition Benefits of Leeks and Wild Ramps.” June 2019. https://www.healthline.com/nutrition/leek-benefits     Peer-reviewed nutritional analysis; kaempferol, allicin, thiosulfinates, vitamin C concentration versus oranges, cardiovascular and cancer-protective properties.

19. HealthierSteps. “Health Benefits Of Wild Ramps And Leeks.” February 2023. https://healthiersteps.com/health-benefits-of-wild-ramps-and-leeks/     Vitamin B6, manganese, folate, potassium and blood pressure; kaempferol and cancer risk reduction.

20. Healthfully. “Nutritional Benefits of Ramps.” January 2021. https://healthfully.com/257269-nutritional-benefits-of-ramps.html     Detailed vitamin A and C daily value percentages; selenium and chromium content; cites Eric Block’s ‘Garlic and Other Alliums: The Lore and the Science.’

Appalachian Culture, Identity & Foraging Tradition

2. Sachdeva, N. et al. “Pungent Provisions: The Ramp and Appalachian Identity.” Academia.edu. https://www.academia.edu/22223522/Pungent_Provisions_The_Ramp_and_Appalachian_Identity     Peer-reviewed qualitative research on ramp culture, identity, and the tension between regional tradition and national culinary demand.

4. Jordan, M. et al. “Ramps (Allium tricoccum Aiton) as a Wild Food in Northern Appalachia.” Society & Natural Resources. Taylor & Francis Online, 2025. https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/08941920.2025.2512536     Peer-reviewed mixed-methods study on ramp harvesting, commercial trade, conservation, and Appalachian regional identity.

5. Appalachian Memories. “The Love of Wild Ramps in the Appalachian Mountains.” EchoesofAppalachia.org, October 2024. https://appalachianmemories.org/2024/10/25/the-love-of-wild-ramps-in-the-appalachian-mountains/     First-person Appalachian foraging traditions, preparation methods, and sustainable harvesting practices.

6. Serra, Janet. “Discovering Ramps: Spring’s Wild Culinary Treasure.” JanetSerra.com, May 2025. https://janetserra.com/2025/05/16/discovering-ramps-springs-wild-culinary-treasure/     Spring ephemeral lifecycle, leaf emergence timing, sulfur compounds and cardiovascular health benefits.

9. OhMyFacts. “15 Facts About Ramps.” October 2024. https://ohmyfacts.com/food-beverage/vegetables/15-facts-about-ramps/     Cherokee culinary and medicinal traditions, nutritional profile summary, and harvest season.

10. ForageFinds.com. “Appalachian Foraging: Native Edible Plants Guide.” December 2024. https://www.foragefinds.com/foraging-by-region/central-appalachia-native-edible-plants/     Indigenous knowledge of ramps, European settler adoption, and role of ramps in contemporary Appalachian cuisine.

Supplement Smarts: What Seniors Should Know Before Reaching for That Bottle

Walk through the supplement aisle of any pharmacy and you’ll find shelf after shelf of promises — stronger bones, sharper memory, less joint pain, better sleep. Americans spend roughly $60 billion a year on dietary supplements, and seniors are among the most enthusiastic buyers. But which of these products actually deliver, which are harmless but ineffective, and which could do real damage? The answers are more nuanced than the marketing suggests.

Older adults are often drawn to supplements because aging changes appetite, digestion, medication use, and nutrient absorption. But the general rule is simple: supplements work best when they fill a documented gap, and they are least useful when they are taken as a broad “insurance policy” by otherwise well-nourished people. Let’s take a closer look.

First, a ground rule that applies to everything in this article: dietary supplements are not FDA-approved drugs. The FDA treats them more like foods, meaning manufacturers don’t have to prove effectiveness before selling them. Quality control also varies widely — what’s on the label may not always match what’s in the bottle. As a result, the scientific evidence behind many supplements is limited or inconsistent. When shopping, look for products with a USP (United States Pharmacopeia) verified mark, which indicates independent testing for identity, purity, and potency.

The Genuinely Helpful Ones

Vitamin D and Calcium are probably the most well-supported supplements for older adults. Bone loss accelerates with age, and these two nutrients work as a team — calcium provides the raw material for bone, while vitamin D helps the body absorb it. The National Institute on Aging recommends 600 IU of vitamin D daily for adults aged 51–70, and 800 IU for those over 70. Most seniors don’t get enough from diet or sun exposure alone, making supplementation genuinely sensible for many people. This is especially true for prople with documented deficiency or osteoporosis risk.  One important caveat: don’t go overboard. Too much vitamin D can cause calcium to build up in the blood, potentially harming the kidneys and blood vessels.

Vitamin B12 is another legitimate priority; Up to 15 percent of older adults may bedeficient.. Older adults are prone to B12 deficiency not because they eat less of it, but because the stomach produces less acid with age, and stomach acid is needed to release B12 from food. Those taking acid-blocking medications are at even higher risk. Deficiency can cause nerve damage and anemia. The good news is that the form of B12 in supplements is absorbed without needing stomach acid, making supplements effective where food sources may fall short.

Omega-3 fatty acids, found in fish oil, have earned a solid reputation for lowering triglycerides — a type of blood fat linked to heart disease. A large study of over 400,000 people found associations between fish oil use and improved cholesterol profiles. However, the picture is more complicated for other claimed benefits. Evidence for omega-3s preventing dementia is mixed, and some research suggests fish oil can actually raise LDL (“bad”) cholesterol in certain people, so monitoring is wise. For those who can’t eat fatty fish regularly, fish oil is a reasonable backup — just don’t expect miracles beyond the triglyceride benefit.

Melatonin has moderate scientific support for improving sleep, which is a chronic issue for many older adults. It’s particularly helpful for resetting disrupted sleep cycles. The key is using it at low doses — often 0.5 to 3 mg is sufficient, though most over-the-counter products contain far more. It’s generally well tolerated but should not replace evaluation of underlying sleep disorders.

Creatine and protein supplements may sound like something only gym rats need, but research increasingly supports their role in combating sarcopenia — the age-related loss of muscle mass that can lead to falls and loss of independence. A 2024 Stanford review found that creatine supplementation, combined with resistance training, can meaningfully preserve muscle in adults over 65. Branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) can play a supporting role in certain situations, particularly when protein intake from food is inadequate. Vegans should pay particular attention to protein intake.

The Ambiguous Middle Ground

Glucosamine and chondroitin are among the most popular supplements for joint pain, and the scientific debate around them has been going on for decades. These are naturally occurring compounds in cartilage, and the theory is that supplementing them may slow joint deterioration in osteoarthritis. A 2024 systematic review of 146 studies found that over 90% of the studies reported positive outcomes — impressive on its face. But the landmark NIH-funded GAIT trial told a more sobering story: glucosamine and chondroitin, alone or together, were no more effective than a placebo for most people with knee osteoarthritis. The exception was a subgroup with moderate-to-severe pain, who did show moderate improvement. Safety is generally good, but those on blood thinners like warfarin should be careful, as glucosamine may affect clotting.

Turmeric and curcumin have generated enormous popular interest, and there’s at least a plausible scientific basis for the excitement. Curcumin, the active compound in turmeric, is a potent anti-inflammatory and antioxidant. Multiple clinical trials support some benefit for knee pain, and some research suggests potential benefits for cognitive health. However, curcumin is poorly absorbed on its own, which is why many products add black pepper (piperine) or use enhanced delivery formulations. The overall evidence, while promising, is still described as “mixed or low quality” by most reviewers. If you do try it, look for a formulation with enhanced bioavailability and give it at least 4–8 weeks and be aware that it may cause gastrointestinal symptoms.

Saw palmetto is widely used by older men for symptoms of benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH) — the enlarged prostate that causes frequent urination. A 2024 updated Cochrane review found some evidence of limited benefit for urinary symptoms for some men, though the results are inconsistent and most mainstream urology guidelines do not formally recommend it. It’s generally well tolerated. Men using it should still get their prostate checked regularly and not assume saw palmetto rules out other conditions.

Magnesium has had a social media moment, with enthusiastic claims about better sleep, improved mood, and reduced muscle cramps. The actual science is more cautious — there’s limited evidence for magnesium supplements providing any of these benefits in people who aren’t already deficient. That said, deficiency is relatively common in older adults, and correction of a true deficiency can absolutely help. A blood test can tell you if you actually need it.

Multivitamins present a genuine paradox. They’re the most commonly taken supplement category, often recommended by physicians as a nutritional safety net. And for seniors with reduced appetite or limited dietary variety, that logic holds. But large, well-designed studies have found limited evidence that multivitamins improve longevity or prevent major diseases in otherwise healthy older adults. A newer 2024 analysis from the COSMOS trial suggests some modest benefit for cognitive function. Senior-specific multivitamins are preferred — they typically contain more vitamin D and B12 and less or no iron, which reflects the actual needs of older adults.

The Ones That Raise Red Flags

Iron supplements deserve special caution in older men and post-menopausal women. Unless there’s a documented deficiency confirmed by blood testing, taking iron supplements can be harmful. In men, iron overload is a genuine risk, and about twice as many men carry the gene for hereditary hemochromatosis (a condition where the body absorbs too much iron) as carry the gene for iron deficiency. Excess iron has been linked to liver damage and may raise cancer risk. Senior-specific multivitamins wisely contain little or no iron for exactly this reason.

High-dose Vitamin A is another potential problem. The liver’s ability to clear vitamin A decreases with age, and older adults absorb more of it. Doses above recommended daily values can accumulate to toxic levels, potentially harming the liver. This is specifically the retinol form of vitamin A.  Beta-carotene from plant sources is much safer. Check your multivitamin label carefully.

High dose Vitamin B6 can cause nerve damage, balance problems, and sensory neuropathy when taken over long periods but is safe at recommended levels.

Many supplements claim to improve memory or prevent dementia. Unfortunately, the evidence is generally weak. Fish oil, ginkgo biloba, and other popular products have not demonstrated clear benefits for preventing cognitive decline in controlled studies.   Some research suggests that long-term supplementation with B vitamins might slow certain aspects of cognitive decline in specific populations, but results remain inconsistent.

St. John’s Wort is widely used for mild depression, but it comes with a serious warning: it interacts with a long list of medications, including antidepressants, blood thinners, heart medications, and antiretroviral drugs. For seniors managing multiple conditions with multiple prescriptions, this herb is particularly risky. Ginkgo biloba carries similar drug interaction concerns, especially around bleeding risk when combined with blood thinners or aspirin.

High-dose antioxidants — vitamins A, C, and E taken in large amounts — have largely failed to deliver on their promise of preventing heart disease and cancer. The US Preventive Services Task Force does not recommend these for prevention. In some cases, large antioxidant supplements may actually interfere with the body’s natural disease-fighting mechanisms.

The Bottom Line

Given the mixed evidence, a sensible approach to supplements includes several principles:

  1. Food first. A balanced diet usually provides most necessary nutrients.
  2. Test before supplementing. Blood tests can identify deficiencies such as B12 or Vitamin D.
  3. Avoid megadoses. Excessive intake of vitamins can cause toxicity.
  4. Check medication interactions. Many supplements interact with common drugs, including blood thinners.
  5. Treat supplements like medications. They should have a clear purpose and measurable benefit.

Supplements that address documented deficiencies or fill genuine dietary gaps — vitamin D, B12, calcium, omega-3s — offer the best evidence for benefit in seniors. Joint supplements like glucosamine and turmeric may help some people, though the evidence is mixed enough that a try-and-see approach (with a 2–3 month window to assess benefit) is reasonable. And several common supplements, particularly iron in unsupervised use, high-dose vitamin A, and certain herbals in combination with medications, carry risks that are easy to overlook because they’re sold without a prescription.

I always advised my patients to bring all their supplement bottles to at least one visit each year and to bring any medicines prescribed by specialists. Physicians can spot dangerous overlaps, flag interactions with your prescriptions, and tell you if what you’re taking makes sense for you. Many seniors never hear a list of side effects for supplements the way they do for prescription drugs — and they often assume that means there aren’t any. That assumption, unfortunately, can be costly.

Illustration generated by author using ChatGPT.

Sources

Kaufman MW et al. Nutritional Supplements for Healthy Aging: A Critical Analysis Review. American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine, 2024.

National Institute on Aging. Dietary Supplements for Older Adults.

National Institute on Aging. Vitamins and Minerals for Older Adults.

Linus Pauling Institute, Oregon State University. Older Adults — Micronutrient Information Center.

Baden KER et al. The Safety and Efficacy of Glucosamine and/or Chondroitin in Humans: A Systematic Review. Nutrients, 2025.

National Center for Health Research. Glucosamine Supplements: Do They Work and Are They Safe?

BodySpec. Supplements for Joint Health: 2025 Evidence-Based Guide.

UCHealth Today. Dietary Supplements: Are These 14 Common Vitamins and Supplements Beneficial or a Waste of Money?

Cleveland Clinic. Dietary Supplements Compound Health Issues for Older Adults.

FDA. Mixing Medications and Dietary Supplements Can Endanger Your Health.

NIH Office of Dietary Supplements. Iron — Health Professional Fact Sheet.

NIH Office of Dietary Supplements. Multivitamin/Mineral Supplements — Health Professional Fact Sheet.

Foods (MDPI). Food Supplements and Their Use in Elderly Subjects — Challenges and Risks. 2024.

PMC. Improving Cognitive Function with Nutritional Supplements in Aging: A Comprehensive Narrative Review. 2023.

Memorial Healthcare System. Herbal Supplements and Prescription Drugs: Know the Risks. 2024.

WebMD. Saw Palmetto: Overview, Uses, Side Effects, Precautions.

________________________________________________

Medical Disclaimer

The information provided in this article is intended for general educational and informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. It should not be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.

Always seek the guidance of a qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition or treatment. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay seeking it because of something you have read here.

If you are experiencing a medical emergency, call 911 or your local emergency number immediately.

The author of this article is a licensed physician, but the views expressed here are solely those of the author and do not represent the official position of any hospital, health system, or medical organization with which the author may be affiliated.

The Evolution of the English Language: From Anglo-Saxon Roots to a Global Tongue

English is a beautifully messy language—shameless in its borrowing and relentless in its evolution. It resists the tidy logic that might make a grammarian’s life easier, and that resistance is part of what makes its history so compelling. The English we speak today is the product of centuries of invasion, migration, cultural collision, and literary ambition—a language built in layers, like geological strata laid down over time.

To see how English grew from an obscure Germanic dialect into a global lingua franca, it helps to trace three broad phases: Old English, Middle English, and Modern English. Each stage was shaped by different historical forces, from Germanic migration and Viking settlement to the Norman Conquest, the Renaissance, the printing press, and ultimately the worldwide reach of the British Empire and the United States.

Anglo-Saxon Foundations

The story begins on the European mainland. When Roman authority collapsed in Britain in the early fifth century, Germanic-speaking peoples from what is now northern Germany, Denmark, and the Netherlands moved into the island. The Angles, Saxons, and Jutes arrived in waves, bringing closely related West Germanic dialects that gradually developed into Old English, often called Anglo-Saxon.

Old English was thoroughly Germanic in both grammar and vocabulary. It was a highly inflected language: case endings marked whether a noun was subject, object, or possessive, and nouns had grammatical gender. Verbs were conjugated with a complexity that feels foreign to most modern English speakers. Much of the core vocabulary of modern English—words such as water, house, bread, child, earth, life, and death—dates back to this early period and still carries that Germanic stamp.

The language of Beowulf, composed between the eighth and early eleventh centuries, is virtually unreadable today without specialized training. Its famous opening line, “Hwæt! We Gardena in geardagum,” is technically English, but it feels closer to a foreign language. Old English used letters such as þ (thorn) and ð (eth) and relied on grammatical structures that later disappeared.

Nor was Old English a single uniform tongue. It existed as a cluster of regional dialects including Northumbrian, Mercian, Kentish, and West Saxon. Under King Alfred the Great in the late ninth century, Wessex became the leading political power in England and a center of learning. Alfred sponsored translations of important Latin works into Old English, most often in the West Saxon dialect. As a result, most surviving Old English texts come from that dialect, giving us only a partial view of the linguistic diversity of early England.

Latin and Celtic Influences

Even before the Anglo-Saxons arrived in Britain, Latin had begun to influence their speech through contact with the Roman world. Early Latin loanwords include street (from strata), wall (from vallum), and wine (from vinum).

A second wave of Latin influence arrived with the Christianization of England beginning in 597, when Augustine of Canterbury established a mission in Kent. Christianity introduced vocabulary connected with religion, learning, and administration—words such as church, bishop, monk, school, altar, and verse.

By contrast, the Celtic languages spoken by the native Britons left a surprisingly small mark on English vocabulary. Their influence survives most clearly in place names—for example Thames, Avon, and Dover—and in landscape terms such as combe (valley) and tor (rocky hill). Why Celtic languages left relatively few everyday words in English remains one of the lingering puzzles of linguistic history.

Vikings and the Norse Contribution

Beginning in the late eighth century, Scandinavian raiders and settlers—collectively known as Vikings—began attacking and eventually settling parts of England. By the ninth century much of northern and eastern England had become part of the Danelaw, where Old English speakers lived alongside speakers of Old Norse.

Because Old Norse and Old English were closely related Germanic languages, speakers could often roughly understand each other. Over time, however, sustained contact produced deep linguistic blending. English absorbed many Norse-derived words that now feel completely native, including sky, skin, skill, skirt, egg, leg, window, husband, call, take, give, get, want, and die.

Perhaps the most striking Norse contribution lies in the pronouns they, them, and their, which replaced earlier Old English forms. When a language adopts core pronouns from another language, it signals unusually intense and prolonged contact.

Many linguists also believe that contact with Norse speakers helped accelerate the simplification of English grammar. In bilingual communities, speakers often reduce complex inflectional endings that make communication difficult. As a result, English gradually moved away from the elaborate grammatical endings of Old English and toward a system that relied more heavily on word order.

The Norman Transformation

The Norman Conquest of 1066 transformed English more dramatically than any other single event in its history. When William of Normandy defeated King Harold at the Battle of Hastings and became king of England, he brought with him a French-speaking aristocracy.

For several centuries after the conquest, French dominated the language of power—the court, the law, the church hierarchy, and much of government administration. English remained the everyday language of the population but lost prestige in elite circles.

French vocabulary poured into English in areas associated with authority and culture. Law gained terms such as justice, court, judge, jury, prison, crime, and verdict. Government absorbed parliament, sovereign, minister, authority, tax, and treasury. Military language adopted army, navy, soldier, captain, defense, and siege.

Even the language of food reflects this social divide. The animals in the field kept their Old English names—cow, sheep, pig, and deer—while the meat served at noble tables took French names: beef, mutton, pork, and venison.

The Rise of Middle English

Over time, French dominance gradually weakened. The loss of Normandy in 1204 encouraged English nobles to identify more strongly with England itself. Later, the Black Death (1348–1350) reshaped English society by elevating the economic importance of English-speaking laborers and craftsmen.

During the fourteenth century, English returned as the language of all social classes. The language that emerged—Middle English—looked very different from Old English. Most grammatical endings disappeared, grammatical gender vanished, and sentence structure shifted toward the familiar subject-verb-object order.

At the same time, English vocabulary became a rich mixture of Germanic and Romance elements. This layering produced sets of near-synonyms with different levels of formality: ask (Germanic), question (French), and interrogate (Latin).

The most famous literary figure of this period was Geoffrey Chaucer, whose Canterbury Tales demonstrated that English could rival French and Latin as a vehicle for sophisticated literature. Chaucer wrote in the London dialect, which was gaining prominence due to the city’s political and commercial importance. Though not yet standardized, London English gradually became the foundation of later written English.

Printing and the Great Vowel Shift

William Caxton established England’s first printing press in 1476, and this technological revolution had far-reaching consequences for the language. Printing created a need for standardized spelling and grammar, since texts would now be distributed widely rather than copied by hand in local scriptoria. Caxton himself struggled with the problem of dialect variation, complaining about the difficulty of choosing forms that all English readers could understand. Over time, the conventions adopted by London printers became the de facto standard. Additionally, the need to create type for the printing press led to the dropping of the letters þ (thorn) and ð (eth) that were difficult to replicate in lead.

At the same time, English pronunciation underwent a dramatic change known as the Great Vowel Shift, which occurred roughly between 1400 and 1700. Long vowel sounds moved upward in the mouth, transforming the pronunciation of many common words. For example, “name” once sounded closer to nah-muh, while “mouse” sounded more like moose. 

The causes of the Great Vowel Shift remain debated—theories range from the social upheaval following the Black Death to the influence of French-accented English—but its effects were enormous. The spellings had been largely fixed by printing before the vowel shift was complete, so that the written words reflected pronunciations that no longer existed such as knife and through.

Renaissance Expansion

The English Renaissance of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries unleashed another flood of new vocabulary, much of it borrowed from Latin and Greek. Scholars and writers introduced thousands of words connected to science, philosophy, and literature, including democracy, encyclopedia, atmosphere, thermometer, criticism, and educate.

Critics derided the new coinages as “inkhorn terms”—pretentious, unnecessary words invented by scholars dipping their quills in inkhorns. Some of these attacked words, like “perpetrate” and “contemplate,” survived, others, like “ingent” (enormous), did not.

Two towering cultural works further shaped English during this era: Shakespeare’s plays and the King James Bible (1611). Shakespeare popularized countless words and expressions—among them assassination, lonely, eventful, and phrases like “break the ice” and “wild goose chase.” The King James Bible, widely read for centuries, left deep marks on English rhythm and idiom.

Dictionaries and Standardization

By the eighteenth century, many writers wanted to standardize and regulate English. The most influential effort was Samuel Johnson’s Dictionary of the English Language (1755), which became the dominant reference work of its era.

In the United States, Noah Webster’s American Dictionary of the English Language (1828) promoted simplified spellings such as color instead of colour and center instead of centre. Webster viewed spelling reform as part of America’s broader cultural independence from Britain.

English Goes Global

From the seventeenth through the early twentieth centuries, the British Empire spread English across the globe. Along the way, the language absorbed vocabulary from many other languages. Hindi contributed words such as jungle and shampoo, Arabic added algebra and alcohol, and Malay gave English bamboo and ketchup.

As English took root in different regions, new varieties emerged—American, Australian, Canadian, Indian, Nigerian, Singaporean, and many others. Linguists today increasingly recognize these as legitimate forms of English rather than deviations from a single standard.

English in the Digital Age

In the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, mass media and digital communication have accelerated linguistic change. Radio, film, television, and the internet spread slang, accents, and new expressions around the world with unprecedented speed.

English continues to absorb new words from science, technology, business, and online culture. Brand names become verbs; internet slang becomes everyday speech. Today more than a billion people speak English as a first or second language, making it the most widely used language in human history.

A Language Still Evolving

The history of English reminds us that language is not a fixed monument but a living system shaped by human interaction. Its vocabulary is like an archaeological site, where almost every common word carries traces of earlier eras.

English has never been “pure,” and attempts to purify it have always failed. Its strength lies in its openness—its ability to borrow, adapt, and reinvent itself. From the heroic poetry of Beowulf to Shakespeare’s theater, from the King James Bible to the language of the internet, English continues to grow through the voices of those who use it.

And if history is any guide, the English spoken a few centuries from now will sound just as surprising to us as Chaucer’s language once did.

Illustration generated by author using ChatGPT.

Sources

Baugh, Albert C. and Thomas Cable. A History of the English Language (6th edition). Routledge, 2012. This remains the standard academic textbook on the subject and covers every period and influence discussed above.

Crystal, David. The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language (3rd edition). Cambridge University Press, 2019. An accessible and richly illustrated reference covering the structure and history of English.

McCrum, Robert, Robert MacNeil, and William Cran. The Story of English (3rd revised edition). Penguin, 2003. A popular history that accompanied the PBS television series, excellent for general readers.

Mugglestone, Lynda (ed.). The Oxford History of English (2nd edition). Oxford University Press, 2012. A collection of essays by specialists covering English from its earliest origins to the present day.

Bede, The Venerable. Ecclesiastical History of the English People. Penguin Classics, 1990 (translated by Leo Sherley-Price). The primary early source on the Anglo-Saxon migrations.

Townend, Matthew. “Contacts and Conflicts: Latin, Norse, and French.” In The Oxford History of English, edited by Lynda Mugglestone, 2012. A detailed treatment of the major external influences on English.

Online resource: The British Library’s “Evolving English” exhibit materials are available at https://www.bl.uk/learning/langlit/evolvingenglish/

Online resource: Durkin, Philip. “Borrowed Words: A History of Loanwords in English.” Oxford University Press, 2014. Summary and excerpts available at https://global.oup.com/academic/product/borrowed-words-9780199574995

Hay Fever: The Allergy That Has Nothing to Do with Hay

Let’s get one thing out of the way up front: hay fever has almost nothing to do with hay, and it doesn’t cause a fever. The name stuck after a popular 19th-century theory that the smell of summer hay was making people sick. Turns out, the culprit is invisible and far more pervasive — tiny airborne particles that your immune system, for reasons we can’t entirely explain, decides to treat like the enemy. The official medical term is allergic rhinitis, but most of us just call it hay fever, seasonal allergies, or, in the depths of pollen season, I call it a personal nightmare.

If you’ve ever spent a spring morning sneezing your way through a box of tissues or rubbed your eyes until they looked like you’d been crying all night, you already know what this feels like. What you might not know is why it happens, what exactly sets it off, and — most importantly — what you can do about it. Let’s dig in.

What Is Hay Fever, Exactly?

Hay fever is, at its core, an overreaction by your immune system. When you breathe in certain particles — pollen, dust, animal dander — your body may misidentify them as a threat. In response, it releases a chemical called histamine, which is supposed to help fight off invaders but instead triggers a cascade of miserable symptoms: sneezing, congestion, a runny nose, itchy eyes, and general stuffiness. None of this is actually doing anything useful. Your immune system is essentially deploying the cavalry against a dandelion.

According to the Cleveland Clinic, roughly 20% of Americans have allergic rhinitis, and a 2021 study found that more than 81 million people reported seasonal allergy symptoms that year alone. So, if you’re one of us, you are not alone.

Hay fever comes in two main varieties. Seasonal allergic rhinitis is what most people picture — the spring sneezing, the summer eye-rubbing, the early fall misery. Perennial allergic rhinitis, on the other hand, is the year-round version, driven by indoor allergens that don’t take the winter off. Either way, the underlying mechanism is the same: your immune system picking a fight with something that poses no real danger.

What Triggers It?

The list of potential triggers is longer than you might expect, but they fall into a few main categories.

Pollen is the classic offender and the one most associated with the “hay fever” label. But not all pollen is created equal. According to the American College of Allergy, Asthma and Immunology (ACAAI), seasonal hay fever is most commonly triggered by wind-carried pollen from trees, grasses, and weeds. Crucially, it’s not flower pollen — those heavy, colorful grains are carried by insects and never make it into your airway.   The sneaky offenders are the plain-looking plants whose lightweight pollen drifts for miles. Tree pollens tend to peak in spring, grasses in early summer, and ragweed in late summer through early fall.

Hot, dry, and windy days are the worst for pollen exposure. A cool, rainy day provides some relief — rain washes pollen out of the air, at least temporarily. As noted by MedlinePlus (National Library of Medicine), pollen counts are highest during those breezy, sunny mornings when everything is blooming.

Beyond pollen, a range of indoor allergens can trigger perennial symptoms year-round. Dust mites — microscopic creatures that live in bedding, carpets, and upholstered furniture — are among the most common. Pet dander (the tiny flecks of skin that cats, dogs, and other animals shed) is another major culprit. Mold spores, which thrive in damp environments, can trigger symptoms both indoors and outdoors. And unpleasantly, cockroach droppings and saliva are also recognized as allergens. The ACAAI notes that perennial symptoms tend to worsen in winter, when people spend more time indoors with windows closed and allergens concentrated.

You may also notice that some non‑allergic irritants make things worse, such as cigarette smoke, strong perfumes, cleaning sprays or exhaust fumes. They do not cause hay fever on their own, but they can irritate already sensitive noses and eyes.

There’s also a lesser-known category: occupational rhinitis. If your symptoms are worse at work and better on weekends, you might be reacting to something in your workplace environment — cleaning chemicals, dust, fumes, or other irritants. This is worth discussing with a doctor if you notice a pattern.

The so-called “hygiene hypothesis” suggests that overly clean environments may predispose the immune system to overreact when you do come in contact with a trigger. This point remains debatable, but it’s widely discussed in immunology literature.

How Does It Feel?

The symptoms of hay fever overlap enough with the common cold that it can be genuinely hard to tell the two apart at first. The key difference is that hay fever is not contagious, doesn’t come with a true fever, and tends to linger as long as you’re exposed to the trigger rather than resolving in a week or two like a cold.

Typical symptoms include sneezing (sometimes in rapid-fire bursts), a runny or stuffed-up nose, itchy and watery eyes, an itchy throat or roof of the mouth, and post-nasal drip. More severe cases can cause fatigue, reduced concentration, and disrupted sleep. According to Harvard Health Publishing, the congestion can also lead to secondary complications like sinus infections or ear infections, since swelling can block the passages that normally drain those areas.

For people with asthma, hay fever can be an especially unwelcome companion. The same inflammation that irritates the nasal passages can travel through the airways and worsen breathing problems. The NCBI/InformedHealth.org notes that hay fever symptoms can sometimes “move down” into the lungs and develop into allergic asthma over time — one more reason to take persistent symptoms seriously.

What Can You Do About It?

The good news is that hay fever is manageable, even if it isn’t curable. Treatment generally falls into three strategies: avoidance, medication, and — for more serious cases — immunotherapy.

Avoidance sounds obvious but is easier said than done and takes some planning. Staying indoors on high-pollen days (especially in the morning when counts peak), keeping windows closed, using air conditioning instead of window fans, and showering after being outside can all reduce your exposure. For dust mite allergies, encasing pillows and mattresses in allergen-blocking covers and washing bedding in hot water regularly can make a noticeable difference. The ACAAI also suggests wearing wraparound sunglasses outdoors to limit the amount of pollen that reaches your eyes.

Medications are the backbone of hay fever treatment for most people. Antihistamines work by blocking the histamine response — they’re widely available over the counter and work well for mild-to-moderate symptoms. Older antihistamines (like diphenhydramine, the active ingredient in Benadryl) can cause drowsiness; newer ones like cetirizine (Zyrtec) and loratadine (Claritin) are much less sedating for most people.  These make life tolerable for me in the fall and spring.  When I was younger, there were days when I wouldn’t venture outside because of the unpleasant symptoms.

Nasal corticosteroid sprays are considered the most effective single treatment for allergic rhinitis by most clinical guidelines. According to MedlinePlus, they work best when used consistently rather than just on symptom days, and many brands — including fluticasone (Flonase) and budesonide (Rhinocort) — are now available without a prescription. Harvard Health advises starting these sprays a week or two before your expected allergy season begins for maximum effectiveness.

Decongestants can help with nasal stuffiness, but nasal spray decongestants (like oxymetazoline) should not be used for more than three days in a row, as they can cause a rebound effect that makes congestion worse. Oral decongestants don’t carry that risk but can raise blood pressure and heart rate, so they’re not appropriate for everyone.

Leukotriene inhibitors — most commonly montelukast (Singulair) — offer another option. These prescription medications work differently from antihistamines and steroids, blocking a different arm of the allergic response. They’re less effective than corticosteroid sprays on their own but can be useful in combination. Antihistamine eye drops are also available for people whose main complaint is itchy, watery eyes.

For people with persistent or severe symptoms that don’t respond well to medications, allergen immunotherapy may be the answer. This is the long game: regular, gradually increasing doses of the allergen itself, either through allergy shots (subcutaneous immunotherapy) or sublingual tablets and drops placed under the tongue. According to the Australasian Society of Clinical Immunology and Allergy (ASCIA), treatment typically runs three to five years and should be overseen by an allergy specialist. It doesn’t cure the allergy, but it can meaningfully reduce the severity of symptoms and lower your dependence on daily medications.

Finally, simple saline nasal rinses are worth mentioning. They’re not glamorous, but rinsing the nasal passages with saltwater (using a neti pot or squeeze bottle) can physically flush out allergens and thin mucus. They’re safe, inexpensive, and effective enough that clinical guidelines recommend them as a complementary strategy.  Personally, I’ve found them unpleasant to use though many of my patients swear by them.

A Final Word

Hay fever is one of those conditions that can feel like a minor inconvenience until it’s not — until it’s disrupting your sleep, tanking your productivity, and making you dread the most beautiful days of the year. The encouraging news is that modern medicine has a pretty good toolkit for managing it. If over-the-counter antihistamines and nasal sprays aren’t cutting it, that’s worth a conversation with your doctor. Allergy testing can pinpoint your specific triggers, and from there, a targeted treatment plan can make a real difference.

There’s something ironic about hay fever: the very environments we associate with health—fresh air, blooming trees, green landscapes—can provoke the body into a defensive overreaction. Understanding that paradox is the first step toward managing it effectively.

In the meantime, maybe check the pollen count before you plan that picnic.

As always, this article is for information only. Consult your health care provider regarding your individual care.

Illustration generated by the author using ChatGPT.

Sources

Cleveland Clinic: Allergic Rhinitis (Hay Fever) — https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/diseases/8622-allergic-rhinitis-hay-fever

American College of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology (ACAAI): Hay Fever — https://acaai.org/allergies/allergic-conditions/hay-fever/

MedlinePlus (National Library of Medicine): Allergic Rhinitis — https://medlineplus.gov/ency/article/000813.htm

Harvard Health Publishing: Hay Fever (Allergic Rhinitis) — https://www.health.harvard.edu/a_to_z/hay-fever-allergic-rhinitis-a-to-z

NCBI / InformedHealth.org: Overview of Hay Fever — https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK279488/

Australasian Society of Clinical Immunology and Allergy (ASCIA): Allergic Rhinitis — https://www.allergy.org.au/patients/allergic-rhinitis-hay-fever-and-sinusitis/allergic-rhinitis-or-hay-fever

The Easter Bunny: A Surprisingly Serious History

How a German hare hopped its way into American Easter tradition

Every Easter morning, children across America hunt for eggs left by a rabbit. It’s a charming ritual—and a deeply strange one, when you stop to think about it. Rabbits don’t lay eggs. They don’t carry baskets. Yet here we are, every spring, maintaining the fiction with great enthusiasm. Where did this tradition come from? The answer turns out to be a lot more interesting than you might expect.

The story starts in Germany. The earliest documented reference to an Easter Hare—called the “Osterhase” in German—appears in 1678, in a medical text by the physician Georg Franck von Franckenau. In the German tradition, the Osterhase was specifically a hare, not a rabbit, and its job was straightforward: deliver colored eggs to well-behaved children. Naughty children got nothing. This moral dimension—gift delivery tied to good behavior—should sound familiar. The Easter Bunny was, in a sense, an early version of Santa Claus.

The tradition crossed the Atlantic in the 1700s, carried by German Protestant immigrants who settled in Pennsylvania. Their children knew the Osterhase (sometimes rendered as “Oschter Haws” in Pennsylvania Dutch dialect) and kept up the custom of leaving out nests—made from caps and bonnets—for the hare to fill with eggs. Over time, the nests became baskets, the simple colored eggs became candy and chocolate, and the moral judgment quietly dropped away. By the 20th century, the Easter Bunny had transformed from selective gift-giver into universal children’s benefactor.

But why eggs at all? Eggs entered the Easter story long before Germany. For ancient Romans, they symbolized new life and fertility, and the custom of giving dyed eggs as spring gifts predates Christianity. The Christian tradition added another layer: during the Lenten fasting period eggs were a forbidden food. By Easter Sunday, the people were ready to use the accumulated eggs and were ready to celebrate.  They cooked, decorated, and shared them. The emergence from the shell became a visual metaphor for resurrection, and the symbolism stuck.

Rabbits and hares had their own long history as symbols of fertility and springtime. Some writers have linked the Easter Bunny to an ancient Anglo-Saxon goddess named Eostre—from whose name we may get the word “Easter”—and they claim the hare was her sacred animal. It’s a compelling story. It’s also largely unsupported by evidence. The Oxford Dictionary of English Folklore notes that the only historical source mentioning Eostre is the medieval scholar Bede, and Bede says nothing about hares. The goddess-and-hare connection appears to be modern folklore dressed up as ancient tradition.

What is better documented is that hares held symbolic significance across many early cultures. Neolithic burial sites in Europe include hares interred alongside humans, suggesting ritual importance. Hares are conspicuous breeders—they produce multiple litters each year and nest above ground, making their reproductive activity visible in a way that rabbits’ underground burrows do not. For pre-modern peoples marking the return of spring, the hare was a living advertisement for new life.

The combination of egg symbolism and hare symbolism wasn’t a deliberate design decision by any single culture or institution. It was a gradual collision—two powerful images of renewal fusing together over centuries of seasonal celebration. The church absorbed local spring customs rather than eliminating them, allowing pagan associations with fertility and rebirth to persist beneath a Christian overlay. The result is the hybrid tradition we have today.

Today’s Easter Bunny is genuinely a global figure, though not always a rabbit. In Australia, the role is played by the Easter Bilby, an endangered marsupial that conservationists have promoted as a local alternative since the 1990s. Switzerland has an Easter Cuckoo. Parts of Germany have an Easter Fox. Each region adapted the basic concept of a spring gift-bringer to fit its own wildlife and folklore.

The commercial Easter Bunny we know—the chocolate molded figure, the pastel basket, the branded plush toy—is largely a product of the late 19th and 20th centuries, shaped by the same forces that turned Saint Nicholas into Santa Claus. Candy manufacturers, greeting card companies, and department stores found in Easter a spring counterpart to the Christmas retail season, and the Easter Bunny was the obvious mascot.

None of that diminishes what the tradition actually does. The Easter Bunny survived precisely because its meaning kept evolving. It began as a moral enforcer in 17th-century Germany, became a community ritual for immigrant families in Pennsylvania, and eventually became a child’s-eye-view celebration of spring available to secular and religious families alike. The rabbit never needed to make logical sense. It only needed to mark the moment the world turns green again—and every civilization, it seems, finds a way to celebrate that.

Illustration generated by author using ChatGPT.

Sources:

  • Bede, De Temporum Ratione (8th century)
    https://sourcebooks.fordham.edu/basis/bede-reckoning.asp
  • Encyclopaedia Britannica — Easter holiday origins
    https://www.britannica.com/topic/Easter-holiday
  • Catholic Encyclopedia — Lent and fasting traditions
    https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09152a.htm
  • Smithsonian Magazine — History of Easter Eggs
    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/the-history-of-the-easter-egg-180971982/
  • History.com — Easter Symbols and Traditions
    https://www.history.com/topics/holidays/easter-symbols
  • Library of Congress — Easter traditions in early America
    https://blogs.loc.gov/folklife/2016/03/easter-on-the-farm/
  • National Geographic — Where Did the Easter Bunny Come From?
    https://www.nationalgeographic.com/history/article/easter-bunny-origins
  • American Folklife Center, Library of Congress
    https://www.loc.gov/folklife/
  • National Confectioners Association — Easter candy statistics
    https://www.nationalconfectioners.org/blog/seasonal-easter-candy-data/
  • Smithsonian — How holidays became commercial traditions
    https://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-surprising-history-of-holiday-shopping-180964949/
  • Oxford Companion to the Year — Ronald Hutton
    https://global.oup.com/academic/product/the-stations-of-the-sun-9780192854483
  • University of Pennsylvania Religious Studies overview of seasonal festivals
    https://www.penn.museum/sites/expedition/easter/

A Clearer Look at the Chemistry of Health and Aging

A Clearer Look at the Chemistry of Health and Aging

Introduction: The Invisible Chemistry Inside Your Body

At this very moment, a quiet chemical battle is taking place inside every cell of your body. On one side are free radicals—unstable molecules that react aggressively with nearby cells. On the other side are antioxidants, compounds that neutralize those unstable molecules before they cause damage.

When these two forces stay in balance, the body functions normally. But when free radicals outnumber the body’s defenses, the result is oxidative stress. Scientists increasingly believe oxidative stress contributes to aging and many chronic diseases.

Understanding this process does not require a chemistry degree. But knowing the basics can help explain why lifestyle choices such as diet, smoking, sun exposure, and exercise affect long-term health.

What Are Free Radicals?

Free radicals are simply unstable molecules. They are unstable because they contain an unpaired electron, which makes them highly reactive.

To stabilize themselves, free radicals attempt to steal electrons from nearby molecules. When they do this, they may damage the structure of cells, proteins, or DNA.

The most common free radicals in the body are forms of oxygen and nitrogen known as reactiveoxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS). Examples include superoxide, hydrogen peroxide, and hydroxyl radicals. Although these names sound intimidating, the basic idea is straightforward: they are oxygen-based molecules that react easily with other parts of the cell.

According to the National Cancer Institute, free radicals form when atoms or molecules gain or lose electrons during normal metabolic processes.

How Free Radicals Are Produced

Free radicals arise from both normal body processes and environmental exposures.

Internal Sources

The most important source is the body’s energy production system. Cells convert food into energy inside tiny structures called mitochondria. During this process, small numbers of free radicals are produced as natural by-products.

In addition, the immune system intentionally generates free radicals when fighting infections. Certain white blood cells release bursts of reactive oxygen molecules that help destroy bacteria and viruses.

Free radical production can also increase during inflammation, psychological stress, and intense physical exertion. In short, some degree of free radical production is unavoidable because it is a normal part of life’s chemistry.

External Sources

Environmental exposures can significantly increase free radical production. Cigarette smoke is one of the most powerful sources of oxidative chemicals. Air pollution, alcohol consumption, and excessive exposure to sunlight—particularly ultraviolet radiation—can also generate large numbers of reactive molecules. In addition, exposure to pesticides, industrial chemicals, and certain types of radiation may contribute to oxidative reactions inside the body.

These exposures can push free radical production beyond what the body’s natural defenses can easily manage.

The Surprisingly Useful Side of Free Radicals

Free radicals are often portrayed as purely harmful, but that description is incomplete. In moderate amounts they serve several useful functions.

One of the immune system’s most effective weapons is the oxidative burst. When immune cells encounter bacteria, they release a wave of free radicals that chemically attack and destroy the invading organisms. Without this response, the body would have far greater difficulty controlling infections.

Small amounts of reactive molecules also function as cellular signaling agents, helping regulate processes such as cell growth, repair, and programmed cell death. Programmed cell death is especially important because it allows the body to remove damaged or potentially dangerous cells.

Nitric oxide provides another example. Although it technically qualifies as a free radical, it plays an important role in controlling blood vessel relaxation and maintaining healthy blood pressure.

Exercise also temporarily increases free radical production. Surprisingly, this mild oxidative stress appears to stimulate beneficial adaptations. The body responds by strengthening its natural antioxidant defenses, which may partly explain why regular physical activity improves long-term health. Some researchers have suggested that very large doses of antioxidant supplements taken around workouts could reduce some of these benefits, although this remains an area of ongoing research.

When Free Radicals Cause Damage

Problems begin when free radical production exceeds the body’s ability to neutralize them.

Because free radicals steal electrons from other molecules, they can trigger chain reactions that damage important cellular structures.

One major target is the cell membrane. Cell membranes are composed largely of fats, and free radicals can attack these fats in a process called lipid peroxidation. When this happens, the membrane becomes weaker and less able to control what enters or leaves the cell.

Proteins are another common target. Proteins carry out much of the body’s work, including thousands of chemical reactions controlled by enzymes. When free radicals alter the structure of proteins, those proteins may lose their normal function.

Perhaps the most concerning effect involves DNA damage. Free radicals can alter the genetic material inside cells, creating mutations. If the body’s repair systems cannot correct these changes, the mutations may contribute to the development of cancer.

The body does possess repair mechanisms that fix much of this damage. However, these systems can be overwhelmed when oxidative stress persists for long periods.

Free Radicals and Chronic Disease

Researchers have found a strong association between oxidative stress and chronic diseases. Although the exact relationships are still being studied, the evidence suggests that oxidative damage contributes to several major health conditions.

Cardiovascular disease provides one of the clearest examples. Oxidative stress appears to play an important role in atherosclerosis, the process that leads to heart attacks and strokes. Free radicals can chemically modify LDL cholesterol, making it more likely to accumulate in artery walls and trigger plaque formation.

Cancer is also linked to oxidative DNA damage. When free radicals alter genetic material, they may activate genes that promote uncontrolled cell growth or disable genes that normally suppress tumors.

Interestingly, cancer cells themselves often produce large amounts of free radicals because of their rapid metabolism. Some cancer therapies take advantage of this by pushing tumor cells beyond their ability to tolerate oxidative stress.

Neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease and Parkinson’s disease are also associated with oxidative damage. The brain may be particularly vulnerable because it consumes large amounts of oxygen and contains fats that are easily oxidized.

Other conditions linked to oxidative stress include diabetes, cataracts, rheumatoid arthritis, chronic kidney disease, and inflammatory bowel disease. Aging itself may partly reflect the gradual accumulation of oxidative damage over time, a concept sometimes referred to as the free radical theory of aging.

Antioxidants: The Body’s Defense System

The body is not defenseless against free radicals. It maintains an extensive network of protective molecules known as antioxidants.  They stabilize free radicals by donating an electron without becoming unstable themselves. This process stops the damaging chain reaction.  The body relies on both internally produced antioxidants and antioxidants obtained from food.

Antioxidants Produced by the Body

Several powerful antioxidant enzyme systems operate inside cells. They work together to convert highly reactive molecules into less harmful substances, eventually producing water or oxygen.

A key molecule is glutathione, sometimes described as the body’s “master antioxidant.” Produced largely in the liver, glutathione plays an important role in neutralizing free radicals and assisting in detoxification processes.

However, the body’s ability to produce some antioxidants may decline with age, which could partly explain increased vulnerability to oxidative damage later in life.

Antioxidants from Food

Diet provides a wide variety of antioxidant compounds that support the body’s defenses.

Vitamin C is a water-soluble antioxidant commonly found in citrus fruits, strawberries, bell peppers, and broccoli. Vitamin E, a fat-soluble antioxidant that helps protect cell membranes, is abundant in nuts, seeds, and vegetable oils.

Plant pigments known as carotenoids also have antioxidant activity. Beta-carotene in carrots and sweet potatoes, lycopene in tomatoes, and lutein in leafy green vegetables are well-known examples. Plants also produce thousands of protective compounds called polyphenols. These substances occur in foods such as berries, tea, apples, onions, dark chocolate, and olive oil.

Because different plant foods contain different protective chemicals, nutrition scientists often recommend eating a variety of colorful fruits and vegetables.

The Antioxidant Supplement Puzzle

For many years, antioxidant supplements were promoted as a simple way to prevent disease. However, large clinical studies have produced mixed results. Several major trials found that high-dose antioxidant supplements did not provide the expected benefits. In some cases they were even associated with harm. For example, studies showed that high dose beta-carotene supplements increased lung cancer risk in smokers.

One possible explanation is that antioxidants behave differently when taken in very large doses. Under certain conditions they may act as pro-oxidants, potentially increasing oxidative reactions instead of preventing them.

Another concern involves cancer treatment. Some therapies work by generating oxidative damage that destroys cancer cells. High doses of antioxidant supplements might interfere with this mechanism.

Because of these uncertainties, many experts recommend obtaining antioxidants primarily from whole foods rather than supplements.

Oxidative Stress: When the Balance Is Lost

Oxidative stress occurs when free radical production exceeds the body’s ability to neutralize them.  At the cellular level, oxidative stress can weaken membranes, disrupt protein function, and damage DNA. At the tissue level, it can trigger chronic inflammation, which in turn generates additional free radicals and perpetuates the cycle of damage.

Because free radicals exist only briefly, scientists usually measure oxidative stress indirectly by detecting chemical by-products that remain after oxidative reactions occur.


Lifestyle Factors That Influence Oxidative Stress

Many everyday habits influence the balance between free radicals and antioxidants.

Smoking, heavy alcohol consumption, air pollution exposure, chronic psychological stress, diets high in processed foods, obesity, and poorly controlled diabetes all increase oxidative stress.

In contrast, regular moderate exercise, diets rich in fruits and vegetables, maintaining a healthy weight, avoiding smoking, and managing stress help maintain a healthier balance between free radicals and antioxidants.


Conclusion: Balance Is Everything

The story of free radicals, antioxidants, and oxidative stress is ultimately about balance.

Free radicals are not simply destructive molecules. In appropriate amounts they help the immune system fight infection, regulate cellular communication, and assist the body in adapting to exercise. The damage occurs when these reactive molecules accumulate faster than the body can control them.

Antioxidants are an important part of the defense system, but they are not magic solutions. The best strategy appears to be supporting the body’s natural balance through healthy lifestyle choices. A diet rich in plant foods, regular physical activity, avoiding smoking, and minimizing harmful exposures all help maintain that balance.

Despite decades of marketing by the supplement industry, scientific evidence continues to suggest that the complex chemistry of whole foods works better than isolated antioxidant pills.

In many ways, modern science has simply confirmed an old piece of advice: eat plenty of fruits and vegetables, stay active, and take care of your body.


Sources:

Cleveland Clinic – Oxidative Stress

PMC – Free Radicals, Antioxidants in Disease and Health (2013)

Nature Cell Death Discovery – Free Radicals and Their Impact on Health (2025)

Frontiers in Chemistry – Oxidative Stress and Antioxidants (2023)

PMC – Oxidative Stress Crosstalk in Human Diseases (2023)

PMC – Free Radicals, Antioxidants and Functional Foods

MD Anderson Cancer Center – What Are Free Radicals?

Medical News Today – Free Radicals: How Do They Affect the Body?

Cleveland Clinic Health – What Are Free Radicals?

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