Issue 02: Wellbeing
The concept of wellness and well-being is rather a funny one, and we’re not the only people who thinks so.
It’s fascinating that a multi-billion-pound industry has been erected simply on the premise of feeling not-sick. Feeling well ought to be our natural state; instead it is just one more thing we have to work hard for.
Moreover, we've often lifted an eye-brow at the cost of some of these procedures, practices, alternative medicines, gadgets and guides that promise to improve our lives. Our magazine is free, not because we’re saints or do-gooders, but because it feels right.
he methods we prescribe are also cheap as chips, and be warned, there’s not a fad in sight. In this issue we swerve the mushy trend-speak and give juice cleanses and flotation tanks a miss. There’s nothing wrong with them, but at LONDNR, we wanted to look at meaningful new ways of making well-being possible and playful.
The concept of wellness and well-being is rather a funny one, and we’re not the only people who thinks so.
It’s fascinating that a multi-billion-pound industry has been erected simply on the premise of feeling not-sick. Feeling well ought to be our natural state; instead it is just one more thing we have to work hard for.
Moreover, we've often lifted an eye-brow at the cost of some of these procedures, practices, alternative medicines, gadgets and guides that promise to improve our lives. Our magazine is free, not because we’re saints or do-gooders, but because it feels right.
he methods we prescribe are also cheap as chips, and be warned, there’s not a fad in sight. In this issue we swerve the mushy trend-speak and give juice cleanses and flotation tanks a miss. There’s nothing wrong with them, but at LONDNR, we wanted to look at meaningful new ways of making well-being possible and playful.
The concept of wellness and well-being is rather a funny one, and we’re not the only people who thinks so.
It’s fascinating that a multi-billion-pound industry has been erected simply on the premise of feeling not-sick. Feeling well ought to be our natural state; instead it is just one more thing we have to work hard for.
Moreover, we've often lifted an eye-brow at the cost of some of these procedures, practices, alternative medicines, gadgets and guides that promise to improve our lives. Our magazine is free, not because we’re saints or do-gooders, but because it feels right.
he methods we prescribe are also cheap as chips, and be warned, there’s not a fad in sight. In this issue we swerve the mushy trend-speak and give juice cleanses and flotation tanks a miss. There’s nothing wrong with them, but at LONDNR, we wanted to look at meaningful new ways of making well-being possible and playful.