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Learning to Know the Truth

  • January 28, 2026
  • Doctor Lawrence

An In the News Reflection

A recent health research report described a new discovery about how bones respond to physical activity. Scientists identified a specific biological signal inside bone marrow that helps explain how movement encourages bone-building cells to strengthen bone tissue, while inactivity allows fat cells to accumulate in the marrow.

This balance matters—especially for women—because bone density and fracture risk change across the lifespan, particularly during midlife and aging.

What this research clarifies is not simply that exercise is good for bones, but why that is true at a cellular level. Movement sends signals that guide stem cells toward building strength rather than storing fat. Over time, this process influences resilience, mobility, and independence.

For women navigating hormonal shifts, caregiving demands, or limited time for self-care, understanding how everyday movement affects long-term bone health offers practical—and reassuring—insight.

When Health Truths Deepen

From this everyday health truth, a larger pattern emerges.

Often, what we believe to be true is not wrong—it is simply incomplete. We knew movement mattered, but we did not yet understand the deeper mechanism. Only by paying closer attention, questioning assumptions, and following evidence did a clearer picture come into view.

That is how truth tends to work—not only in science, but in life.

Learning to know the truth does not mean discarding what we already know. It means staying open to deeper clarity as it becomes available. For many people—especially women navigating changing bodies, responsibilities, and expectations—health truths are rarely simple.

What worked once may not work the same way now.
What we were told years ago may need gentle re-examination.

Learning to Know the Truth — A My28Days® Cycle

Days 1–7: Notice
Truth begins by paying attention.
Change: from autopilot to awareness

Days 8–14: Reconsider
Truth deepens when we allow ourselves to revise.
Change: from certainty to learning

Days 15–21: Speak Gently
Truth needs kindness to remain humane.
Change: from silence or harshness to clarity

Days 22–28: Live Lightly
Truth, when integrated, brings ease.
Change: from effort to wisdom

Truth as a Process

Truth does not arrive all at once.
It does not demand perfection.
And it does not require us to have everything figured out.

Like health itself, truth unfolds through attention, curiosity, and patience.

You do not have to solve anything today.
Simply noticing is enough.

Read the full ScienceDaily report:

My28Days.org is an educational and advocacy platform supported by the Mary Elizabeth Conover Foundation.  For more information or to lend support, contact Office@ConoverFoundation.org

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