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Clare Marie Schneider/NPR

Today's tip for 2022: To deepen relationships, start by showing up for yourself

If you're craving deeper relationships and more connection with loved ones, start by getting to know yourself better by running a time audit.

22 tips for 2022: To deepen relationships, start by showing up for yourself

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A newborn cries on September 17, 2013 at the maternity of the Lens hospital, northern France. A study of crying mice could help explain some building blocks of human infant cries and adult speech. PHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP via Getty Images hide caption

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PHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP via Getty Images

What crying baby mice could teach us about human speech

Scientists have found a cluster of rhythmic brain cells in newborn mice that may explain why spoken languages around the world share a common tempo.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., pauses for a moment of silence alongside fellow lawmakers and congressional staff members during a vigil Thursday evening to commemorate the anniversary of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images hide caption

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Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

The immovable Republican Party and 'ink-blot politics'

Several of the key facts of the Jan. 6 insurrection are indisputable. And yet millions on the right do dispute them. Here's a look at how that happened.

The immovable Republican Party and 'ink-blot politics'

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As students have returned to school this year, mental health issues related to the pandemic are surging. Cavan Images RF/Getty Images hide caption

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Cavan Images RF/Getty Images

Kids are back in school — and struggling with mental health issues

This school year was supposed to bring a return to normalcy. But the stress of transitioning back to in-person learning and the ever-changing pandemic has caused a surge in mental health needs.

Kids are back in school — and struggling with mental health issues

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A booster dose of the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine is prepared during a vaccination clinic on Dec. 29, in Lawrence, Mass. The FDA is now shortening the wait time between the second dose and the booster to five months from six months. Charles Krupa/AP hide caption

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Charles Krupa/AP

FDA shortens the wait time between Moderna vaccine and booster to 5 months

Now, both the Pfizer and the Moderna booster shots can be given five months after the second dose of vaccine — down from six months.

A tally on the chalkboard at Commerce Street Brewery in Mineral Point, Wis., shows that people have bought more than 110 beers for the late comedian Betty White. Courtesy of Commerce Street Brewery hide caption

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Courtesy of Commerce Street Brewery

A pub that let people buy beers for Betty White will now donate the money to charity

The Golden Girl had a golden ale named for her at the pub in Mineral Point, Wis. Now the brewery is using its "buy a beer for a friend" system to support animal charities in White's honor.

Cha Pornea for NPR

Stressed about money? Scared to check your balance? These tips are for you

If you wince every time you open up your credit card app or feel stressed just thinking about personal finances, here's how to curb money avoidance and train your brain to face your money woes head-on.

Stressed about money? Scared to check your balance? These tips are for you

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Left to right: Angel Gonzalez and Luis Paulino are seen at Paulino's 2011 high school graduation in New York. Courtesy of Angel Gonzalez hide caption

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Courtesy of Angel Gonzalez

School bullies told him to speak English. His mentee showed him he already belonged

At StoryCorps, a Dominican immigrant speaks with a fellow Spanish speaker who in high school helped him adjust to living in America. Eventually, they helped each other find their own voices.

School bullies told him to speak English. His mentee showed him he already belonged

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A man distributes bread outside a bakery in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Dec. 2. According to U.N. figures, some 23 million people in Afghanistan suffer from extreme levels of hunger. Petros Giannakouris/AP hide caption

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Petros Giannakouris/AP

For many Afghans, winter is forcing a cruel choice of whether to eat or stay warm

"It shouldn't be a lottery of life about who gets to eat, who doesn't get to eat. Do I keep my child warm or do I give my child food?" a World Food Programme Afghanistan spokesperson tells NPR.

For many Afghans, winter is forcing a cruel choice of whether to eat or stay warm

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The architect: Maverick Carter. Photo illustration by Renee Klahr/NPR hide caption

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Photo illustration by Renee Klahr/NPR

Maverick Carter on Building the LeBron James Empire

Years before they built the SpringHill Company — an entertainment and development brand recently valued at $725 million — Maverick Carter and LeBron James were just two kids from Akron, Ohio who loved playing basketball.

Maverick Carter on Building the LeBron James Empire

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A sanctioned and regulated homeless encampment is operating this winter on the outskirts of Missoula, Mont. Kirk Siegler/NPR hide caption

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Kirk Siegler/NPR

Why some cities are operating legal homeless camps even in the dead of winter

Facing worsening homelessness and sprawling illegal encampments, some American cities are resorting to setting up regulated, outdoor shelters even in the dead of winter.

Why some cities are operating legal homeless camps even in the dead of winter

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Anna Hoffmann soars during the women's ski jumping competition for placement on the 2022 U.S. Olympic team at the Olympic Ski Jumping Complex Saturday, Dec. 25, 2021, in Lake Placid, N.Y. Hans Pennink/AP hide caption

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Hans Pennink/AP

U.S. women ski jumpers won't compete in the Beijing Olympics after failing to qualify

Women ski jumpers fought for more than a decade to compete in the Olympics. Now the U.S. women's team has failed to qualify for Beijing.

U.S. women's ski jumpers won't compete in the Beijing Olympics. They failed to qualify

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NOAA's National Weather Service Director Louis Uccellini (L), gives a tour of NOAA's Center for Weather and Climate Prediction, to Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker (2ndL), Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-MD) (3rd-R), NOAA Acting Administrator Kathryn Sullivan (2nd-R), and Bryan Norcross (R),of the Weather Channel, , July 2, 2013 in Riverdale, Maryland. Mark Wilson/Getty Images hide caption

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Mark Wilson/Getty Images

Making weather forecasts is hard. Getting people to understand them is even harder

After nearly a decade, the director of the National Weather Service has stepped down. Getting the public to understand weather is just as important as the science that delivers the forecasts, he says.

Making weather forecasts is hard. Getting people to understand them is even harder

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