After 12 years as our restaurant critic, Pete Wells is moving on, leaving a job with many rewards — and, as he writes, maybe too many courses. "I knew I needed to change my life," he writes, adding: "I’ve decided to bow out as gracefully as my state of technical obesity will allow.”
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The term “glass cliff” is a phenomenon in which a company in crisis appoints a woman to turn things around — often setting them up for failure. Some saw Boeing naming Stephanie Pope to run its commercial airplanes division in March as the latest example. Companies say they aren’t consciously doing this. But some researchers think companies in crisis sometimes turn to women because they are perceived as having the soft skills needed to navigate difficult situations. The glass cliff is also prevalent in other countries and outside the corporate world: in government, sports leagues and at universities.
When That Job Promotion Is Really a ‘Glass Cliff’
https://www.nytimes.com
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A reader asked: “My younger sister has decided to attend an expensive private college. This surprised me: She was accepted at prestigious state schools with scholarships, which would be more affordable for our parents, who are footing the bill. When my brother and I went to college several years ago, such an expensive school would have been out of the question. We also had to take out small loans, which my parents are not asking our sister to do. Their financial situation hasn’t changed, and I feel frustrated. I had to select a college based on price and take out loans; she doesn’t have to do either. Should I raise this with my parents? They are kind and generous people, and I don’t want to seem ungrateful. But I am still paying off the loans.”
Why Are My Parents Handling College Costs So Differently for My Sibling?
https://www.nytimes.com
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Here are ways to tell the difference between depression and burnout, according to clinicians and researchers, and what to do about both.
How Can I Tell if I’m Depressed or Burned Out? (Published 2022)
https://www.nytimes.com
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“Quiet quitting” has been defined and redefined. For some, it was mentally checking out from work. For others, it became about not accepting additional work without additional pay.
Who Is Quiet Quitting For? (Published 2022)
https://www.nytimes.com
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As the number of autism diagnoses rises, some large employers across the U.S., including Microsoft, Dell and Ford, are taking steps to make workplaces more accessible and welcoming for neurodivergent employees. Autism activists have praised companies that have become more accepting of remote work since the coronavirus pandemic. But navigating the job market remains a challenge for autistic people, as neurodivergent candidates might be reluctant to disclose their diagnoses or ask for accommodations upfront.
Employees With Autism Find New Ways to Navigate the Workplace
https://www.nytimes.com
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Artificial intelligence tools can create lifelike faces and realistic photographs — and they are getting better all the time. Can you tell the difference between what’s real and what’s fake? Take our quiz.
A.I. Is Getting Better Fast. Can You Tell What’s Real Now?
nytimes.com
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It takes a lot of energy to grow a baby — just ask anyone who has been pregnant. But scientists are only now discovering just how much. In humans, the energetic cost of pregnancy is about 50,000 dietary calories — far higher than previously believed.
Scientists Calculated the Energy Needed to Carry a Baby. Shocker: It’s a Lot.
https://www.nytimes.com
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In Opinion "It’s not just that I worry that there are fewer opportunities today, whether through college or work, for the million-plus kids out there with no high school diploma or GED (and that the Pell Grants that made it possible for me to go to college and once covered more than three-quarters of the cost of attending a four-year public college now cover roughly 30 percent). I worry that there are fewer adults willing to take those all-important chances on those of us the world today seems to have so little time and attention for. College is hard. And expensive. And what university wants to accept a kid like me who might bring down its all-important rankings?" Rachel Louise Snyder writes in her essay, "Notes From a Formerly Unpromising Young Person."
Opinion | Notes From a Formerly Unpromising Young Person
https://www.nytimes.com
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A reader asked: “I strongly suspect that my husband is developing dementia. Our fighting has stopped, but it’s a lonely place to be. I’m not thrilled about spending my retirement years as a caregiver. It’s a huge sacrifice that will narrow my own life significantly. Do we both need to go down with the ship? Can I leave now (and let his family deal with this)? Or am I obligated to stay and care for him?”
I Think My Husband Has Dementia. Can I Leave Him Before It Worsens?
https://www.nytimes.com
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