Clinical Psychologist Dr. Gloria Morrow shares holistic wellness advice with us each Women’s Wednesday.

Bishop L. Spenser Smith gets you ready for love every Wednesday at 3:10PM.  Today he shares some springtime tips for the men. Take a listen!

Superficial living has hit an all time high. Eighty six percent of people who own luxury cars have a net worth of less than five hundred thousand dollars. There is a problem with that. To fake financial prosperity is to lie.Are we that messed up that we think buying some fake name brand item will make us feel more worthy, desired or envied?

Say what you want about Miss RiRi, but the girl has style. She's often the trendsetter and rarely does she miss the mark. Case and point.

Ashley Price felt terrible. She was tired, dizzy spells came and went, dark splotches popped up on her chest for no reason, and she’d gained 50 pounds in two years.

By the year 2034 about 44.1 million people will have diabetes, up from 23.7 million people today. At the same time, the cost of treating people with diabetes will triple.

A study, which tracked more than 10,000 civil servants and municipal workers from 1963 to 1997, found that 8.4 percent of the single men died of strokes, compared to 7.1 percent of the married men.

Salmon is an excellent source for Omega 3's. Try this scrumptious healthy recipe.

Women who eat more white bread, white rice, pizza, and other carbohydrate-rich foods that cause blood sugar to spike are more than twice as likely to develop heart disease than women who eat less of those foods, a new study suggests.

Research published online April 12 in the journal Pediatrics found that girls who drank the most alcohol during their teen years — daily or nearly every day — were five times more likely to develop benign breast disease as young adults than were their peers who never drank or drank less than once a week.

"While people know stress plays a role in how they feel physically, they're often unaware that it is a risk factor for heart disease," says Suzanne Steinbaum, MD, an attending cardiologist at Lenox Hill Hospital in New York City.