This article is about wellbeing research. Mind & Brain News — ScienceDaily focuses on Harvard scientists link gut bacteria to depression through hidden inflammation trigger.

A gut bacterium may be quietly fueling depression through an unexpected chemical twist. Researchers found that when Morganella morganii interacts with a common pollutant, it produces a molecule that triggers inflammation—something strongly linked to depression. This finding helps explain how gut microbes can influence brain health at a molecular level. It also raises the possibility of new treatments that target the immune system rather than just the brain. …read more

Why it matters

Stories like this can help readers step back and look at the patterns that support or undermine daily steadiness.

HOF perspective

A wellbeing-focused view would keep the focus on calm, repeatable change rather than quick fixes or dramatic claims.

Practical takeaway

Notice one pattern that helps you feel calmer, then make it easier to repeat.

Read the original source

This is an original short commentary, not a reproduction of the source article. Read the original at Mind & Brain News — ScienceDaily.

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