DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com Holistic Healthcare/Speculative Fiction
Wednesday June 10, 2026
Independent Holistic Healthcare
& Human Rights Advocacy for Whole‑Person Wellness
DrHaroldMandel.org/DrMandelNews.com Holistic Healthcare/Speculative Fiction
Independent Holistic Healthcare
& Human Rights Advocacy for Whole‑Person Wellness
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I am a New York-based physician, medical journalist, and fiction writer. My work is defined by a lifelong commitment to medical advocacy—defending the individual against coercive systems of psychiatry and the corporate influences that sustain them. Currently, I focus my professional efforts on three critical pillars:

A good dinner does more than end the day. It sets the tone for how you sleep, how you recover, and how you show up tomorrow. For both body and mind, the evening meal is a reset button: it replenishes nutrients used during the day, supports overnight repair, and creates a natural pause that helps shift you out of “go mode.”
After four to si
A good dinner does more than end the day. It sets the tone for how you sleep, how you recover, and how you show up tomorrow. For both body and mind, the evening meal is a reset button: it replenishes nutrients used during the day, supports overnight repair, and creates a natural pause that helps shift you out of “go mode.”
After four to six hours without food, your muscles, brain, and immune system are ready for refueling. A balanced dinner with lean protein, fiber, and healthy fats stabilizes blood sugar overnight, reduces those 3am wake-ups, and gives your body the amino acids it needs to repair tissue while you sleep. Research from the National Sleep Foundation links heavy, high-sugar late meals to fragmented sleep, while balanced ones support deeper slow-wave sleep.
Dinner also supports brain health and mood. Tryptophan, magnesium, omega-3s, and B vitamins found in foods like turkey, salmon, leafy greens, and whole grains are building blocks for serotonin and melatonin. That is the chemistry behind comfort food that actually comforts: it helps regulate mood and circadian rhythm.
Beyond nutrients, the ritual of dinner matters. Sitting down for twenty minutes, even alone, signals to your nervous system that the day is winding down. Eating slowly without screens lowers cortisol and improves digestion. The meal becomes a boundary between work and rest.
Building a dinner that works for you comes down to three things: protein, fiber, and color. Lean protein like salmon, chicken, lentils, or tofu repairs tissue and keeps you full. Fiber-rich carbs such as quinoa, sweet potato, beans, or whole-grain pasta provide steady energy and B vitamins for your nervous system. Colorful vegetables bring antioxidants, magnesium, and potassium that fight inflammation and support brain function. Add a healthy fat like olive oil, avocado, or nuts to help absorb vitamins and support brain cell membranes.
Timing helps too. Aim to finish eating two to three hours before bed. That gives your body time to digest without spiking blood sugar or causing reflux when you lie down.
If you want a meal that hits all those notes, try a Mediterranean salmon plate. Bake a five to six ounce wild salmon fillet with olive oil, lemon, and dill at 400°F for twelve to fifteen minutes. Serve it over cooked quinoa or farro with mixed greens, cherry tomatoes, sliced avocado, and a sprinkle of pumpkin seeds. The salmon provides omega-3s and vitamin D, the quinoa adds complete protein and magnesium, and the greens and seeds bring folate and tryptophan. Total prep is about twenty minutes.
Other simple combinations work just as well. A lentil stew with carrots, celery, and turmeric plus whole-grain toast gives you plant-based protein and anti-inflammatory compounds. A sheet pan dinner with ground turkey, diced sweet potato, broccoli, and red onion delivers zinc and vitamin B6 in under thirty minutes. On lighter nights, a savory plate of plain Greek yogurt topped with cucumber, walnuts, olive oil, and za’atar with whole-grain pita offers probiotics and tryptophan.
The key to making dinner sustainable is to keep it simple. Prep one component ahead, like a pot of grains or a tray of roasted veggies on Sunday. Stick to five ingredients or fewer so decision fatigue does not kill the habit. And treat dinner as transition time. Light a candle, play music, or step outside for two minutes after you eat. The ritual matters as much as the nutrients.
A good dinner is not about perfection or gourmet cooking. It is about giving your body the raw materials to heal and giving your mind permission to slow down.

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Cherie was known by friends and coworkers as a pleasant, adventurous, attractive young woman. When she wasn’t working in computer science for New Era 777 Enterprises, she loved traveling to new cities, swimming in clear blue water, and searching for memorable meals in tucked-away restaurants around the world.
Her life seemed ordinary and h
Cherie was known by friends and coworkers as a pleasant, adventurous, attractive young woman. When she wasn’t working in computer science for New Era 777 Enterprises, she loved traveling to new cities, swimming in clear blue water, and searching for memorable meals in tucked-away restaurants around the world.
Her life seemed ordinary and happy.
Then one night, after having far too much to drink at a celebration, everything changed.
She awoke the next morning in the locked ward of a psychiatric institution.
The memories were fragmented and confusing. She remembered harsh fluorescent lights, unfamiliar faces, and what she believed was the sound of Dr. Thompson laughing nearby. In her hazy state, she became convinced that he had taken advantage of her while she drifted in and out of consciousness.
Terrified, she begged a nurse for help.
When Dr. Thompson overheard her accusations, he dismissed them as evidence of worsening mental illness. He documented her statements as delusions and ordered additional medication. The more Cherie protested, the less anyone seemed willing to listen.
She held onto one hope.
Court.
Surely, she thought, a judge would hear her concerns and protect her rights.
The following morning she was brought before Judge Farok for a hearing regarding her involuntary confinement. Desperate for help, she tried to explain everything she believed had happened.
Judge Farok proved no better than the institution itself.
Rather than helping her, he exploited her vulnerability and then used his authority to silence her. Every complaint she made was twisted into supposed evidence that she was becoming increasingly unstable.
Months passed.
Cherie remained confined. Whether her allegations were true or not no longer seemed to matter. The institution had become a place where power protected itself, and where the voice of one frightened patient carried little weight against those who controlled her fate.
She cried nearly every day.
She felt forgotten.
Hopelessness slowly consumed her.
One afternoon, after six months of confinement, Cherie made a tragic decision. Convinced she would never be heard and never escape the machinery that surrounded her, she broke open a hospital window and leapt.
The institution recorded her death as the act of a severely disturbed patient.
But among the staff, rumors lingered.
Some wondered whether she had been telling the truth all along.
Others preferred not to ask.
And in the years that followed, the story of Cherie became a cautionary tale whispered by those who feared what could happen when immense power is placed in the hands of people who are never required to answer for it.
Speculative Fiction
by Dr Harold Mandel

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The American psychiatric-legal complex has stopped pretending to be about care or justice. It now functions as a predator that feeds on secrecy, hierarchy, and the ritual humiliation of anyone who steps outside its script. This is not a loose network of institutions. It is a cult of authority, a self-protecting syndicate where police, cou
The American psychiatric-legal complex has stopped pretending to be about care or justice. It now functions as a predator that feeds on secrecy, hierarchy, and the ritual humiliation of anyone who steps outside its script. This is not a loose network of institutions. It is a cult of authority, a self-protecting syndicate where police, courts, and psychiatric power brokers move in a tight orbit of favors, boundary violations, and mutual absolution. The public is told to revere the badge, the robe, the degree, while the moral decay behind those polished doors is perfumed with procedure.
It survives not by healing, but by invisibility. It has mastered the trick of hiding its own corruption while recasting human individuality as symptoms.
Inside this machine, dissent is not debated. It is diagnosed. Nonconformity is not tolerated. It is pathologized. A peaceful activist becomes a risk factor. A traveler who enjoys a night in Tokyo with a refined companion becomes evidence of instability. A citizen who refuses to kneel becomes noncompliant. The psychiatric label is not a medical tool here. It is a weaponized stamp, a bureaucratic scarlet letter designed to erase credibility, isolate the target, and license whatever coercion follows. The more arbitrary the accusation, the more useful it is, because arbitrariness is the whole point. It is how power announces itself.
Meanwhile the institutions that claim moral authority are drowning in their own ethical sewage. Corruption is routine. Judicial and law enforcement entanglement is normalized. Coercive psychiatric labeling is used as a convenient shortcut to silence inconvenient people. These bodies have not simply failed to uphold boundaries. They have forgotten why boundaries exist. They do not merely stigmatize. They industrialize stigma and feed people through a conveyor belt of social destruction. They do not merely abuse power. They cultivate it, train it, and reward it as a professional skill.
The cruelty is not a glitch. It is the operating system. This machine thrives on degradation, on the slow grinding down of anyone who will not submit, on the bureaucratic sadism of forms and hearings and evaluations and treatments that function as psychological chokeholds. It punishes the gentle and protects the ruthless. It destroys reputations with diagnostic jargon while hiding its own misconduct behind confidentiality laws and institutional privilege. It calls its victims sick while its own internal culture burns with arrogance, impunity, and moral collapse.
What America calls a psychiatric-legal system is in truth an empire of rot, a sprawling, self-congratulating hierarchy that manufactures madness to conceal its own corruption. Until its architecture of secrecy is torn open, until the public can see the gears and the incentives and the back-room alliances that keep it humming, it will keep grinding human beings into dust while applauding its own expertise. The tragedy is not only that the system is cruel. The tragedy is that it insists we call its cruelty care.

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