I’m a Harvard-trained pediatrician:The No. 1 healthy food parents aren’t feeding their kids enough of
As a pediatrician, I spend a lot of time engaging with families about nutrition. My philosophy is simple: If you empower a child to embrace healthy eating habits early on, they are more likely to carry these positive behaviors into adulthood.
Early intervention can be transformative and help substantially reduce their long-term risk of developing chronic conditions such as diabetes, heart disease and even certain types of cancer.
Many parents already know the importance of feeding kids vegetables and limiting added sugar. We often discuss “eating the rainbow,” emphasizing the need for a diverse range of colorful fruits and vegetables. Parents frequently prioritize dark leafy greens, antioxidant-rich blueberries and healthy-fat-packed avocados.
However, there’s one nutritional powerhouse that often gets overlooked: beans. Here’s why I wish more parents fed this underrated superfood to their kids.
1. They contain protein that is crucial for growth and energy
Beans, in all their varied forms, are an exceptional source of plant-based protein. Many bean varieties contain all the essential amino acids that are vital for supporting a child’s energy, growth and active lifestyle.
Beans are also loaded with both soluble and insoluble fiber, a duo that’s a game-changer for digestive health. Insoluble fiber promotes regular bowel movements, preventing constipation and keeping things moving smoothly. Soluble fiber contributes to that feeling of fullness and satiety after a meal, which can be helpful in managing appetite and preventing overeating.
Soluble fiber also plays a role in lowering LDL, or “bad” cholesterol levels, and helps to stabilize blood sugar fluctuations after meals, preventing those dreaded energy crashes.
2. They are filled with essential nutrients and vitamins
Beans are naturally fortified with an impressive array of essential vitamins and minerals.
They are also a fantastic source of folate, which is vital for cell growth and development, as well as iron, which is crucial for carrying oxygen throughout the body.
Plus, they’re packed with magnesium for nerve and muscle function, and a range of B vitamins that support energy production and brain health.
Soybeans in particular have a good amount of healthy fats in them, like omega 3 and omega 6 fats that support heart and brain health.
3. They are sustainable and affordable
Beyond their nutritional profile, beans offer practical advantages. They are very affordable, making them accessible to families on any budget. Their long shelf life means you can stock up and always have a healthy meal option on hand.
Additionally, incorporating beans into our diets is an environmentally-friendly choice. They have a lower carbon footprint compared to many animal protein sources, contributing to a more sustainable food system.
4. They are versatile and appealing even to the pickiest eaters
Of course, all the nutritional knowledge in the world won’t make a difference if kids refuse to eat what’s offered. This is where the magic of beans truly shines.
I’ve found that many children genuinely enjoy the taste and texture of beans, and they are remarkably easy to prepare in various kid-friendly ways.
For younger children or more picky eaters, start with something simple and approachable, like steaming edamame (young soybeans) or adding black beans to a cheesy quesadilla. I’ve even found success with black bean-based brownies, a surprisingly delicious and nutritious treat.
For more adventurous eaters, consider introducing lentil soups, flavorful bean chili or stews. The versatility of beans makes them easy to incorporate into a wide range of dishes, ensuring there’s a bean recipe out there for everyone.
Want to boost your confidence, income and career success? Take one (or more!) of Smarter by CNBC Make It’s expert-led online courses, which aim to teach you the critical skills you need to succeed that you didn’t learn in school. Topics include earning passive income online, mastering communication and public speaking skills, acing your job interview, and practical strategies to grow your wealth. Use coupon code MEMORIAL to purchase any course at a discount of 30% off the regular course price (plus tax). Offer valid from 12:00 am Eastern Time (“ET”) on May 19, 2025, through 11:59 pm ET on June 2, 2025. Terms and restrictions apply.
Plus, sign up for CNBC Make It’s newsletter to get tips and tricks for success at work, with money and in life, and request to join our exclusive community on LinkedIn to connect with experts and peers.
Mark Cuban’s $250 million ‘Shark Tank’ investing strategy: ‘I’m f—ing crushing it on the market’
Mark Cuban has finally left the tank.
The billionaire entrepreneur and investor’s final episode of ABC’s “Shark Tank” aired on Friday, marking the end of his 15-season run on the show. Investing isn’t a science, so it’s no surprise that Cuban had his share of hits and misses on the show — but the billionaire will exit with a healthy portfolio, he says.
Cuban invested “about $33 million” in total during his time on the show, he tells CNBC Make It. From those investments, he estimates he’s received up to $35 million in cash returns, and his mark-to-market equity from those businesses is worth “at least $250 million.”
“I’m f—ing crushing it on the market,” Cuban told Fortune in January, referring to the overall market value of the dozens of companies he’s invested in since joining “Shark Tank” in 2011.
On camera, Cuban committed as much as $61.9 million to more than 200 deals, according to the website Shark Tank Insights — but the deals that happen on-screen don’t always result in consummated investments after the fact.
DON’T MISS: How to change careers and be happier at work
More notably, Cuban has said that his primary goal with “Shark Tank” investments wasn’t even centered around making money.
“I don’t do the show to get the best investments,” he wrote on Twitter in July 2022, in a post that no longer appears on the social media platform, now known as X. “And I don’t always invest because I think I’ll make money. Sometimes my deals are purely to help [an entrepreneur] or send a message.” (Cuban, a vegetarian since at least 2019, invested in multiple vegan food brands on the show.)
At the time, Cuban noted that he’d taken a net loss “on a cash basis” from his “Shark Tank” investments, before accounting for the value of his actively held stakes. Now, he says he’s coming out ahead in terms of both cash and mark-to-market, an accounting term that refers to assessing an asset, like an investment, based on its current fair market value.
Mark-to-market is basically a way for Cuban to determine the overall value of his investments, some of which he’s yet to exit, based on how the market value of those businesses has grown since he first invested.
Cuban’s past comments have provided a window into the billionaire’s investing strategy, at least when it comes to the TV show.
“What really gets me going is when people have an operating business where they’ve already gone for it. And they’ve invested everything,” Cuban told TV Tango in 2011. “They’ve put their heart, their soul, their time, everything that they have available to them into the business. And they’ve laid it on the line. And they just need a little bit of help.”
Cuban also appreciates any entrepreneur’s level of raw effort, intelligence and “ability to sell,” he said. The more money he puts on the line, however, the less willing he is to take a risk on something that won’t recoup his investment, he noted.
“I contrast [those factors] to the risk-reward of the business or of the investment,” said Cuban. “So in other words, if I’m investing $10,000, there’s a different risk-reward profile than if I’m investing a million dollars.”
Disclosure: CNBC owns the exclusive off-network cable rights to “Shark Tank.”
Want to boost your confidence, income and career success? Take one (or more!) of Smarter by CNBC Make It’s expert-led online courses, which aim to teach you the critical skills you need to succeed that you didn’t learn in school. Topics include earning passive income online, mastering communication and public speaking skills, acing your job interview, and practical strategies to grow your wealth. Use coupon code MEMORIAL to purchase any course at a discount of 30% off the regular course price (plus tax). Offer valid from 12:00 am Eastern Time (“ET”) on May 19, 2025, through 11:59 pm ET on June 2, 2025. Terms and restrictions apply.
I’m a psychologist who studies couples—5 things people in the happiest relationships do on weekends
If you work full-time, you already know how much time and effort it takes to master work-life balance. Add to that a relationship, and it becomes even harder.
As a psychologist who studies couples — and who has a working wife — I’ve faced these challenges firsthand. Thankfully, my job as both a researcher and husband has taught me how important it is to be intentional about how my wife and I spend our time, specifically on weekends.
Here’s how people in the happiest, most successful relationships spend their free time:
1. They put their phones away
A couple who spends a lot of time together, but is constantly distracted by texts, emails or social media, probably isn’t as happy as a couple who spends less time together, but without their phones.
That’s why carving out one-on-one time without any interference from technology is so important. And how you spend that time is actually irrelevant. It doesn’t need to be extravagant or planned down to the minute. What matters is presence.
It could be a quiet morning coffee where you exchange unfiltered thoughts, a slow walk to fill the silence, or a good old wining-and-dining — as long as the phones and laptops are put away.
2. They engage in ‘parallel play’
After a draining week of work, it’s normal and even healthy to crave solitude. But it can be hard to choose between “me time” and “we time.”
Luckily, there’s a way to satiate the need for both alone time and bonding simultaneously. “Parallel play,” a concept derived from child psychology, is when two people engage in their preferred activity separately, but alongside each other.
For couples, this might look like one partner reading on the couch, while the other plays their favorite video game next to them. They might not be engaging directly with one another, but they’re still intentionally sharing space and de-stressing with an activity they each enjoy.
It’s basically a way of saying: “I love you, but I also need to love me for an hour or two. Let’s do it together.”
3. They create a ritual
Relationships thrive on ritual. Coming home to your partner and knowing that the weekend will bring something familiar — something reliably yours — can be comforting.
In fact, research shows that rituals can help couples organize their lives in a way that allows for both change and stability to coexist. Individuals can merge into a shared identity that feels distinct from either person alone. You can ground yourselves together, no matter what chaos surrounds you.
What those rituals look like is completely up to you. Don’t shy away from cheesy. It could be Sunday morning pancakes, or board game night with a goofy scoreboard on the fridge. If you’re more practical, maybe it’s a weekly sit-down over a glass of wine to plan out the week, or tackling one nagging chore together with your shared playlist in the background.
4. They put sex on the schedule
Studies show that couples who have a satisfying sex life are more likely to be happier in their relationships.
But with endless chores and errands, weekends can start to feel like a second workweek — with little time left over for intimacy. Sex quickly starts to feel like less of a priority.
DON’T MISS: How to successfully change careers and be happier at work
That’s why structured intimacy can be a good thing. Many people think it can diminish spontaneity, but if anything, it actually removes the mental fatigue of trying to make intimacy happen.
It’s also a great way for couples to engage without distraction, all while combating the emotional strain of work. So, make it intentional and set a time.
5. They laugh on purpose
Playfulness, according to research, is one of the most reliable tools couples can use to strengthen their relationship. It can boost relationship satisfaction, ease conflict and break up the sense of monotony that partners can start to resent.
During the week, we unknowingly train ourselves to look for things to stress over. But on weekends, we need to take those goggles off. The act of being silly — and being met with silliness in return — helps us reconnect with the childlike wonder we carry inside that gets buried beneath our responsibilities.
So, look for joy on purpose. Maybe you pull out a trivia game with nonsense rules or challenge each other to a dance battle.
There’s no right or wrong way to be playful, and chances are, you already know how to make your partner laugh. You just have to remember to do it.
Mark Travers, PhD, is a psychologist who specializes in relationships. He holds degrees from Cornell University and the University of Colorado Boulder. He is the lead psychologist at Awake Therapy, a telehealth company that provides online psychotherapy, counseling and coaching. He is also the curator of the popular mental health and wellness website, Therapytips.org.
Want to boost your confidence, income and career success? Take one (or more!) of Smarter by CNBC Make It’s expert-led online courses, which aim to teach you the critical skills you need to succeed that you didn’t learn in school. Topics include earning passive income online, mastering communication and public speaking skills, acing your job interview, and practical strategies to grow your wealth. Use coupon code MEMORIAL to purchase any course at a discount of 30% off the regular course price (plus tax). Offer valid from 12:00 am Eastern Time (“ET”) on May 19, 2025, through 11:59 pm ET on June 2, 2025. Terms and restrictions apply.
Mark Cuban’s final ‘Shark Tank’ deal: $125,000 to a Texas restaurant chain—‘I definitely love it’
After more than a decade, Mark Cuban has departed from ABC’s “Shark Tank.” His final televised investment on the show: a six-figure offer for 10% of a restaurant dedicated entirely to deviled eggs.
Deviled Egg Co., founded in 2017 by former bar and lounge manager Raechel Van Buskirk, began as a side hustle in Omaha, Nebraska. Van Buskirk, the company’s CEO, experimented with a variety of off-beat deviled egg flavors, and catered them from her home before teaming up with business partner Alexi Wellman — originally the company’s first investor, Van Buskirk says — to launch a food trailer in 2020.
Today, the business is a full-fledged restaurant — with two sit-down locations and one grab-and-go storefront, all near the Dallas metropolitan area — featuring deviled egg flavors like crab rangoon, cheeseburger and chicken quesadilla. Deviled Egg Co. also ships a 36-egg kit, called the “Shark Tank Special,” to further-flung customers.
Deviled Egg Co. brought in just under $1.3 million in annual revenue 2024, and was profitable, says Van Buskirk. On the TV show, she and Wellman asked a panel of investor judges for $150,000 in investment funds, in exchange for a 5% equity stake in their company.
“We do plan to use part of [the investment] to open two more grab-and-go models,” Van Buskirk said on the show. “We have people that want to franchise already,” added Wellman.
After starting with their food trailer, the duo launched their restaurant location in Omaha in 2021. They expanded to Texas in 2023: Van Buskirk had family in the area, and after being diagnosed with breast cancer in December 2022, she wanted to be closer to her loved ones, she says.
She’s currently in full remission, she adds. She and Wellman closed their Omaha location in December.
The “Shark Tank” judges enjoyed their sample deviled eggs, with Daymond John saying, “This is probably the best thing I’ve ever eaten in 16 years on this stage.” But he ultimately declined to offer Deviled Egg Co. an investment, saying he’d rather be a customer than a co-owner. Lori Greiner agreed, and similarly declined to extend an offer.
Barbara Corcoran said she saw potential. She offered $150,000 for 15%, saying that’s the same equity stake she has in other “Shark Tank” food companies like Cousins Maine Lobster and Crispy Cones. Kevin O’Leary made a competing offer, $150,000 for 20% of Deviled Egg Co.
That’s when Cuban offered to go in on a deal with Corcoran: $250,000 for 20%, with both figures split evenly between the two investors. “I definitely love it,” said Cuban.
Corcoran agreed to the partnership, and Wellman and Van Buskirk immediately accepted the offer. “I cannot wait to make them so much money,” Van Buskirk said. (Post-taping, the deal has yet to be confirmed, with negotiations still in progress, Van Buskirk now says.)
The offer marked a bittersweet end to Cuban’s run on the show. The billionaire investor tearfully reminisced on the days when he too hoped to find investors who believed in him. He now plans to spend more time with his family, and devote more of his work focus to his online pharmacy startup Cost Plus Drugs.
“What I’d like to say is thanks [to] everybody who took a chance on me, all the entrepreneurs who said yes to me — who knows how many millionaires we’ve created — and their employees. How many people we’ve inspired,” Cuban said on the show. “I’m proud of what we’ve done.”
Correction: This story has been updated to reflect that Alexi Wellman is Raechel Van Buskirk’s business partner at Deviled Egg Co. A previous version of this article misstated Wellman’s role.
Disclosure: CNBC owns the exclusive off-network cable rights to “Shark Tank.”
Want to boost your confidence, income and career success? Take one (or more!) of Smarter by CNBC Make It’s expert-led online courses, which aim to teach you the critical skills you need to succeed that you didn’t learn in school. Topics include earning passive income online, mastering communication and public speaking skills, acing your job interview, and practical strategies to grow your wealth. Use coupon code MEMORIAL to purchase any course at a discount of 30% off the regular course price (plus tax). Offer valid from 12:00 am Eastern Time (“ET”) on May 19, 2025, through 11:59 pm ET on June 2, 2025. Terms and restrictions apply.
Ivy League psychologist shares No. 1 key to happiness: ‘We have to choose a different way of living’
Often, people’s biggest obstacle to success and happiness is their own fear — of failure, rejection, or uncertainty, to name just a few — says psychologist Scott Barry Kaufman.
You can overcome it with a process called “unlearning fear,” says Kaufman, an adjunct associate professor of psychology at Columbia University’s Barnard College. By doing so, you can become more resilient and, ultimately, more successful by developing an ability to identify your self-imposed obstacles and think objectively about how to move past them, he adds.
“Fear is automatically learned” from people’s past experiences and traumas, Kaufman writes in his latest book, “Rise Above,” which published in April. “And fear must be actively unlearned: We have to choose a different way of living, and we can start by taking responsibility for the fact that unlearning fear — or any past patterns — can take a lot of inner work.”
Avoiding something that scares you is a normal reaction, says Kaufman. Maybe you’re afraid to ask your boss for a promotion or apply for a new job, because you don’t want to suffer the disappointment of rejection. Or, maybe you fear failure too much to take the risk of launching your own business.
The easiest thing to do in those situations is typically nothing: “Our default state is to have a sense of helplessness when we get overwhelmed,” Kaufman says.
DON’T MISS: How to change careers and be happier at work
Instead, the key to “unlearning fear” is to reframe what frightens or worries you as an opportunity to learn or try something new, and potentially unlock a greater level of success than you’d previously thought possible. Kaufman calls this “learning hopefulness,” he says: “You can, in any moment, decide to live and make the fear decision or make the growth decision. You have more control over that than you realize.”
Try asking yourself “What” questions instead of “Why” questions, Kaufman recommends. He offers this example: Your boss gives you more work than you were expecting, leading you to feel overwhelmed and frustrated.
“You can go from ‘Why am I feeling this?’ to, ‘OK, what am I feeling? What would make me feel better?’” Kaufman says. “Asking, ‘what’ questions — ‘What do I need right now, in this moment?’ — these lead to a whole upward spiral of productive questions.”
The result: You might end up talking to your boss about setting realistic expectations for how much work you can get done in a set amount of time, so you can prioritize your tasks together.
Asking why can lead you to “a dead end” for identifying possible solutions, Kaufman says. Asking “what” helps create distance and objectivity, making it easier for you to recognize harmful patterns and come up with solutions to break them — ultimately helping you build the mental strength and resilience you need to overcome obstacles and become more successful.
“If we approach life with a sense of flexibility and embracing all that life has to offer, we learn that everything can teach us something,” says Kaufman. “Going into any situation with curiosity and an openness to learning is a much better way than leading with your fear.”
Other experts recommend similar strategies to overcome fears, particularly fear of failure. Most successful people can reframe their failures, identifying them more as learning opportunities, rather than falling into the trap of a “fear-based fixed mindset,” psychologist psychologist Jenny Wang wrote for CNBC Make It in May 2022.
Failure is “a pitstop where you refuel your journey and redirect your approach,” Wang wrote, adding: “Failure can be a tool to help hone your skills, understand your obstacles, and realize that you have it within yourself to stand back up and keep pushing.”
Want to boost your confidence, income and career success? Take one (or more!) of Smarter by CNBC Make It’s expert-led online courses, which aim to teach you the critical skills you need to succeed that you didn’t learn in school. Topics include earning passive income online, mastering communication and public speaking skills, acing your job interview, and practical strategies to grow your wealth. Use coupon code MEMORIAL to purchase any course at a discount of 30% off the regular course price (plus tax). Offer valid from 12:00 am Eastern Time (“ET”) on May 19, 2025, through 11:59 pm ET on June 2, 2025. Terms and restrictions apply.
Plus, sign up for CNBC Make It’s newsletter to get tips and tricks for success at work, with money and in life, and request to join our exclusive community on LinkedIn to connect with experts and peers.