Malloy Law Offices, LLC - June 2026

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MALLOY LAW OFFICES, LLC

7910 Woodmont Ave. #1250 Bethesda, MD 20814

(202) 933-7277 Malloy-Law.com

Inside This Issue

1

Running Free, but Not Without Risk

2

5 Time Management Hacks That Actually Work

2

Technology Is Transforming Personal Injury Cases

3

A Smart Ritual for Overthinking Minds

Cinnamon Roll Peach Cobbler

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The Summer Solstice Marks a Turning Point Most People Miss

JUNE 21 COMES AND GOES But It Changes More Than You Think

Why It Changes Every Year This isn’t random. It comes down to the way Earth moves through space. Our planet orbits the sun at an angle of about 23.5 degrees, and that tilt creates our seasons. In June, the Northern Hemisphere tilts toward the sun, letting sunlight hit it more directly and for a longer stretch each day. The solstice marks the exact moment when that tilt is working most in our favor. What It Means for Us People have been paying attention to this day for a long time. Ancient civilizations carefully tracked it, building structures that aligned with sunrise or sunset at the solstice. For them, it was incredibly meaningful because it marked growth, harvest cycles, and survival. Even now, without relying on the sun to plan crops, something is still very

June 21 usually passes without much fuss, but did you know that it marks a shift you can actually feel? After this day, the sun hangs around longer, the evening stretches out, and suddenly there’s no rush to head inside. It’s not a holiday, and most people don’t circle it on a calendar, but it’s one of the clearest reminders that the seasons are always moving, whether we notice or not. What the Summer Solstice Actually Is The summer solstice is the point when the Northern Hemisphere gets the most direct sunlight it will see all year. That’s why it brings the longest day and the shortest night. The sun rises early, sets late, and seems to take its time crossing the sky. After this day, the balance slowly shifts, and June 21 is the peak.

grounding about knowing exactly where we are in the year.

A Moment to Notice Nothing dramatic happens on the summer solstice, and there's no sudden change you can point to, but if you pay attention, it’s there in the extra light, in how late the sky stays bright. It’s a small reminder that time moves in patterns, not straight lines, and this is the point where the year quietly starts to turn again.

4 • Malloy-Law.com

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