Hey there, and welcome to hellohealthblog (you can find us over at https://hellohealthblog.com/). Before you dive into all our lifestyle tips and food articles, let’s quickly talk about some basic ground rules we expect our visitors to follow while hanging out here. Just by staying on our site and reading our posts, we naturally assume you are totally cool with everything on this page. If any of these points don’t really match your vibe, we completely understand, but we do ask that you head out and stop using our platform.
1. Who Actually Owns the Stuff Here?
Everything we publish on this space—whether it is an in-depth workout guide, a breakdown of vitamins, a recipe, or even the design patterns, layouts, and logos—is built by the team behind hellohealthblog or the writers working with us. All of this material is heavily protected under global creative property laws.
We are genuinely happy to let you read, learn from, and enjoy our pieces for your own personal self-care goals. That said, we draw some very firm lines here:
- Please don’t grab our text, recipes, or routine graphics and copy-paste them onto your own website, social pages, or forums unless we explicitly give you written permission first.
- Running a business off our free material, renting it out, or trying to make money directly off our research is a big no-no.
- You cannot clone our site’s specific visual presentation, signature layouts, or brand identity elements.
2. Hitting the Comments Section
We love seeing our readers chat, trade personal advice, and lift each other up down in the comments. But just so we are on the same page, our internal crew doesn’t filter or read every single comment before it shows up live. Because of that, whatever gets written down there belongs 100% to the individual person who typed it—their words do not mirror what our brand stands for or believes.
To keep this a genuinely warm and positive corner of the web, we do pop in to clean things up. We reserve the absolute right to instantly delete any post that feels aggressive, spams promo links, shares sketchy medical practices, or ruins the community spirit.
3. Adding Links to Our Blog
We are usually perfectly fine with trusted platforms—think popular search systems, mainstream news sites, official health organizations, and direct web registries—dropping links to our articles without asking beforehand. However, flashing our main logo or custom health art to link back