In the first article of this series, I
mentioned that drinking more water can help you shed fat. How? There
are several ways, but the main way that drinking more water can help you
lose weight is by taking up space in the stomach, where you would
otherwise pack higher calorie liquids and food. Of course, water is
naturally calorie-free (no need to purchase “Diet Water”), so you
consume fewer calories, and losing fat is mainly about taking in fewer
calories than you burn in a day.
One man was in the news after he lost more than 100 pounds by drinking 3
large glasses of water with every meal: one before eating, one during
the meal, and one after the meal.
Another way that water helps with weight loss is by increasing your
metabolism. A German study from Berlin's Franz-Volhard Clinical
Research Center, showed that healthy men and women saw a 30% increase in
metabolism after drinking 17 ounces of water. The increases started 10
minutes after drinking the water and topped off after about 30 to 40
minutes, before fading. While this is only a minor difference, more
studies are needed to determine whether being constantly well hydrated
would result in a consistently faster metabolism than being in a
constant state of minor dehydration, though it seems logical. Either
way, if you’re drinking a lot of water, you’ll be burning more calories
just running to the bathroom more. ;)
Yet another way that more water can help you lose weight is by helping
your body to eliminate waste and toxins that keep you feeling sluggish.
Being well hydrated softens your stool and helps to move waste out of
the intestines, allowing your digestive system to function more
efficiently.
This reminds me of another reason to drink more water: Research also
shows that keeping well hydrated can your reduce risk of colon cancer by
45 percent (probably by not leaving a lot of waste behind to rot and
fester), bladder cancer by 50 percent, and possibly reduce breast cancer
risk as well. Then there’s the study published in the American Journal of Epidemiology finding that people who drank more than five glasses of water a day were 41% less likely to die from a heart attack during the 6-year study period than those who drank less than two glasses.
Can it get any better? Yes! In one study, migraine sufferers who drank
1.5 liters of water (about six cups) in addition to their usual daily
intake, experienced 21 fewer hours of pain, in a two week period than
those in the placebo group, as well as a decrease in pain intensity.
But wait! There’s more! Research shows that a dehydration level of
just 1% of your body weight reduces thinking functions and just a 2%
dehydration level can trigger short-term memory problems and difficulty
focusing on a computer screen or printed page. On the other hand,
drinking 8 to 10 cups of water per day can improve your levels of
cognitive performance by as much as 30%. So you could say that it would be smart to drink more water!
Nutritional experts agree that the average person needs to drink, at
least, 2 liters (8 cups) of water per day. But what about all those
plastic bottles going into landfills and making their way into the
ocean? For starters, most bottled water comes from the same sources
that municipal water systems use, but they don’t have the added chlorine
and fluoride. Here in South Florida, we’re blessed with some of the
best tasting, highest rated tap water in the country. In fact, Miami
means “sweet water” in the language of the Native Americans who used to
live around here. Coming from Dallas, I can testify that Miami water
has a far less chemical taste. If, however, you don’t like the taste of
tap water, I recommend getting a Britta filter water pitcher or a Pur
filter on your sink. Neither costs much and you’ll save a bundle over
bottled water or any less healthy beverage options. Then get yourself a
few BPA-Free, large, plastic or steel water bottles to carry with you
wherever you go, so you can keep drinking throughout the day.
Some people have actually told me, “I hate water!” How can you hate
water?! It’s not like it tastes bad; it has no flavor! To which they
reply “That’s why I can’t stand it! It’s so boring!” Okay, so which
tastes better: water, or bitter pills, chemo, and surgery? Again,
Health Care always comes down to this simple choice: either you take
Care of your own Health, or you leave it up to the doctors to provide
you with Sick Care later. I’m not judging which is right or wrong for
you, but I know which one I’m choosing!
- Michael Raphael, LMT, CPT
This blog is about health and wellness. As one, whose purpose in life is to facilitate healing, my philosophy is a holistic one: True Wellness involves the whole person – body, mind, and spirit. These are the 3 main aspects of the human experience, and it is my belief that they are not separate, but completely interwoven and interdependent. For the most part, this blog will act as a simple, sensible, and scientifically grounded guide to Wellness, focused primarily on physical health.
Sunday, April 13, 2014
Wellness Key #2 - The REAL Fountain of Youth (Part 1)
Even before the time of Ponce De Leone, as
far back as ancient Greece, mankind has been regaled with legends of
natural pools or springs with water that healed and restored youth.
While there is some anecdotal evidence suggesting that some mineral
springs may indeed assist in healing a variety of ailments, most of us
now understand that these ancient stories, of water that magically and
instantaneously restores youth to the aged, are mere myths. This raises
the question, why was water thought to be the vehicle for such magic?
Why not a magical stone or tree? I believe this is because of the very
nature of water. No other element maintains its appearance and
qualities throughout the ages the way water does. Water is the essence
of flexibility; by ceaselessly surrendering, it forever bends without
breaking. While the stone may initially appear stronger because the
water surrenders to it, over time, water will eventually erode the stone
to nothing. By easily flowing through change without resistance, water
remains… relatively un-changed.
Water is understood to be an essential ingredient for sustaining life. Water is the body’s second most important fuel source, without which you’ll die in a few days. It comprises 45 to 70 percent of your body weight (fat contains no water, so the higher your percentage of body fat, the lower your percentage of water). In our bodies, water serves as a vehicle for transporting nutrients and waste, acts as a lubricant for all of the movements going on all over our body, provides the moisture for tears, and regulates heat loss.
Water was the original beverage, and is still the healthiest beverage you can drink, bar none. Water helps flush out toxins, sodium, urea, and other cellular wastes which the kidneys have filtered from the lymphatic system. So, how healthy do you think you’ll be if you don’t flush out all of those things your body wants to get rid of? Well, for starters, studies show that people who drink a lot of water have a 50% lower risk of kidney stones or kidney disease.
One of the main factors in physiological aging is dehydration, another is decreased flexibility, and there is a link between the two. When it comes to the effects of hydration on our muscles, the human body is a bit like a tree branch; a dry branch is brittle and inflexible, and will soon break off dead, while the branch that is green and moist on the inside is flexible and therefore nearly unbreakable. As previously mentioned, water in the body helps to lubricate the movements of muscles, tendons and joints, and without enough lubricant, these movements do not happen as easily.
As a massage therapist I’ve learned that I can tell a lot about a person’s health by the health of their skin. If someone has dry, rough, tight skin with wide open pores, and more obvious wrinkles than typical for a person of their age, I know that they are frequently dehydrated. If I ask questions, inevitably, I find out that the person either smokes (I can usually smell the cigarette toxins, like the smell of a smoker’s clothes, escaping through a smoker’s pores during the massage, so I don’t have to ask about that), drinks a good deal of alcohol (more than 1 drink per day on average), doesn’t eat enough fruits or vegetables, and/or doesn’t drink enough water. Fruits and vegetables contain 80-90% water, while cigarettes and alcohol dehydrate.
In contrast, people who have smooth and youthful skin, well past what most would consider youth, typically have the opposite behaviors. Meaning that they drink at least 2 quarts of water per day, are either vegetarians or get at least 3-4 servings of vegetables and fruits per day, haven't smoked much or at all, and drink alcohol in moderation, if at all. If you're not one of these people at present, I have good news for you: Water actually can be your "fountain of youth". While it can't restore your youth over night, not only can it help you hold on to what youth you have left, but can indeed help to restore some of your youth, by flushing out toxins, re-hydrating your skin, restoring some muscle tone and flexibility, and lubricating your joints.
In the next article, I'll tell you more about all of the wonderful health benefits of water, including weight loss.
- Michael Raphael, LMT, CPT
Water is understood to be an essential ingredient for sustaining life. Water is the body’s second most important fuel source, without which you’ll die in a few days. It comprises 45 to 70 percent of your body weight (fat contains no water, so the higher your percentage of body fat, the lower your percentage of water). In our bodies, water serves as a vehicle for transporting nutrients and waste, acts as a lubricant for all of the movements going on all over our body, provides the moisture for tears, and regulates heat loss.
Water was the original beverage, and is still the healthiest beverage you can drink, bar none. Water helps flush out toxins, sodium, urea, and other cellular wastes which the kidneys have filtered from the lymphatic system. So, how healthy do you think you’ll be if you don’t flush out all of those things your body wants to get rid of? Well, for starters, studies show that people who drink a lot of water have a 50% lower risk of kidney stones or kidney disease.
One of the main factors in physiological aging is dehydration, another is decreased flexibility, and there is a link between the two. When it comes to the effects of hydration on our muscles, the human body is a bit like a tree branch; a dry branch is brittle and inflexible, and will soon break off dead, while the branch that is green and moist on the inside is flexible and therefore nearly unbreakable. As previously mentioned, water in the body helps to lubricate the movements of muscles, tendons and joints, and without enough lubricant, these movements do not happen as easily.
As a massage therapist I’ve learned that I can tell a lot about a person’s health by the health of their skin. If someone has dry, rough, tight skin with wide open pores, and more obvious wrinkles than typical for a person of their age, I know that they are frequently dehydrated. If I ask questions, inevitably, I find out that the person either smokes (I can usually smell the cigarette toxins, like the smell of a smoker’s clothes, escaping through a smoker’s pores during the massage, so I don’t have to ask about that), drinks a good deal of alcohol (more than 1 drink per day on average), doesn’t eat enough fruits or vegetables, and/or doesn’t drink enough water. Fruits and vegetables contain 80-90% water, while cigarettes and alcohol dehydrate.
In contrast, people who have smooth and youthful skin, well past what most would consider youth, typically have the opposite behaviors. Meaning that they drink at least 2 quarts of water per day, are either vegetarians or get at least 3-4 servings of vegetables and fruits per day, haven't smoked much or at all, and drink alcohol in moderation, if at all. If you're not one of these people at present, I have good news for you: Water actually can be your "fountain of youth". While it can't restore your youth over night, not only can it help you hold on to what youth you have left, but can indeed help to restore some of your youth, by flushing out toxins, re-hydrating your skin, restoring some muscle tone and flexibility, and lubricating your joints.
In the next article, I'll tell you more about all of the wonderful health benefits of water, including weight loss.
- Michael Raphael, LMT, CPT
Saturday, January 18, 2014
Wellness Key #1: Just Breathe
Some cultures believe that we are all born
with a predetermined number of breaths, some assigned more breaths than
others, and that wherever we are and whatever we’re doing when we take
our last breath; that is the moment of our passing. While I don’t
subscribe to this theory, think about it this way: If you knew you only
had 5,000 breaths left, how would you breathe? Me? VEEEERY
SLOOOOOOWLY!
Slow, deep breathing is probably the most important and yet undervalued key to wellness. Oxygen is the body’s #1 fuel source. Without it we die in minutes. Conversely, Carbon Dioxide, which can kill you in high enough quantities, is a toxin you need to fully expel.
Thousands of years ago, Taoists monks observed that the animals who breathed the slowest, such as the elephant and tortoise, lived the longest; while the animals that breathed the fastest, like cats, dogs and birds, had very short life-spans. From this observation, they deduced that in order to live longer, we need to breathe deeper. They later realized, through meditation, that all matter, including the air, was imbued with energy they called “chi”. And this was several thousand years before Einstein’s famous formula, E=MC2 , stating that all matter is energy! In Chinese, “Chi” means two things: “life-force energy” and “breath”. So, how is breath perceived as being synonymous with vital energy?
While Taoism relied on intuitive realizations, modern science has since discovered that there is in fact a powerful link between Breath and Energy. You see, every cell in our body has a power plant called the mitochondria, which converts glycolytes (fats and sugars) into a liquid fuel called Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP). When the cell has enough oxygen, it uses a process called Aerobic (with oxygen) Cellular Respiration, to make this conversion, and when your cell doesn’t have enough oxygen, it falls back on a different process called Anaerobic (without oxygen) Cellular Respiration. What’s important for you to understand is that when your cells have enough oxygen to use Aerobic Respiration, they get 13 times more ATP or fuel! So the more oxygen you give your body’s cells, the more energy they have to perform at their maximum, whether they be brain cells, heart cells, liver cells, muscle cells, or skin cells.
The deeper you breathe, the more oxygen you bring into the lungs and the more carbon dioxide you expel. The slower you breathe, the more time you give the alveoli of your lungs to absorb oxygen and expel carbon dioxide. So, imagine how much healthier you could be if every breath was full-in and full-out; if every cell in your body had enough fuel to operate at 100% efficiency. As one Nobel Prize winning scientist put it, “Disease cannot thrive in an oxygen-rich environment.”
Scientific research has shown that deep breathing positively affects the brain, the digestive and immune systems, and the cardiovascular system. It has been shown to reduce blood acid levels, thin the blood, reduce blood pressure, and reduce levels of cortisol (a stress response hormone that increases belly fat). Dr. Mladen Golubic, of the Cleveland Clinic's Center for Integrative Medicine says that through deep breathing “"You can influence asthma; you can influence chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; you can influence heart failure."
Deep breathing also has a calming effect on our nerves. When you are stressed or upset, practice focusing only on your breath for a minute. Then try to slow and deepen your breath for a few minutes. Then try to absolutely maximize your breath, so that you breathe all the way in, just beyond what is comfortable, pause, and then breathe all the way out and pause until you have to breathe in again. Then repeat. In just a few minutes, you’ll feel calmer and you’ll think more clearly. This is also a good practice when you’re having trouble falling asleep. Focusing on your breath, takes your mind into the body and distracts it from the 10,000 things going on in your life. Practicing intentionally slow, deep breaths will also expand your lung capacity and allow you to breathe deeper even when you aren’t trying to.
If you find that you are easily “winded” during exercise, it is most likely because you aren’t focusing on taking deep and slow breaths. When running, for example, try breathing in for as many steps as you can, then out for as many steps as you can. Typically, full exhalation takes longer than inhalation, so your breathing rhythm may be 3 steps in & 4 steps out, or 5 steps in & 7 steps out, depending on the depth of your breath. The more often you engage in aerobic exercise with deep breathing, the more your lung capacity will expand over time. This even works for people with an asthma diagnoses.
There actually is a technique to full, deep breathing, called abdominal or diaphragmatic breathing. As a demonstration, stop right now, look down at your torso and take a deep breath. Did you observe your chest expanding or your belly expanding, or both? Most adults will probably take a deep chest breath, but have you ever watched a baby sleep on its back and seen its belly going up and down with each breath? This is actually our natural state of breathing. The chest or thoracic breath is the breath we take when we are stressed, and it is, in fact, more shallow. The image below demonstrates the difference between belly breathing and thoracic breathing.

Notice that the chest breath actually pulls the diaphragm muscle toward the head, interfering with the expansion of the lungs, while expanding the abdomen during the inhale pulls the diaphragm down toward the pelvis, allowing the lungs to fill completely. To easily practice this technique, while lying down, place one hand on your chest and one hand on your belly, and feel which hand rises or falls when you breathe in deeply. Next, try to imagine the air bypassing your lungs and going straight into your abdomen, filling it up like a balloon, and lifting your belly hand up toward the ceiling. At first, you may need to intentionally pull your abdominal muscles out and up, thus pushing the belly hand toward the ceiling, while trying not to move your chest hand. It may feel difficult at first, but be assured that if you continue to practice this for only 5 minutes, it will become easier, and that with regular practice, deep abdominal breathing will replace shallow chest breathing as your default.
- Michael Raphael, LMT, CPT
Slow, deep breathing is probably the most important and yet undervalued key to wellness. Oxygen is the body’s #1 fuel source. Without it we die in minutes. Conversely, Carbon Dioxide, which can kill you in high enough quantities, is a toxin you need to fully expel.
Thousands of years ago, Taoists monks observed that the animals who breathed the slowest, such as the elephant and tortoise, lived the longest; while the animals that breathed the fastest, like cats, dogs and birds, had very short life-spans. From this observation, they deduced that in order to live longer, we need to breathe deeper. They later realized, through meditation, that all matter, including the air, was imbued with energy they called “chi”. And this was several thousand years before Einstein’s famous formula, E=MC2 , stating that all matter is energy! In Chinese, “Chi” means two things: “life-force energy” and “breath”. So, how is breath perceived as being synonymous with vital energy?
While Taoism relied on intuitive realizations, modern science has since discovered that there is in fact a powerful link between Breath and Energy. You see, every cell in our body has a power plant called the mitochondria, which converts glycolytes (fats and sugars) into a liquid fuel called Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP). When the cell has enough oxygen, it uses a process called Aerobic (with oxygen) Cellular Respiration, to make this conversion, and when your cell doesn’t have enough oxygen, it falls back on a different process called Anaerobic (without oxygen) Cellular Respiration. What’s important for you to understand is that when your cells have enough oxygen to use Aerobic Respiration, they get 13 times more ATP or fuel! So the more oxygen you give your body’s cells, the more energy they have to perform at their maximum, whether they be brain cells, heart cells, liver cells, muscle cells, or skin cells.
The deeper you breathe, the more oxygen you bring into the lungs and the more carbon dioxide you expel. The slower you breathe, the more time you give the alveoli of your lungs to absorb oxygen and expel carbon dioxide. So, imagine how much healthier you could be if every breath was full-in and full-out; if every cell in your body had enough fuel to operate at 100% efficiency. As one Nobel Prize winning scientist put it, “Disease cannot thrive in an oxygen-rich environment.”
Scientific research has shown that deep breathing positively affects the brain, the digestive and immune systems, and the cardiovascular system. It has been shown to reduce blood acid levels, thin the blood, reduce blood pressure, and reduce levels of cortisol (a stress response hormone that increases belly fat). Dr. Mladen Golubic, of the Cleveland Clinic's Center for Integrative Medicine says that through deep breathing “"You can influence asthma; you can influence chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; you can influence heart failure."
Deep breathing also has a calming effect on our nerves. When you are stressed or upset, practice focusing only on your breath for a minute. Then try to slow and deepen your breath for a few minutes. Then try to absolutely maximize your breath, so that you breathe all the way in, just beyond what is comfortable, pause, and then breathe all the way out and pause until you have to breathe in again. Then repeat. In just a few minutes, you’ll feel calmer and you’ll think more clearly. This is also a good practice when you’re having trouble falling asleep. Focusing on your breath, takes your mind into the body and distracts it from the 10,000 things going on in your life. Practicing intentionally slow, deep breaths will also expand your lung capacity and allow you to breathe deeper even when you aren’t trying to.
If you find that you are easily “winded” during exercise, it is most likely because you aren’t focusing on taking deep and slow breaths. When running, for example, try breathing in for as many steps as you can, then out for as many steps as you can. Typically, full exhalation takes longer than inhalation, so your breathing rhythm may be 3 steps in & 4 steps out, or 5 steps in & 7 steps out, depending on the depth of your breath. The more often you engage in aerobic exercise with deep breathing, the more your lung capacity will expand over time. This even works for people with an asthma diagnoses.
There actually is a technique to full, deep breathing, called abdominal or diaphragmatic breathing. As a demonstration, stop right now, look down at your torso and take a deep breath. Did you observe your chest expanding or your belly expanding, or both? Most adults will probably take a deep chest breath, but have you ever watched a baby sleep on its back and seen its belly going up and down with each breath? This is actually our natural state of breathing. The chest or thoracic breath is the breath we take when we are stressed, and it is, in fact, more shallow. The image below demonstrates the difference between belly breathing and thoracic breathing.

Notice that the chest breath actually pulls the diaphragm muscle toward the head, interfering with the expansion of the lungs, while expanding the abdomen during the inhale pulls the diaphragm down toward the pelvis, allowing the lungs to fill completely. To easily practice this technique, while lying down, place one hand on your chest and one hand on your belly, and feel which hand rises or falls when you breathe in deeply. Next, try to imagine the air bypassing your lungs and going straight into your abdomen, filling it up like a balloon, and lifting your belly hand up toward the ceiling. At first, you may need to intentionally pull your abdominal muscles out and up, thus pushing the belly hand toward the ceiling, while trying not to move your chest hand. It may feel difficult at first, but be assured that if you continue to practice this for only 5 minutes, it will become easier, and that with regular practice, deep abdominal breathing will replace shallow chest breathing as your default.
- Michael Raphael, LMT, CPT
The Keys to Wellnes
A few months ago a good friend of mine told me that once I
turned 40 everything was going to start falling apart. I said that may be true for him, but it’s not
my truth. Modern physics tells us that linear time is
an illusion and likewise, modern medicine has begun to understand that
chronological age is irrelevant. What
really matters is your physiological age, and that is primarily determined by
how well you take care of your health.
In the back and forth about how to solve our nation’s
escalating healthcare costs, one thing not being discussed is the definition of
healthcare. Going to the doctor or the
emergency room when things go wrong should be called “sickcare”. True healthcare is you taking care of your health. The three main
aspects of true healthcare are nutrition, movement, and stress management. You’ve probably heard the expressions, “Junk
in; junk out”, as it relates to nutrition, and “Use it or lose it”, as it
relates to movement or exercise, but less well known are the devastating
effects of stress on your health and physiological age.
In this article I’ll introduce you to the 10 most important
Keys to Wellness, included within those three main categories of movement,
nutrition, and stress management. And in
the series of articles to follow, I will detail how you can use each of these
Keys to unlock your best health. I’ll tell you about the scientific research
behind the Keys, and give you real life examples. My goal is to educate, empower, and inspire
you to become as healthy as you can be.
I won’t beat you up about your less healthy behaviors, and I won’t tell
you that you have to make drastic changes in order to become healthier. Instead, I’ll give you lots of small steps
you can easily take along your path to wellness. Even if you believe you’re already healthy,
read on; I’m willing to bet you’ll learn something else you can do to be even
healthier.
The Keys
#1. Deep
Breathing - Probably the most important and yet
undervalued key to wellness. Oxygen is
the body’s #1 fuel source. Without it
you die in minutes. The more of it you
take in, the more fuel all of your cells have to function at an optimal level. Carbon
Dioxide, which can kill you in high enough quantities, is a toxin you need to
fully expel. When you’re stressed or
upset, practice focusing only on your breath.
Then try to slow and deepen your breath.
In just a few short minutes, you’ll feel calmer and you’ll think more
clearly. Practicing intentionally slow,
deep breaths will expand your lung capacity and allow you to breathe deeper
even when you aren’t trying to.
#2. Drinking More Water - Water is the body’s second most important fuel source, without which you’ll die in a few days. It comprises 45 to 60 percent of your body weight (depending on your health). One of the main factors in physiological aging is dehydration. Water was the original beverage, and is still the healthiest beverage you can drink, bar none. Just drinking more water can help you shed fat. Need I say more? I will in a later article. In the meantime, nutritional experts say the average person needs to drink, at least, 2 liters of water per day. So start carrying a water bottle with you wherever you go, and keep drinking throughout the day.
#2. Drinking More Water - Water is the body’s second most important fuel source, without which you’ll die in a few days. It comprises 45 to 60 percent of your body weight (depending on your health). One of the main factors in physiological aging is dehydration. Water was the original beverage, and is still the healthiest beverage you can drink, bar none. Just drinking more water can help you shed fat. Need I say more? I will in a later article. In the meantime, nutritional experts say the average person needs to drink, at least, 2 liters of water per day. So start carrying a water bottle with you wherever you go, and keep drinking throughout the day.
#3. Eating
More Fruits & Veggies - I know… now I’m starting to sound like your
mother. However, Fruits and vegetables
are the ONLY way we can really get all of the bio-available vitamins, minerals,
and phyto-nutrients that our bodies need to fight off diseases and stay
healthy. Even the conservative FDA says
you need 5 half cup servings of fruit or vegetables per day in order to stay
healthy. If you’re not getting anywhere near
that amount, don’t feel guilty. Most
Americans aren’t, but then most Americans aren’t extremely healthy either. So, start by doing what you can to add more
vegetables to your dinner, and snack on an apple, banana, carrot, or celery
stick instead of Doritos or a cupcake.
#4. Flexibility -
Another one of the main factors determining your physiological age, is
your body’s flexibility, or lack thereof.
After all, the main key to mobility is flexibility. Regular stretching is an obvious solution, but
is so seldom practiced by most people, even those who exercise regularly. It simply makes sense that stretching your
muscles increases their range of motion, allowing the joints to move farther
without tearing muscles or tendons.
Stretching is a nice gentle way to start getting more movement, and is
even more necessary for those who already exercise regularly, if you want to
continue to be able to do the activities you love. However there’s more to Flexibility than the
physical. It is also important to be
mentally and emotionally flexible. We’ll
go deeper into this in a later article.
#5. Exercise - For
some of you, the mere mention of this word brings up feelings of frustration or
anxiety. I get it. I really do.
So, let’s just talk about Movement.
Humans were designed/evolved to be hunter/gatherers. Originally we burned off the calories we
consumed in our efforts to find the next meal.
Even though most Americans haven’t lived that way for a few generations
now, our bodies have yet to evolve to accommodate our more sedentary
lifestyles. This is the primary culprit
behind so many people being “overweight”, and actually plays a significant role
in a vast array of other diseases prevalent in our society. So, no matter what your weight, you need to
get movement to stay healthy. Not yet
fit enough for vigorous exercises? Start
by walking around your neighborhood in the evening with a friend or family
member at a brisk pace. Or start walking
around the corridors of your office building during lunch. Oh, and take the stairs.
#6. Stress
Management - Stress is gaining a reputation in the medical
industry as a vicious killer, as it has been found to be either the sole
culprit or a co-conspirator in almost every disease known to man. This is partially because one of the main
effects of stress is suppression of your immune system. And just reading
the list of Stress’s other negative effects would make you start to feel
ill. But don’t stress about it. There are so many simple little steps you can
take to reduce your stress, including 3 things we’ve already talked about: Deep
Breathing, Stretching, and Exercise.
I’ll share more with you in a later article.
#7. Sleep -
Studies show that we are a sleep deprived nation. I certainly fall into that group. But living in a condo that has way too many
mirrored walls the last couple of years, I’ve begun to notice that my wrinkles
are FAR less visible after a good night’s sleep than when I’m tired. So I’ve been making an effort to get more of
that “beauty rest”, because I know that the condition of my skin reflects my
internal health.
#8. Eliminating Poisons - This
one is mostly understood. If you’re
smoking at all, or drinking more than an average of two alcoholic beverages per
day, you probably know you need to either quit or cut back. But what about lesser poisons like soft
drinks and other sources of sugar and high fructose corn syrup? And what emotional poisons are you holding on
to that may be affecting your health more than you realize?
#9. Be
Happy -
Are you sick and tired of a lot of things? If so, chances are you are literally making
yourself sick. The health benefits of happiness and a positive attitude are
immeasurable, but scientists have been doing a lot more measuring over the last
20 years and have accumulated a mountain of evidence showing the powerful link
between how you feel and… well… how you feel.
The good news is that you can learn to be happy, no matter what your
circumstances. You can start by contemplating the idea that happiness is the path, not the destination
#10. Practicing
Good Posture – Several generations ago, parents used to teach their kids
“proper” posture. But back then, it was
more about appearances than anything else, and because a lot of those kids
didn’t care about that, they swore they’d never make their kids do it. However, poor posture is one of the main
causes of musculoskeletal pain, and headaches.
Furthermore, our posture not only sends subtle cues to others about us,
it also tells our brains how we feel.
So, a more confident posture causes the brain to release feel-good
hormones that make us feel more
confident, while slouching has the opposite effect.
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