Unhealthy lifestyle. It's a common contributor of our biggest
health problems. For the secrets to a longlife, one of the guiding principles of mind-body medicine is the interconnection of all things, including the mind, the body, and the environment in which we live. Try this simple tips :
1. Daily exercise.
You brush your teeth
every day; exercise
is equally important for your daily routine. Turn off the TV or computer, and
get at least 30 minutes of exercise
every day.
To work your heart, it's got to be aerobic exercise.
You've got lots of options: walking, jogging,
biking, rowing machine, elliptical machine, swimming.
But don't feel like you have to be an athlete. Walking is great exercise. Get
10 minutes here and there during the day. It all counts.
Start with something simple, like parking in the far corner of
the parking lot -- so you get those extra steps to the door. Take the stairs
one or two flights instead of the elevator. If you take public transportation,
get off one stop early and walk the rest. Get out at lunch to walk. Or walk
with your significant other or your spouse after work. You'll get a bonus --
relaxation and stress reduction.
2. Healthy diet.
Quit eating junk food and high-fat fast food. Your heart, brain, and overall health
are harmed by foods high in saturated fats,
salt, and cholesterol.
There's no getting around it. You've got to replace them with healthy foods:
lots of fruits, vegetables, fish, nuts, olive oil -- what we call the Mediterranean diet.
Eat like an Italian, a Spaniard, a Greek! Enjoy!
3. Take time for restful sleep.
Restful sleep is essential key to having health and vital energy. When you're well-rested, you can approach stressful situations more calmly, yet sleep is so often neglected or underemphasized. There is even a tendency for people to boast about how little sleep they can get by on. In reality, over time, inadequate sleep disrupts the body’s innate balance, weakens our immune system, contributes to weight gain and depression, and speeds up the aging process.
Human beings generally need between six and eight hours of restful sleep each night. Restful sleep means that you’re not using pharmaceuticals or alcohol to get to sleep but that you’re drifting off easily once you turn off the light and are sleeping soundly through the night. If you feel energetic and vibrant when you wake up, you had a night of restful sleep. If you feel tired and unenthusiastic, you haven’t had restful sleep.You can get the highest quality sleep by keeping your sleep cycles in tune with the rhythms of the universe, known as circadian rhythms. At the Chopra Center, we find that if people can commit to a consistent sleep ritual, they can usually retrain their mind to experience healthy sleep patterns.
4. Regular physical exams.
You need regular diabetes, blood
pressure, and cholesterol
tests. Make sure your immunizations are up to
date. You may need flu
and pneumonia
shots, depending on your age.
Tell your doctor your family medical
history. Learn your personal risk factors, and the screening tests you need.
Women may have mammograms to screen for breast cancer and Pap
tests for cervical
cancer. Men may have prostate cancer
PSA
tests. Routine screening for colorectal
cancer should start at age 50, perhaps earlier if colon cancer
runs in your family. You also need regular diabetes, blood
pressure, and cholesterol
tests. Make sure your immunizations are up to
date. You may need flu
and pneumonia
shots, depending on your age.
5. Less stress
To be healthy, we need to set boundaries -- and set limits on
work hours. We should not be working so hard that we're neglecting the things
that keep us healthy. This is important advice, too, for people who take care
of elderly parents or young children. Make sure you're getting proper exercise
and sleep
-- and that you're not trying to do too much.
6. Enjoy a good belly-laugh at least once a day.
From the scientific perspective, laughter is an elegant mind-body phenomenon that reduces the production of stress hormones and boosts the immune system. Researchers in Japan found that people with rheumatoid arthritis who watched “rakugo” or comic storytelling experienced a significant decrease in their pain and stress hormone levels as well as an increase in two immune-enhancing.
6. Enjoy a good belly-laugh at least once a day.
From the scientific perspective, laughter is an elegant mind-body phenomenon that reduces the production of stress hormones and boosts the immune system. Researchers in Japan found that people with rheumatoid arthritis who watched “rakugo” or comic storytelling experienced a significant decrease in their pain and stress hormone levels as well as an increase in two immune-enhancing.
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