Healthy living is within your reach,
starting today. Sure, healthy living is a long-term commitment, not a
flash-in-the-pan fad. But there are steps you can take right now that will make
today healthier than yesterday and pave the way for healthy living tomorrow,
too.
Here's your checklist of practical
healthy living tips that are ready to go. Let's get started.
Healthy
Living Step No. 1: Take stock.
Your first step toward healthy living is
to get a handle on your health status right now. Here's your to-do list:
Make appointments with your doctor and
dentist. Catch up on your routine screening and immunizations, and take the
opportunity to ask your doctor any questions you might have.
Gauge your girth. Measure your height
and weight to check your BMI, and measure your waist circumference to see if
you're overweight and if your waistline is putting your health at risk.
Assess your activity. How much physical
activity do you get in a typical week? How intense is that activity? How much
variety do you get in your activity, and how much do you enjoy it? The CDC
recommends that adults get at least two and a half hours per week of
moderate-intensity aerobic activity or one hour and 15 minutes per week of
vigorous-intensity aerobic activity, plus muscle-strengthening activities at
least two days per week.
Keep a food diary. Write down everything
you eat for a day -- and no fair skipping the items you're embarrassed about.
"The idea is to write it down ... without judgment," says Kathianne
Sellers Williams, MEd, RD, LD, a nutritionist, wellness coach, and personal
trainer with Cafe Physique in Atlanta. "You can't change what you're not
aware of or don't acknowledge."
Check your mood and energy. Healthy
living includes emotional wellness and adequate rest. How has your mood been
lately? Are you experiencing any symptoms of depression or anxiety? Do you
usually sleep well for seven to eight hours a night?
Consider your social network. How strong
are your connections with family and friends? Are you plugged in with social or
spiritual groups that enrich your life? "People have a fundamental need
for positive and lasting relationships," C. Nathan DeWall, assistant professor
of psychology at the University of Kentucky, tells WebMD.
If you're not thrilled with the answers
to some of those questions, remember that the point is to figure out where you
are today so you can set your healthy living goals. It's not about being
"good" or "bad," "right" or "wrong."
Healthy
Living Step No. 2: Put out fires.
If you know that you have chronic health
problems, whether it's heart disease, diabetes, depression, arthritis, or other
conditions, treatment is an obvious priority for healthy living. The same goes
for risky behaviors, such as smoking, and addictions of any kind.
Addressing these issues typically isn't
a do-it-yourself task. Partner with your doctor. Make the phone call today to
schedule that appointment.
Healthy
Living Step No. 3 Move more.
Here are Williams' top tips for
increasing physical activity:
Make it fun. Go on a hike, walk with
friends, take a bellydancing or karate class, or whatever you enjoy.
"There's no need to stick to cardio equipment in the gym if you're dreading
it and you don't like it," Williams says. "Find something that's
fun."
Keep track of it. Make a note of your
physical activity in your date book or calendar. "Put big Xs on the days
that you exercise," Williams says. "Keep a visual record that you look
at frequently" as a reminder and motivator.
Set a weekly goal for activity. To build
your confidence, "make the first goal so easy that you say, 'I know I can
do that,'" Williams suggests. She recommends weekly goals because if you
set a daily goal and miss a day, you might get discouraged; weekly goals give
you more day-to-day flexibility. And at the end of the week, reward yourself
with a visual reminder of your accomplishment, such as buying flowers for
yourself.
Work activity into your day. "Ten
percent of something is better than 100% of nothing. So even if you have 10
minutes, it's better than zero minutes," Williams says. She suggests
taking a 10-minute walk before lunch or walking up and down the stairs when
you're feeling drained and tired.
Other ideas include wearing a pedometer
to track how many steps you take per day (health experts recommend shooting for
10,000 steps per day) and working with a personal trainer (double up with a
friend to lower the cost) to create an exercise routine.
If you're curious about how many
calories you're burning, try using WebMD's Fit-o-Meter, a fitness and exercise
calorie calculator. But of course, physical activity is for everyone, whether
you're trying to lose weight or not.
Healthy
Living Step No. 4: Upgrade your diet.
Williams, a nutritionist for a dozen
years, says her diet advice isn't about eating certain foods and avoiding
others as much as it is about awareness and choices. Here are her pointers:
Replace "I should" with
"I choose." So instead of "I should be eating more fruits and
vegetables," it's "I choose to eat more fruits and vegetables"
or "I choose not to," because it's more powerful language,"
Williams says. "It shows that you're in control, you're making the choice.
So if you choose to or you choose not to, you make the choice and you move
on."
Skip the guilt. "Usually, whenever
someone feels guilty about something, it feeds right back to the behavior that
they're trying to get rid of," Williams says. "So if someone is an
emotional eater and they say, 'I know I shouldn't be doing this," it
implies more guilt and judgment on themselves, they feel worse, and then they
end up eating to comfort themselves."
Choose to plan. Stock your pantry with
healthy fare and bring healthy snacks with you so you're prepared when you get
hungry. "When we're really hungry, our physiology kicks in and that's when
we're craving the hamburger and fries; we're not craving a salad,"
Williams says.
Slow down and savor your food. Don't
watch TV, work, or drive while you're eating. "A lot of people tell me,
'My problem is that I really like food,' but I think that's a really good
thing," Williams says. "If you really enjoy food, sit down and enjoy
your meal. You're much more likely to feel psychologically satisfied if you
don't multitask while you're eating."
Shoot for five to nine daily servings of
varied fruits and vegetables. Cover the rainbow of fruit and vegetable colors
to get a good mix of nutrients. "If you're not getting the rainbow, you're
probably not getting all the nutrients that you need," Williams says.
Healthy
Living Step No. 5: Manage stress.
As a wellness coach trained in stress
management, Williams recommends making two different plans to handle stress.
Routine maintenance: Develop positive
coping skills, such as meditation and visualization, and look for activities,
such as yoga or exercise, to keep your baseline stress level in check.
Breakthrough stress: Find ways to handle
stressful situations that flare up without warning. For instance, Williams says
that after a stressful meeting at work, you might run up and down the stairs a
few times to burn off anger, or retreat to a bathroom stall to take a few deep
breaths and refocus.
Williams also shares three other stress
management tips that you can start using immediately:
Check your perspective. Ask yourself,
"Will this matter to me a year from now?" If not, why are you getting
so wound up?
Volunteer. Helping to meet other
peoples' needs may make your own problems seem smaller.
Keep a gratitude journal. Write down the
positive people, events, and things that you're thankful for. "It really
switches the focus to, 'Wow, look how much I have," Williams says.
"Most stress is caused by wishing things were different than they are
now."
Breathe. One of the breathing exercises
that Williams recommends is to count your breaths for a minute, and then try to
cut that number of breaths in half for the next minute.
Healthy
Living StepNo. 6: Sleep better.
If you have trouble sleeping, try these
tips from sleep medicine specialist Lisa Shives, MD, medical director of
Northshore Sleep Medicine in Evanston, Ill.
No TV or computer two hours before
bedtime. It's not just because the TV and computer are stimulating; it's also
because of their light. "We're very sensitive to the cue that light gives
you that it's time to be up and about," Shives says. She recommends light,
calming reading lit by a lamp that doesn't shine directly into your eyes.
No heavy exercise close to bedtime.
Light stretching is OK, but vigorous activity will heat up your body's core
temperature, which makes it harder to sleep. "If you're working up a
sweat, you're working too hard right before bed," Shives says.
Take a hot bath. That will heat up your
core body temperature, but when you get out of the bath, your core temperature
will fall, which may help you get to sleep. Plus, the bath "relaxes you
mentally," Shives says. She adds that having a hot, noncaffeinated drink,
such as chamomile tea, may also help.
Set a regular sleep schedule. When
Shives treats insomnia patients, she tells them that although they can't make
themselves fall asleep, they can make themselves get up at a certain time the
next morning. And though they may be tired at first, if they don't nap, they
may start sleeping better during the following nights. "We're going to get
nowhere if they take big naps during the day and keep a very erratic sleep
schedule; it's chaos then," Shives says.
Don't count on weekend catch-up sleep.
If you have chronic sleep problems, you probably can't make up for that on the
weekends. But if you generally sleep well and have a rough week, go ahead and
sleep in on the weekend. "I actually think that's good for the body,"
Shives says.
Don't ignore chronic sleep problems.
"Don't let sleep troubles linger for months or years. Get to a sleep
specialist earlier rather than later, before bad habits set in," Shives
says.
Prioritize good sleep. "This is as
important as diet and exercise," Shives says. She says that in our
society, "we disdain sleep, we admire energy and hard work and [have] this
notion that sleep is just something that gets in the way."
Healthy
Living Step No. 7: Improve your relationships.
Healthy living isn't just about your
personal habits for, say, diet and activity. It's also about your connections
with other people -- your social network.
DeWall, the University of Kentucky
social psychologist, offers these tips for broadening your social network:
Look for people like you. The details of
their lives don't have to match yours, but look for a similar level of
openness. "What really is important in terms of promoting relationship
well-being is that you share a similar level of comfort in getting close to
people," DeWall says. For instance, he says that someone who needs a lot
of reassurance might not find the best relationship with someone who's more
standoffish. "Feel people out in terms of, 'Does this person seem like me
in terms of wanting to be close to other people?'" DeWall suggests.
Spend time with people. "There's
this emphasis in our culture that you need to be very independent -- an army of
one, you can get along on your own," DeWall says. "Most people don't
know their neighbors as much as they did 50 or 60 years ago."
Build both virtual and face-to-face
relationships. DeWall isn't against having online connections to other people.
"But I think long term, having all of your relationships online or virtual
... would probably be something that wouldn't be as beneficial as having a
mix" of having virtual and in-person relationships.
If a close relationship is painful, get
help. "Some of my work and some work that other people are doing suggest
that ... when you feel rejected by someone, that your body actually registers
it as pain. So if I'm in a relationship that's really causing me a lot of pain,
then we need to do something, we need to go and seek help," DeWall says.
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