You know, you just might be making healthier choices than you realize. Then again, maybe you are ready to change a few of your choices to be happier and healthier.
Below are three lists that focus on the choices you can make as far as your daily living, eating habits, and lifestyle choices. Hannah and I didn’t come up with these lists, but we find that they ring true based on our experience.
The AARP Bulletin (December 2016) surveyed doctors on what they feel are the best habits for healthy living. Here we go.
Daily Living: The everyday lifestyle adjustments most important for greater health:
Take a daily 30-minute walk
Get 7 to 8 hours of sleep each night
Spend time each day with a friend or loved one
Reduce your consumption of junk food
Cut back on refined carbs (white bread, pasta, white rice)
Which do you think was the choice of every doctor surveyed? (Answer below)
Eating Habits: Harmful eating habits most important to change to improve your long-term health:
Drinking soda at most meals and for snacks
Eating several fast-food restaurant meals each week
Eating two or fewer servings of vegetables each day
Bingeing on pizza, hot wings, nachos, or other “social foods” a few times per week
Eating ice cream, cake, doughnuts, or other sweets everyday
Lifestyle Choices: Lifestyle habits or patterns most harmful to a person’s long-term health:
Smoking cigarettes
Not exercising
Feeling perpetually lonely or socially isolated
Ignoring health problems or symptoms
Taking painkillers every day
Being angry, worried, or stressed more often than feeling happy.
I am reminded how important it is to choose to be active and make the effort to build a social network. Of course, the occasional happy hour at Ruby’s in York, Maine with half price margaritas and nachos is not to be missed.
The only “Daily Living” choice selected by every doctor surveyed: Take a daily 30-minute walk.