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7 Steps to Health & Wellness Education


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When Americans get sick, they go to the doctor and say, "Fix me."  But only you can fix you…and you can!  There is no biological reason we can’t live to be a ripe old age, free of pain, illness and decay, still vital and sexually active.  Working to balance modern scientific research and the ancient healing arts of India and China, this is a seven-step program to achieve that goal.  Actively enhancing the link between mind and body will change the way you look, feel and live.  You can follow this seven-step plan in any order you choose.  You start with the step that’s least difficult for you and work on it as long as necessary, three months, six months, a year, until you’re ready to try the next step.  As you move forward, reaping the benefits, observe the power you have gained in changing your life.  As with vehicle repair and maintenance, the earlier you start this program, the more mileage you’ll get.  But it will definitely improve your health and outlook at any age. 

Step 1:  Perform your own health risk appraisal.  To learn wether you’re at greater risk of developing certain diseases than the general population, know your risk factors.  With your health provider’s help, choose actions to take or avoid to reduce your risk.  Physical status:  Do you have high blood pressure or cholesterol?  Both increase the risk of heart attack, stroke and premature death.  Family history:  Ask your close blood relatives how long other family members have lived.  Find out if any of them had major chronic illnesses or conditions such as cancer, heart disease, osteoporosis, diabetes, and degenerative arthritis.  Mistake:  People with short-lived families resign themselves to an early death.  That’s totally unrealistic.  Heredity accounts for no more than 10% of the chance of death.  Lifestyle:  Do you exercise and stretch regularly?  How healthfully do you eat?  Do you get enough rest and make an effort to avoid stress?  Do you drink too much alcohol or use tobacco products? 

Step 2:  Use antioxidants.  The most important medical discovery of the past 50 years is that antioxidants minimize the damage done by free radicals, agents in the blood that attack and weaken body tissues.  I am not impressed by a few imperfect studies debunking the remarkable effects of antioxidants.  These studies do not refute 40 years of impressive research concluding that antioxidants help prevent heart disease, stroke, cataracts, skin wrinkling, senility and breast, lung and colon cancer, while slowing aging itself..  The best source of antioxidants is organically grown fruits (three to five servings a day) and vegetables (three to four servings a day).  But if you’re among the 90% of people who eat the typical American diet, which includes lots of meat and fat but few fresh foods, you need supplements.  Every day, take 500 to 2,000 milligrams of vitamin C, up to 10,000 international units (IU) of vitamin A, 400 to 800 IU of vitamin E and 12,000 to 25,000 IU of beta-carotene, which the body converts to vitamin A (Due to the possible interactions between vitamin E and various drugs and supplements, as well as other safety considerations, consult your doctor before starting a vitamin E regimen). 

Step 3:  Practice some form of aerobic exercise to keep your heart healthy.  Exercise is a more powerful medicine than any drug..  The evidence is overwhelming that people who exercise live longer and have less risk of death from heart disease.  Exercise pumps oxygen through the body tissues.  That’s good for everyone and especially good for people with kidney disease.  Any exercise that is somewhat strenuous will do.  Just be sure to raise your heart rate (you don’t have to feel it pounding).  You can ride a bike or walk.  Do this for 30 minutes three times a week.  After three months, you will feel better.  Continue this regimen, working up to at least five days a week. 

Step 4:  Meditate for stress management and mind/body health.  Stress, which many experts consider the most common cause of disease in this day and age, can rob you of life.  By relieving stress, regularly practiced meditation becomes rejuvenating.  None of one’s accomplishments have a stronger impact on life than using meditation to neutralize the effects of stress on one’s nervous system.  At least once, preferably twice, a day, meditate for 10 to 20 minutes.  Consider tai chi chuan…centering prayer… transcendental meditation…intoning a mantra.  The aim is to create a quiet space between your thoughts.  It requires conscious effort and is not the same as relaxing.  No time?  Think again.  Meditation will increase your productivity for the rest of the day.  Its impact on the ability to absorb knowledge is tremendous. 

Step 5:  Practice weight training for stronger bones.  Brittle bones (osteoporosis) lead to falls, broken hips and a susceptibility to pneumonia while bedridden.  And older people tend to have weak legs in general.  One simple exercise I call (chair-ups).  Sit in an armchair.  Can you raise yourself repeatedly, without touching the arms?  Keep practicing until you can.  That will strengthen your legs a great deal. 

Step 6:  Stretch and strengthen your back.  Being supple will allow you to turn your head around while driving and not have a dangerous "blind spot".  You can bend down to pick things up and stand up again without creaking and cracking.  Flexibility helps prevent the natural degeneration into stiffness that comes with aging…and helps prevent injury from accidents, the major cause of disability in older people, as well as back problems, suffered by 85% of American adults.  Stretch each and every day.  Find a stretching routine you like and do it for two to five minutes shortly after getting up in the morning.  Keep trying to place your palms on the floor without bending your knees.  The closer you can get, the more effective the stretch. 

Step 7:  Eat right.  All extremes in nutrition are to be avoided.  Low-fat diets alone don’t make a difference.  Eliminating any single factor won’t keep you healthy.  What’s crucial is to maintain a balance of proteins, carbohydrates (pasta, whole grains), and plenty of organically grown fruits and vegetables.  Eat more vegetables than animal protein.  Read labels carefully and choose natural foods.  Look at where the food came from.  Oatmeal and cream of wheat are closer to nature than sugar-coated bran flakes.  When you see a box of cereal growing from a tree, you’ll know its a good food.


Disclaimer: Material on this Website is provided for informational purposes only. It is not a substitute for medical care, rehabilitation, educational consultation, or legal advice. Information on this Website is general as it can not address each individual's situation and needs. [more]
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Comments & Questions
carol roach  Moderator: Psychology - 100 Factoids | + 492 votes

excellent article, they say that are bodies are designed to live to 100 years old or more, yet it is us as you say who is causing premature death.
posted 3 months ago
Kerry Hosking  Fz Expert - 30 Factoids | + 42 votes

I agree with the last comment; we are all slowly killing oursleves, or getting help from the government (environmentallly). Well written, thank you Sir. Kerry
posted 3 months ago
dodyast3  Fz Author - 21 Factoids | + 70 votes

Very good article. Love to read yours. Keep it up.
posted 3 months ago
Paul Torri  Fz Expert - 28 Factoids | + 84 votes

Thomas, thanks for the very complete and well thought out article. At 43 I'm starting to take healthy living alot more seriously. Even though my work is physical I need to do more cardio but thankfully I actually enjoy eating healthy. Also for those who don'y like fish like me you can get your omega 3's in pill form aka fish oil.
posted 3 months ago
Thomas Gordon  Fz Member - 23 Factoids | + 212 votes

Hello..Carol...Kerry...Dodyast3...and Paul...I fully believe that our bodies are designed to last longer. In my family we've had several family members live to 100 or more years of age. I am a former drinker & smoker. After all the years of defiling my temple (consuming poisonous addictions), this is why, now I am such a health and wellness NUT! I know we are not vehicles, yet a vehicle (say a diesel engine), are designed to run millions of miles straight. Providing they do not run out of vital fluids. Most ware and tare on a vehicles engine and drive train, is in the starting and stopping. Most people do not get proper rest, and when we awake, we do not maintain proper fuel & fluids. And most do not afford themselves the cost of physical maintenance (oil change etc...). I once red a sales add for a vitamin company, that stated: get this cassette today - " Dead Doctors Don't Lie". It basically stated that Doctors prescribe to us the next fixer upper drugs, that were tested on rats & homeless people w/o families to sue them. And our bodies do not absorb enough of what we need from what we normally consume. Hence an expensive vitamin only produces expensive urine and stool. TY
posted 3 months ago
Susan McCord  Fz Author - 22 Factoids | + 46 votes

A much needed article...More people should strength train and not be afraid of weights. I teach weight training and apart from how great it is for your bones, it takes ten years off of your age by pulling all the muscles back up where they belong. It can even help your neck from looking saggy. Don't be scared to go a little heavier than you think you should. Ladies, you will not end up looking like a steroid monster unless you take them. We just don't have the testosterone than men have to build huge muscles.
posted 3 months ago
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