1. Morning Exercise: Learn to do stretching exercises when you wake up. It boosts circulation and digestion, and eases back pain.
2. Don’t skip breakfast. Studies show that eating a proper breakfast is one of the most positive things you can do if you are trying
to lose weight. Breakfast skippers tend to gain weight. A balanced
breakfast includes fresh fruit or fruit juice, a high-fibre breakfast
cereal, low-fat milk or yoghurt, wholewheat toast, and a boiled egg.
3. Brush up on hygiene. Many people don't know how to brush their teeth properly.
Improper brushing can cause as much damage to the teeth and gums as not
brushing at all. Lots of people don’t brush for long enough, don’t
floss and don’t see a dentist regularly. Hold your toothbrush in the
same way that would hold a pencil, and brush for at least two minutes.
This includes brushing the teeth, the junction of the teeth and gums,
the tongue and the roof of the mouth. And you don't need a fancy, angled
toothbrush – just a sturdy, soft-bristled one that you replace each
month.
4. Neurobics for your mind. Get your brain fizzing with energy.
American researchers coined the term ‘neurobics’ for tasks which
activate the brain's own biochemical pathways and to bring new pathways
online that can help to strengthen or preserve brain circuits. Brush
your teeth with your ‘other’ hand, take a new route to work or choose
your clothes based on sense of touch rather than sight. People with
mental agility tend to have lower rates of Alzheimer's disease and age-related mental decline.
5. Get what you give! Always giving and never taking? This is
the short road to compassion fatigue. Give to yourself and receive from
others, otherwise you’ll get to a point where you have nothing left to
give. And hey, if you can’t receive from others, how can you expect them
to receive from you?
6. Get spiritual. A study conducted by the formidably sober and
scientific Harvard University found that patients who were prayed for
recovered quicker than those who weren’t, even if they weren’t aware of
the prayer.
7. Get smelly. Garlic, onions, spring onions and leeks all
contain stuff that’s good for you. A study at the Child’s Health
Institute in Cape Town found that eating raw garlic helped fight serious
childhood infections. Heat destroys these properties, so eat yours raw,
wash it down with fruit juice or, if you’re a sissy, have it in tablet
form.
8. Knock one back. A glass of red wine a day is good for you. A
number of studies have found this, but a recent one found that the
polyphenols (a type of antioxidant) in green tea, red wine and olives
may also help protect you against breast cancer. It’s thought that the
antioxidants help protect you from environmental carcinogens such as passive tobacco smoke.
9. Bone up daily. Get your daily calcium by popping a tab,
chugging milk or eating yoghurt. It’ll keep your bones strong. Remember
that your bone density declines after the age of 30. You need at least
200 milligrams daily, which you should combine with magnesium, or it
simply won’t be absorbed.
10. Berries for your belly. Blueberries, strawberries and
raspberries contain plant nutrients known as anthocyanidins, which are
powerful antioxidants. Blueberries rival grapes in concentrations of
resveratrol – the antioxidant compound found in red wine that has
assumed near mythological proportions. Resveratrol is believed to help
protect against heart disease and cancer.
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