45 EASY BEST TIPS KEEP HEALTHY
We’ve done the legwork
for you and here they are: the 45 best health tips. Make that 46 – taking the
time to read this tops the list.
1. Copy your kitty:
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.
11. Curry favour. Hot,
spicy foods containing chillies or cayenne pepper trigger endorphins, the
feel-good hormones. Endorphins have a powerful, almost narcotic, effect and
make you feel good after exercising. But go easy on the lamb, pork and mutton
and the high-fat, creamy dishes served in many Indian restaurants.
12. Cut out herbs before
ops. Some herbal supplements – from the popular St John’s Wort and ginkgo
biloba to garlic, ginger, ginseng and feverfew – can cause increased bleeding
during surgery, warn surgeons. It may be wise to stop taking all medication, including
herbal supplements, at least two weeks before surgery, and inform your surgeon
about your herbal use.
13. I say tomato. Tomato
is a superstar in the fruit and veggie pantheon. Tomatoes contain lycopene, a
powerful cancer fighter. They’re also rich in vitamin C. The good news is that
cooked tomatoes are also nutritious, so use them in pasta, soups and casseroles,
as well as in salads. The British Thoracic Society says that tomatoes and
apples can reduce your risk of asthma and chronic lung diseases. Both contain
the antioxidant quercetin. To enjoy the benefits, eat five apples a week or a
tomato every other day.
14. Eat your stress
away. Prevent low blood sugar as it stresses you out. Eat regular and small
healthy meals and keep fruit and veggies handy. Herbal teas will also soothe
your frazzled nerves. Eating unrefined carbohydrates, nuts and bananas boosts
the formation of serotonin, another feel-good drug. Small amounts of protein
containing the amino acid tryptamine can give you a boost when stress tires you
out.
15. Load up on vitamin
C.We need at least 90 mg of vitamin C per day and the best way to get this is
by eating at least five servings of fresh fruit and vegetables every day. So
hit the oranges and guavas!
16. No folly in folic
acid. Folic acid should be taken regularly by all pregnant mums and people with
a low immunity to disease. Folic acid prevents spina bifida in unborn babies
and can play a role in cancer prevention. It is found in green leafy vegetables,
liver, fruit and bran.
17. A for Away. This
vitamin, and beta carotene, help to boost immunity against disease. It also
assists in the healing process of diseases such as measles and is recommended
by the WHO. Good natural sources of vitamin A are kidneys, liver, dairy products,
green and yellow vegetables, pawpaw, mangoes, chilli pepper, red sorrel and red
palm oil.
18. Pure water. Don’t
have soft drinks or energy drinks while you’re exercising. Stay properly
hydrated by drinking enough water during your workout (just don’t overdo
things, as drinking too much water can also be dangerous). While you might need
energy drinks for long-distance running, in shorter exercise sessions in the
gym, your body will burn the glucose from the soft drink first, before starting
to burn body fat. Same goes for eating sweets.
19. GI, Jane.
Carbohydrates with a high glycaemic index, such as bread, sugar, honey and
grain-based food will give instant energy and accelerate your metabolism. If
you’re trying to burn fat, stick to beans, rice, pasta, lentils, peas, soya
beans and oat bran, all of which have a low GI count.
20. Mindful living.
You’ve probably heard the old adage that life’s too short to stuff a mushroom.
But perhaps you should consider the opposite: that life’s simply too short NOT
to focus on the simple tasks. By slowing down and concentrating on basic things,
you’ll clear your mind of everything that worries you. Really concentrate on
sensations and experiences again: observe the rough texture of a strawberry’s
skin as you touch it, and taste the sweet-sour juice as you bite into the
fruit; when your partner strokes your hand, pay careful attention to the
sensation on your skin; and learn to really focus on simple tasks while doing
them, whether it’s flowering plants or ironing your clothes.
21. The secret of
stretching. When you stretch, ease your body into position until you feel the
stretch and hold it for about 25 seconds. Breathe deeply to help your body move
oxygen-rich blood to those sore muscles. Don’t bounce or force yourself into an
uncomfortable position.
22. Do your weights
workout first. Experts say weight training should be done first, because it’s a
higher intensity exercise compared to cardio. Your body is better able to
handle weight training early in the workout because you’re fresh and you have
the energy you need to work it. Conversely, cardiovascular exercise should be
the last thing you do at the gym, because it helps your body recover by
increasing blood flow to the muscles, and flushing out lactic acid, which
builds up in the muscles while you’re weight training. It’s the lactic acid
that makes your muscles feel stiff and sore.
23. Burn fat during
intervals. To improve your fitness quickly and lose weight, harness the joys of
interval training. Set the treadmill or step machine on the interval programme,
where your speed and workload varies from minute to minute. Build up gradually,
every minute and return to the starting speed. Repeat this routine. Not only
will it be less monotonous, but you can train for a shorter time and achieve
greater results.
24. Your dirtiest foot
forward. If your ankles, knees, and hips ache from running on pavement, head
for the dirt. Soft trails or graded roads are a lot easier on your joints than
the hard stuff. Also, dirt surfaces tend to be uneven, forcing you to slow down
a bit and focus on where to put your feet – great for agility and
concentration.
25. Burn the boredom,
blast the lard. Rev up your metabolism by alternating your speed and intensity
during aerobic workouts. Not only should you alternate your routine to prevent
burnout or boredom, but to give your body a jolt. If you normally walk at 6.5km/h
on the treadmill or take 15 minutes to walk a km, up the pace by going at 8km/h
for a minute or so during your workout. Do this every five minutes or so. Each
time you work out, increase your bouts of speed in small increments.
26. Cool off without a
beer. Don’t eat carbohydrates for at least an hour after exercise. This will
force your body to break down body fat, rather than using the food you ingest.
Stick to fruit and fluids during that hour, but avoid beer.
27. ‘Okay, now do 100 of
those’. Instead of flailing away at gym, enlist the help – even temporarily –
of a personal trainer. Make sure you learn to breathe properly and to do the
exercises the right way. You’ll get more of a workout while spending less time
at the gym.
28. Stop fuming. Don’t
smoke and if you smoke already, do everything in your power to quit. Don’t buy
into that my-granny-smoked-and-lived-to-be-90 crud – not even the tobacco
giants believe it. Apart from the well-known risks of heart disease and cancer,
orthopaedic surgeons have found that smoking accelerates bone density loss and
constricts blood flow. So you could live to be a 90-year-old amputee who smells
of stale tobacco smoke. Unsexy.
29. Ask about Mad Aunt
Edith. Find out your family history. You need to know if there are any
inherited diseases prowling your gene pool. According to the Mayo Clinic, USA,
finding out what your grandparents died of can provide useful – even lifesaving
– information about what’s in store for you. And be candid, not coy: 25 percent
of the children of alcoholics become alcoholics themselves.
30. Do self-checks. Do
regular self-examinations of your breasts. Most partners are more than happy to
help, not just because breast cancer is the most common cancer among SA women.
The best time to examine your breasts is in the week after your period.
31. My smear campaign.
Have a pap smear once a year. Not on our list of favourite things, but it’s
vital. Cervical cancer kills 200 000 women a year and it’s the most prevalent
form of cancer among black women, affecting more than 30 percent. But the chances
of survival are nearly 100 percent if it’s detected early. Be particularly
careful if you became sexually active at an early age, have had multiple sex
partners or smoke.
32. Understand hormones.
Recent research suggests that short-term (less than five years) use of HRT is
not associated with an increase in the risk of breast cancer, but that using it
for more than ten years might be. Breast cancer is detected earlier in women
using HRT, as they are more alert to the disease than other women.
32. Beat the sneezes.
There are more than 240 allergens, some rare and others very common. If you’re
a sneezer due to pollen: close your car’s windows while driving, rather switch
on the internal fan (drawing in air from the outside), and avoid being outdoors
between 5am and 10 am when pollen counts are at their highest; stick to
holidays in areas with low pollen counts, such as the seaside and stay away
from freshly cut grass.
33. Doggone. If you’re
allergic to your cat, dog, budgie or pet piglet, stop suffering the ravages of
animal dander: Install an air filter in your home. Keep your pet outside as
much as possible and brush him outside of the home to remove loose hair and other
allergens. Better yet, ask someone else to do so.
34. Asthma-friendly
sports. Swimming is the most asthma-friendly sport of all, but cycling,
canoeing, fishing, sailing and walking are also good, according to the experts.
Asthma need not hinder peak performance in sport. 11 percent of the US Olympic
team were asthmatics – and between them they won 41 medals.
35. Deep heat. Sun rays
can burn even through thick glass, and under water. Up to 35 percent of UVB
rays and 85 percent of UVA rays penetrate thick glass, while 50 percent of UVB
rays and 77 percent of UVA rays penetrate a meter of water and wet cotton clothing.
Which means you’ll need sunscreen while driving your car on holiday, and water
resistant block if you’re swimming.
36. Fragrant ageing.
Stay away from perfumed or flavoured suntan lotions which smell of coconut oil
or orange if you want your skin to stay young. These lotions contain psoralen,
which speeds up the ageing process. Rather use a fake-tan lotion. Avoid sun
beds, which are as bad as the sun itself.
37. Sunscreen can be a
smokescreen. Sunscreen is unlikely to stop you from being sunburned, or to
reduce your risk of developing skin cancer. That’s because most people don’t
apply it properly, and stay in the sun too long. The solution? Slather on sunscreen
daily and reapply it often, especially if you’ve been in the water. How much?
At least enough to fill a shot glass.
38. Laugh and cry.
Having a good sob is reputed to be good for you. So is laughter, which has been
shown to help heal bodies, as well as broken hearts. Studies in Japan indicate
that laughter boosts the immune system and helps the body shake off allergic
reactions.
39. It ain’t over till
it’s over. End relationships that no longer work for you, as you could be
spending time in a dead end. Rather head for more meaningful things. You could
be missing opportunities while you’re stuck in a meaningless rut, trying to breathe
life into something that is long gone.
40. Strong people go for
help. Ask for assistance. Gnashing your teeth in the dark will not get you
extra brownie points. It is a sign of strength to ask for assistance and people
will respect you for it. If there is a relationship problem, the one who refuses
to go for help is usually the one with whom the problem lies to begin with.
41. Save steamy scenes
for the bedroom. Showering or bathing in water that’s too hot will dry out your
skin and cause it to age prematurely. Warm water is much better. Apply
moisturiser while your skin is still damp – it’ll be absorbed more easily.
Adding a little olive oil to your bath with help keep your skin moisturised
too.
42. Here’s the rub.
Improve your circulation and help your lymph glands to drain by the way you
towel off. Helping your lymph glands function can help prevent them becoming
infected. When drying off your limbs and torso, brush towards the groin on your
legs and towards the armpits on your upper body. You can do the same during
gentle massage with your partner.
43. Sugar-coated. More
than three million South Africans suffer from type 2 diabetes, and the
incidence is increasing – with new patients getting younger. New studies show
this type of diabetes is often part of a metabolic syndrome (X Syndrome), which
includes high blood pressure and other risk factors for heart disease. More
than 80 percent of type 2 diabetics die of heart disease, so make sure you
control your glucose levels, and watch your blood pressure and cholesterol
counts.
44. Relax, it’s only
sex. Stress and sex make bad bedfellows, it seems. A US survey showed that
stress, kids and work are main factors to dampen libido. With the advent of
technology that allows us to work from home, the lines between our jobs and our
personal lives have become blurred. People work longer hours, commutes are
longer and work pervades all aspects of our lives, including our sexual
relationships. Put nooky and intimacy on the agenda, just like everything else.
45. Good night, sweetheart. Rest heals the body and has
been shown to lessen the risk of heart trouble and psychological problems.

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