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Marriage Counseling Seven
Tips To Live Longer
We have all heard the stories; the executive retires in Spring
and dies before the first Winter snowfall. While some may
conclude that the former exec just couldn’t adjust to
retirement, it is more likely that they burned themselves out
working. That is, years of shortchanging their own personal
well-being finally caught up with them.
It is so easy to get trapped on the treadmill of demanding
schedules and too many priorities using caffeinated energy to
get things done. It is often self-care that gets put on the
shelf first because there just isn’t time to exercise and eat
right. Yet, there is increasing research that even small
lifestyle changes can be a major factor in a long healthy
life.
Some suggestions:
• Keep a long fuse. Scientists use to believe that “Type A’s,”
those people driven by ambition, were most at risk for heart
attacks. But recent research demonstrates that it is not
striving for goals that have people dropping like flies; it is
being hostile, angry and cynical. A hostile disposition is also
dangerous once cardiovascular disease sets in. Dr. Murray
Mittleman, a cardiovascular epidemiologist at the Beth Israel
Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, interviewed 1623 men and
women who had heart attacks. He found that the risk of having
an attack was twice as great in those that were angry in the
two hours before the incident.
• Lighten up. There is increasing evidence linking depression
to heart disease. Johns Hopkins researchers interviewed 1551
people in the early 1980’s who were free of heart disease. They
followed up fourteen years later and found that those who
reported a history of a major depression were four times as
likely to have a heart attack as those not depressed.
• Get off the couch. Not only for weight control, better
circulation, reduced risk of diabetes, but exercise actually
works as an anti-depressant. In a recent study at Duke
University, 60 % of clinically depressed people who took a
brisk 30-minute walk at least three times per week were no
longer depressed after 16 weeks. Increasingly psychiatrists are
finding that exercise can often work as well as
anti-depressants for the mildly depressed individual.
• Flatten the middle. It’s been more than 50 years since French
scientist Jean Vague noted that people with a lot of upper-body
fat (those that look like apples, rather than pears), often
developed heart disease, diabetes and other ailments. Since the
introduction of CT and MRI scans, Drs. have discovered that a
visceral fat, located within the abdomen was strongly linked to
these diseases. The good news is that this type of fat also
burns off the fastest. This is why even a small reduction in
weight can reverse the deadly factors of heart disease.
• Limit bad habits. Heavy drinking, smoking, overeating, and
overcaffeinating are major factors in the development of heart
disease and other problems. It has been found that both
drinking and smoking tend to increase the abdominal fat that
puts folks at risk for heart disease. Excessive caffeine
increased blood pressure to dangerous levels for people
experiencing job stress.
• Fire up your metabolism. New research shows that a healthy
metabolic profile counts far more than cardiovascular fitness
or weight alone. In a Japanese study, a group of men were put
on a low-intensity exercise program for one year. Although they
did not lose weight, nor improve their cardiovascular fitness,
their metabolic health improved dramatically (measured by how
well the body utilizes insulin). States Glenn A. Glaesser of
the University of Virginia, “Metabolic fitness is one of the
best safeguards against heart disease, stroke and
diabetes.”
• Approach sleep like Goldilocks—Just right. In a recent study
of 72,000 nurses published in the January Archives of Internal
Medicine, researchers found that getting too little sleep—or
too much—may raise the risk of developing heart disease. Women
who averaged five hours or less of sleep a night were 39% more
likely to develop heart disease than those that got eight
hours. And nine or more hours of shuteye was associated with a
37% higher risk of heart disease.
Your best investment for the future is in your health
today.
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