Guerrilla Health Tactics: 5 Snappy Tips For A
Healthier, Happier You
by Christopher Brown
The subject of health care
itself often seems plagued with conflicting advice, or even
heated controversy. Witness the recent Cruise-Shields
incident, which will doubtless occupy several chapters in
future health and nutrition texts. So what to do about this
advice-riddled and divisive field when you want to find out
what you can do to better your own health? We suggest that you
do a little research, read differing opinions,
and the reasons given for them, and then
go with what you feel confident about.
Although I am neither a doctor nor a health care professional,
I have studied a great deal about the effects of various kinds
of personal habits, vitmains, etc., and their known
consequences to your health. So here I will offer what I regard
as well-proven tips for really improving your own health in
very practical and effective ways.
1. Eat yogurt and a banana every day. Yogurt has live cultures
in it, meaning "good bacteria" that your body absolutely needs,
and which any caffeine beverage or alcohol will tend to reduce
or eliminate. Electricity and anti-biotics kill these off too.
This good bacteria functions like millions of tiny janitors,
eating up and cleaning away any sort of debris which might
float about in your bloodstream or body. You must replace these
daily to stay healthy in the long run, and yogurt is one of the
easiest sources both for this, and for calcium. You can also
buy acidophilus milk at the grocery store, or pro-biotics from
your local health food store.
Bananas contain potassium, a mineral necessary for many bodily
functions, including muscle development and maintaining proper
hydration, and which can – and often does – suffer depletion
from environmental and dietary factors. So, as they say, go
bananas.
2. Eat fresh – not cooked or canned - vegetables and fruit
every day without fail. Once you heat a vegetable to over 120F
degrees, the enzymes they contain begin to break down. These
enzymes aid the digestion process, which forms the central part
of good health. There are other ways to get enzymes in your
diet, but eating fresh fruits and veggies remains the best
way.
A great way to enjoy your daily dose of enzymes comes by
"juicing." This has become something of a health craze of late,
and a great one at that. You can buy a good juicer for about
$200 or so, or for less if you don't mind bargain hunting. Try
e-bay. To "jucie," you simply turn the juicer on and stuff your
fruits and veggies down the chute. The juicer then aggressively
works them over, yielding only the juice inside them out the
bottom chute to fill your cup.
Fresh fruit and veggie juice is delicious, and it will really
help improve your health in many little ways. Try combining
different juice "partners," including oranges and carrots. They
go well together. And, yes, ladies, the vitamins and minerals
in fresh fruit and veggie juice can help give your skin a
healthier, more youthful tone. And the anti-oxidants they offer
overflow with other health benefits too.
3. Exercise For Fun. Find a game or sport you enjoy, and do it
for 10 minutes a day. My children love it when I chase them
around the park – so I do. They laugh and we all exercise, but
no one outruns "the claw." Studies show, time and again that
most people don’t exercise because they think they don’t have
enough time. But this is nonsense. Most people waste more than
10 minutes a day just chatting.
Start slowly if you are a beginner, and go easy. Maybe just
walk for 10 minutes at a comfortable pace. Just do SOMETHING.
10 minutes of exercise every day will greatly enhance every
aspect of your health, starting with your cardiovascular
system. After you feel confident with your level of health, set
some short term goals. Time yourself, and see if you can do it
"just a little" farther or faster. If it’s too hard, slow down
or back off a little. Enjoy your exercise. It really can be
fun.
Studies also show that you derive far more benefit from
exercising if you do it at intervals. If you walk for ten
minutes, walk slowly to warm up for the first minute, then
speed it up with a little burst for the next minute or two,
then slow way down to relax and rest up for your next, more
rapid interval. This way, you are never more than a minute away
from a resting point, and you don’t feel so much pressure to
perform. Interval training (or I.T.) has remarkable benefits
(compared to mere "steady state" exercising) – including the
reducing of stress. So go alittle harder on Tuesday in your
exercise routine, and a little easier on Wednesday. Then pick
up the pace again on Thursday. Train at intervals.
4. Keep your house very clean at all times, especially the
bathrooms and kitchen. This is where germs tend to accumulate.
All houses have some dirt and mold in them. Dirty houses have a
great deal more than clean ones, and over the long haul to much
micro-garbage in the air will tend to cause all sorts of
allergy problems and other harmful side-effects. Keep the
toothbrushes well insulated when not using them, and store them
in a room OTHER than the bathroom. It could tell you why, but
some of you might be eating. Trust me, just do it.
If your circumstances make it too difficult to keep the house
very clean, hire a cleaning service. Your health is worth the
cost. And wash your hands – and your children’s hands – often
throughout the day. This simple practice can reduce
illness-related "down time" by as much as 50% or more
5. This one may seem a bit odd at first, but there is good
logic behind it. Try not to use the heater or air-conditioner
in your vehicles much, especially if you travel on rural or
dusty roads. The air blown into the cab (and blown into the
faces and lungs of the driver and passengers) has NO FILTER.
This is nuts, but it is true. Just think about it for a
minute.
Your engine has an air filter in it because dirt blows under
the hood and can clog up the mechanical works. Hence the
filter. But the same dirty air, which blows across the engine
and into the cab of your vehicle, doesn’t have to traverse a
filter before it reaches your lungs.Yikes.
It is often quite dirty – especially if you live near a
construction site or dirt road – and this dirt can accumulate
in your lungs, and possibly even your bloodstream. I have no
idea why no one seems to have thought of this when they built
the vehicles we drive, especially when so many now spend
countless hours commuting – sitting behind the wheel, with the
heater or A/C blasting away. I know of no studies on this topic
either, but common sense says "Don’t blast a steady stream of
dirt into your lungs over long periods of time."
If you can, instead of using the heater, put on another layer
of clothes, or a very warm jacket. If you can, instead of using
the A/C, just roll down the window(s) to cool off – or drink
some cold water. And remember, exercise helps keep your system
stay cleaner too, so take that advice seriously and put it into
practice.
Your personal health ranks very high among your personal
assets, so take it seriously enough to spend some time thinking
about it, and doing something to improve it. Start with our
"big five." You will be glad you did.
About the Author: Christopher Brown escaped with a
degree in history from the California State University
(Hayward), but did hard time in seminary. In March, 2004, he
founded Ophir Gold Corp., and runs its sites: http://scriberight.blogspot.com or
"OGC's Free Web Traffic:" http://ophirgoldcorp.blogspot.com or
"Extreme Profit:" http://extremeprofit.blogspot.com
Source: www.isnare.com
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