By
Pamela Peeke MD, MPH NWHRC Medical Advisor
Dr. Peeke is a Pew
Foundation Scholar in
Nutrition and Metabolism,
and Assistant Clinical
Professor of Medicine at the
University of Maryland in
Baltimore. She writes about
health and lifestyle issues
important to all women.
10 Tips for Healthier Living
Don't worry. I'm not just going to sit here and tell
you that if you just ate right and exercised more
you'd lose weight and live happily ever after.
Life just ain't that easy.
What I am going to tell
you is to stop worrying
about your weight. That's
right. Forget the scale, buy the
clothes that feel comfortable,
learn to love the body you
have. As long as you start
focusing on your health.
Confused? Don't be. It's all
part of what you've been hearing
and reading about all over
the place. You don't have to be
thin to be healthy—and you
don't have to be overweight to
be sick. So here are my top 10
recommendations for things
you can do today to live your
way to better health:
- Limit yourself to two
processed or pre-made foods
a day. So, for instance, if you
have a danish instead of oatmeal
and a Hot Pocket instead of a
sliced turkey sandwich, you're
done with processed foods for
the day. Processed foods are
swimming in salt, sugars and
unhealthy fats and are deficient
in all-important fiber.
- Have a piece of fruit or a
vegetable with every meal.
Having toast with melted
cheese for breakfast? Slice up
some strawberries. Fixed a
sandwich for lunch? Dip some
raw broccoli in low-fat ranch
dressing to go alongside.
- Walk wherever you can.
If you're going less than six
floors, take the stairs—up and
down. Park at the far end of the parking lot and walk into
the building; park and walk
into the restaurant instead of
zooming through the drivethrough;
get up and go talk to
your coworker down the hall
instead of sending an e-mail.
At the end of the day, those
steps add up.
- Don't buy food you know
you shouldn't eat. I've never
understood people who say
they can't resist the chips and
ice cream in their house—but
keep buying it! And if you're
buying it for the kids, stop.
They don't need it any more
than you do.
- Limit eating out to once a
month. Your waist and pocketbook
will thank you.
- Schedule at least three
hours a week for yourself.
This is time you're not driving
the kids around, not cleaning
the house, not at work, not
doing anything to please anyone
except yourself. This time
is yours to do with as you
like. Women need stressbusters
like this to help reduce the
dangerously high levels of
stress hormones we walk
around with all day, hormones
that lead to numerous diseases,
as well as pack on the fat
around our middles.
- Wear a pedometer and aim
for 10,000 steps a day. The
evidence on these little batteryoperated
machines is amazing.
One major study found that couch potatoes who met a
daily goal of 10,000 steps
improved their fitness level,
blood pressure and body fat
just as much as a group that
followed a traditional gymbased
aerobic program.27 Overall, studies find that
getting 8,000 to 10,000 steps
(about five miles) helps you
lose weight, while adding
2,000 steps to your current
level, or about one mile a day,
helps maintain your current
weight and stop gaining
weight.
- Keep a food diary. Not so
much to track what you eat,
but to track why you eat. Too
many people eat as a way to
smother emotions or relieve
boredom. If you find you're
doing this, you need to talk
to someone about finding a
healthier way to cope.
- Stop drinking soda and fruit
juice. They are huge sources of
extra calories not to mention
unhealthy sugars that don't
pack much nutritional benefit.
Instead, stick to low-fat or
skim dairy, water or unsweetened
iced tea.
- Find a physical activity
you enjoy. It could be gardening,
kayaking, golf (but walk
the course), tennis, hiking,
biking or rock climbing.
You'll meet new people,
become more physically active
and reduce stress—all at the
same time.X
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2006 NWHRC. All rights reserved. Reproduction of material published in the
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