Heart Health For The Whole Family

When it comes to your state of heart health, the habits that you create as a family have the largest impact on the habits your sons or daughters will have as they become adults. That’s the reason it’s important for you to make maintaining your hearts healthier a family exercise.

Everyone should be involved because even if your children aren’t vulnerable to coronary disease yet, they will likely become at risk in the future if you don’t start to instill good eating habits now. The the first thing that you can do to truly transform your family’s heart health is to eat at home.

Eating in restaurants is renowned for being higher in both fat and calories. Eating at home is almost always more nutritious. In addition to being healthier due to nutrition, eating as a family has also been shown to help youngsters improve at school as well as have better self-esteem.

EXERCISE

Physical exercise is yet another thing that families are able to do together. There are all types of techniques that you can work together to get your bodies moving. For example, taking a family walk at the end of each night is a superb way to get physical activity and spend more time the ones you care for.

You may also try other suggestions for example bicycle riding, roller blading, and roller skating. These activities are as fun as they are healthful. Starting a family garden may also be a wonderful way to keep your heart healthy.


The specific labor of planting and tending your garden is a superb way to boost your physical activity levels. In addition, the vegetables and fruits that you grow make great additions to heart healthy cuisine. Children who grow their very own veggies are more inclined to want to eat them.

START NEW TRADITIONS

Start new family traditions for instance having family night each week. Make family night a chance to go bowling, play miniature golf, or go hiking at the closest nature path. Focusing on fun actions that are also good at keeping your body moving can help your children to naturally build good habits.

DEVELOP HEART HEALTH AND TURN OFF THE TV

Being a family, you need to limit how long spent vegetating in front of the television. It’s difficult to tell kids to get more active when the adults are not leading by example.

Rather than just sitting here, try finding something to accomplish outside that is more beneficial to your well-being. That’s not to imply that TV must be banned, it needs to just be watched sparingly. For instance, give your child a specific amount of time or number of programs that he or she can watch nightly.

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Fight Stress With Walking

Walking

One of the best stress and depression fighters going is exercise. If you have tried it you know that it is almost impossible to dwell on negatives while working out. But some fear to try because they are “out of shape” or don’t want add the cost of joining a fitness club.

But there is one exercise almost anyone can do, costs next to nothing, and is extremely effective both at enhancing your mood and improving your health and that is the simple act of walking.

Like everything else, there is a right way to walk that helps you get the best benefits out of the exercise. What follows is a few suggestions on getting started and getting the most out of it.

HOW TO START
Well, all you really need is a decent pair of shoes, comfortable, non restrictive clothes and the desire to begin.

If you haven’t done any serious exercise for years start your program easy. To begin, walk for a consecutive twenty minutes a day every day for a week. If this is too easy, add five minutes each day until your walk is long enough to feel that you’ve accomplished something. Read the rest of this entry »

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Control Stress with Pets

control stress with petsYou really don’t need to look any further than that pup’s nonstop wagging tail or maybe enjoy a kitten’s delicate rolling purring while it gets scratched right behind its ears, and it’s really clear — without resorting to elaborate scientific studies: pets deliver a unique companionship and joy to the lives of their masters. But our furred, four-legged pals can offer still more benefits, keeping us active and active in the world and improving our health and wellness by connecting with and helping us, particularly when we are sick, perhaps in the hospital and do not even feel up to taking part in human company.

From autistic youngsters to terminally ill cancer sufferers, pets can offer a calming presence when people need it most. Their focus and affection can be downright healing; some research shows, finding that having them around can reduce blood pressure, reduce heart rate, reduce depression and anxiety, lessen feelings of lonesomeness, and also enhance an individual’s perceived quality of health. Therapies connected with relationships between patients and a properly trained pet, along with its human owner, cuts down on the stress and anxiety of individuals hospitalized for mood or psychotic conditions, an American Psychiatric Association review discovered. Pet ownership increases survival immediately following heart attacks and decreases the mortality rate from heart disease, a different study showed.


Alzheimer’s patients, too, benefit from the company of paws, with those with the ailment as well as in establishments interacting better and displaying more serenity. Amid Alzheimer’s sufferers attached to a pet companion, medical studies have found a lowering of outbursts, lower anxiety and fewer mood disorders.

Senior citizens, naturally, frequently adore their cats and dogs, and research shows their health benefits from camaraderie. While their peers without pets slowed up and were less active, pet owners age 65 to 80 turned out to be more physically active — an essential element in elder health and fitness, the American Psychological Association observed in a survey.

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You Really Need A Vacation

control stressHere is a wonderful article on stress, vacations, and why we desperately need them. It is written by Karen Ravn, and was originally published by the LA Times on May 30, 2011.

Got stress?

If you answered no, hooray for you! (And, by the way, what planet are you from?)

But if you answered yes (like any normal member of the human race), you’re likely heartened by the arrival of vacation season. Just the ticket for a little stress-reduction.

And that can have some big payoffs. It can lower your blood pressure, boost your immune system and help you live longer. It may even make you smarter.

“A vacation is not a luxury,” says Jens Pruessner, an associate professor in the departments of psychology, psychiatry, neurology and neurosurgery at McGill University in Montreal. “It’s an investment in your health.”


Most of what scientists know about the brain and chronic stress comes from studies of rodents, whose response systems are very much like ours (perhaps disconcertingly so) and who therefore make good stand-ins for us. But rodents rarely pack their bags and head for the beach when summer rolls around, so it’s harder to use them as models for vacationers.

Nonetheless, researchers have learned enough to make some useful suggestions:

Plan ahead

A vacation is a chance to get away from many of the stresses you can’t get away from in your everyday life (your boss, your commute, the chaos that is your home). Of course, it can also introduce new ones. But while some of these may be out of your control — bad directions, missed connections, loud neighbors in hotels with thin walls — planning ahead can forestall others. If it’s stressful for you to be around your in-laws, don’t arrange a monthlong camping trip with them. If you’re afraid of airplanes, pick a destination you can drive to instead — and don’t get talked into skydiving lessons. If you suffer from separation anxiety, don’t go anywhere Spot can’t go too.

Making your vacation as stress-free as possible pays off, according to a 2010 study in the Netherlands. When researchers looked at how happy people were after taking vacations, only those who felt very relaxed while they were away were happier than people who hadn’t taken a trip at all.

But the same study found that people who were busy planning a vacation were happier than those who had no vacation to plan — so even when a vacation turned out to be a dud, the time spent planning it may have made it all worthwhile.

One caveat: For some people, going on vacation may be more stressful than not going — perhaps because of money concerns or because they’re just not comfortable being away from home or from work. In such cases, it may be that no amount of planning can make a vacation a good idea.

Make sure it’s fun

This is not exactly shocking news, but it is nice to know for a scientific fact that fun is good for you (and your brain). A study published last year in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found exactly that. In rats, anyway.

“It doesn’t get rid of stress, just lowers it, across all aspects of the hormonal system,” says study co-author James Herman, director of the Laboratory of Stress Neurobiology and professor of psychiatry and behavioral neuroscience at the University of Cincinnati.

Rats in the study had access to a sugar solution twice a day for two weeks. Then researchers tested their responses to stress by placing them in tubes that restricted their movements. Compared with controls, the rats who had had access to sugar had lower heart rates and levels of stress hormones. Other rats who received a saccharin-sweetened solution also had reduced stress responses, but rats who had sugar delivered directly to their stomachs did not. Researchers inferred that it was the pleasurable taste, not the calories in the solution, that produced the effect.

To confirm the pleasurability hypothesis — and to show that it held for more than just taste — other rats were allowed daily visits with “pliant females” for two weeks, Herman says, and they too showed the same stress reductions.

To travel or not?

Even if you love to travel, at times the hairy logistics can present you with plenty of opportunities to blow your cool. On the other hand, a situation is only stressful if you perceive it to be. “A lot depends on your appraisal of the evidence,” says Carlos Grijalva, a professor of psychology and behavioral neuroscience at UCLA. “How you evaluate the situation is critical.”

True, it’s hard to put a positive spin on the situation if you’re standing at the end of a mile-long line and your flight is due to take off in five minutes. But it may be possible to perceive an irritating seat mate as a chance to hone your social skills or lost luggage as an excuse to spiff up your wardrobe.

The post-vacation brain

Some studies with rats have shown that stress can actually shrink parts of their brains, and a 2009 study in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences found that it probably shrinks your brain too.

But not to panic!

The rat studies found that three weeks of restraint-induced stress led to shrinkage of tree-like projections called dendrites in a part of the brain called the medial prefrontal cortex — and impaired performance on an attention task. Importantly, though, these chronic stress effects disappeared once the rats had been stress-free for four weeks.

In the parallel human study, medical students who’d spent a month preparing for stage one of the medical board exam were tested on an attention-shifting task as close to the day of their medical exam as possible. Then they were tested again a month after the test, when their sources of stress were way down.

They too performed relatively poorly the first time they did the task, when they were badly stressed, and much better — just as well as a control group — after an essentially stress-free month.

The researchers could not, of course, get direct evidence that there was dendrite shrinkage in the med students that was subsequently reversed. But they inferred that this happened, since the results of every other aspect of the studies were so parallel, says study lead author Dr. Conor Liston, a research fellow in the department of psychology at Weill Cornell Medical College in New York.

How long a vacation?

“How long it takes you to relax after a stressful period of time depends on how quickly you can reset your perspective on life,” says George Slavich, an assistant professor at the UCLA Cousins Center for Psychoneuroimmunology. “Taking a relaxing trip to Hawaii can help, but it’s not necessary, nor is it always sufficient. No tropical vacation can help if the stress is mostly in your head.”

On the other hand, Pruessner says, when you’re on vacation, you probably have more time than usual for self-reflective thought, which could help you recognize that your stress is mostly in your head — and maybe even work on getting it out of there.

In the medical student study, a month was enough to make stress-impaired brains get their groove back. But wait! Don’t snort. Sure, a month off is inconceivable. But it’s possible that less time could do the trick too.

Pruessner once did a simple experiment with a group that had come for a two-week meditation-and-yoga retreat at a hotel in Canada. He measured blood levels of the stress hormone, cortisol, twice: at the beginning of their stay and again at the end.

At the beginning, the group could be divided into three sets: those with normal cortisol levels, those with higher than normal levels and those with lower than normal levels. Pruessner inferred that the first set was not particularly stressed, the second set was somewhat stressed and the third was even more stressed. (Scientists believe that when stress gets really, really bad, the body’s cortisol response can sometimes stop working.)

At the end of the two weeks, those in the first set still had normal cortisol levels; those in the second set had lower levels than before, implying that they had become less stressed; and those in the third set showed no change, implying that their blunted response systems had not improved.

Pruessner’s interpretation? Two weeks of rest and meditation and yoga were enough to help those who were somewhat stressed but not enough to help those who were more stressed than that.

“Ideally, you don’t want to wait too long to take a vacation,” he says. “You don’t want to get to that third stage.”

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Improve Your Work/Life Balance

As the demands of your work life become more demanding of your attention it becomes all the more challenging to successfully balance the demands of your career with your “real” life. Even if you don’t have a lot of control over the demands of your job, the hours needed to get it all done, or even what may be coming at you next, it is important that you don’t lose sight of what parts of your life you can control and the things that make you the happiest.

Here are a few guidelines that can help you bring a bit more balance to your hectic life and control stress at the same time:

  • SCHEDULE YOUR DOWN TIME LIKE ANY OTHER TASK The secret is to be proactive and create a daily or weekly schedule for yourself. Instead of taking each day as it comes, planning in advance will allow you to schedule a “date night” with your partner, or a long lunch with a friend. Even if you typically enjoy some free time during the weekends, scheduling pleasant tasks like a movie or a family outing will ensure that this open time doesn’t slip away.
  • BE SURE EXERCISE IS ON YOUR SCHEDULE Making time for exercise several times a week will help you get more done in the long run by increasing your energy levels and will also help your concentration. Read the rest of this entry »